Wednesday, July 29, 2015

Service

“Work harder, not smarter.” “Don’t reinvent the wheel.” “What if money were no object?” “Follow your heart.”
What happens when you aren’t sure what your passion is and where your heart wants to go? What happens after 20 years of teaching and you don’t want to go back…not because of the kids but because of the excessive drama and negativity of peers.
I’ve taken a leap of faith with my family and moved to a new town with no job leads. For the first time in my career I don’t have a job and the school year will start in a few short weeks, and I’m fine with that. I’m appreciating the fact that I can work harder and smarter, I can reinvent myself, and I can follow my heart…money will come in time. My biggest challenge is figuring out which path to take. Is teaching my true passion or is it just a habit, a way of life, something I am comfortable with and am good at?  I know what I like to do but had to ask my husband what he thinks I am passionate about. I just couldn’t come up with a tidy answer to fit in the box today. “Baking…baking makes you happy, especially when you do it for others. Actually, doing things for others is when you are most happy.”

He’s right. I like doing things for others, it gives me a sense of peace and accomplishment, and it brings me joy. Our diocesan theme this year is Called to Serve, something I feel was amazingly easy for me to fall into as a camp teacher. We spent a week talking to students about how to serve those with varying needs; those who are hungry, suffering, needy, and lonely. We talked about serving those we were with and those we would meet after leaving camp. We provided a service toolkit with tangible ideas for campers to use as they left. We heard a homily about loving yourself as your neighbor, focusing on yourself more than your neighbor since many of us neglect our own care. Maybe it’s time to listen to what I have been teaching and look for more ways to serve others, to make others happy and in so doing I will know my passion and which path my heart wants to take. I will start by serving my family more rather than having a long commute followed by incredibly long hours at work with just enough time to get home and be exhausted. In serving my family I will be able to serve and care for myself, someone I have neglected to take care of, especially in the last few years. I will find the joy in simple daily tasks and not feel rushed in having to accomplish everything on my list, and complete it all in time to go to bed and rush off to another 12 hour day right away outside the home. My family is my life and my joy will only increase with time better spent with them.

Friday, July 3, 2015

Camp Capers is my road map

I am at a cross roads in life, we have taken a leap of faith and purchased a home in another town where we have family. I have resigned from my job. We have put our house on the market. My husband and I don’t have job leads despite multiple applications. I spend many days packing and cleaning the grand collection of “stuff” we have accumulated in this home of 15 years. I find myself struggling mainly with the end of this chapter, leaving here means leaving the life I once led. I miss my best friend who has been gone for 8 years now, I miss my Mom who has been gone for almost two. I feel this makes the loss of them both even more final than it already is.

I am realizing this path of drastic change did not start this year, it started last year. I began a new job on a new campus, my Mom died the day before inservice started. I went to work within three days to maintain my sanity and find a new normal. The classroom I was assigned to came with its own set of challenges but best of all, its own set of blessings. I learned a little about advocating for myself despite spending years trying to teach students to do the same thing. I had a group of seniors who kept me on my toes and kept me busy and gave me love, support, and a really hard time some days. In the spring, my husband’s father passed away after a long illness adding to the already long and stressful year we were living.  Some of these young people are happily still in my life to give me love, support, and reminders of that hard time they gave me. I get to see them grow instead of sending a class on its way and hope they are still doing well. I get to learn from them.

At the end of last school year I was fortunate enough to be invited to co teach with a dear friend and colleague at Camp Capers. Teaching is easy, teaching at church camp would stretch my brain in different ways. I was familiar with Camp Capers through my child who willingly went to summer camp the first year he could even though he had not previously spent a night away from us. He had two church buddies in the cabin with him and started his week off waving goodbye and plunging headlong into what I now know will be one of the biggest foundations of his life.  Last summer I dropped my child off knowing when I picked him up I would turn around and go to camp myself in under 24 hours. As I sat in our first meeting with staff I heard what a rough week it had been for many of the staff the previous week, I saw the tired faces and the stress of not knowing how our team would mesh with the summer staff. I wanted to ease those frustrations with a tale of my son’s week, in his words, the best week ever! I started telling the staff, none of whom I knew, about how wonderful my child’s week had been, how he had lost two grandparents that school year, life had been hard, and camp had helped him heal; somewhere in the middle of that explanation I broke down. Instead of comforting the staff, I was the stranger in the room who needed comfort and added to their already weary summer. And yet, I was welcomed with open arms. I taught, I learned the songs my son knew, I was pushed by the schedule physically and mentally. I was strongly but lovingly encouraged by the chaplain to help lead a chapel service; this was way out of my comfort zone. My turn came during night chapel at the swimming pool. After an open swim session and snacks we gathered around the pool and my co teacher held my hand through the service. Last year’s theme was gifts, “For God hath not given us the spirit of fear, but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind.”
2 Timothy 7 lives on my Twitter bio as a reminder that this experience was a gift to me, chapel at the pool was a fresh beginning, shaping my  life and sending me on a  new path I didn’t realize at the time. Camp Capers was the beginning of my healing process.  I have been invited back to teach and learn again with the same leadership group this summer with a theme of service.

Early this school year I began to lose my way, drowning in the negativity of yet another new team I was teaching with. I fell victim to fear rather than reminding myself I had a spirit of power. I doubted my sound mind and many years of experience on the whim of some far less experienced than myself. I didn’t love the person I was becoming in the classroom or out. We began to talk as a family about moving closer to extended family for support. 

Throughout the last year I have found friendships with several people in the Camp Capers family, most of them half my age with much to teach me as I watch them grow. Several of those have written blogs recently, some about camp and some about themselves, all of which have served as a tool to help me find my way on this new path. I am learning once again not to be afraid of loneliness; I will love myself. I will move and let myself be moved (Thank you, Lukas) I will rejoice in following this path and appreciate the opportunity I have to recreate myself after 20 years of teaching public education as I continue to actively search for God in my relationships (Thank you, Amanda). The true lessons I need are those I began to learn at Camp Capers last year and are all waiting for me when I go back to camp in a few weeks. I need to fully embrace who God created me to be and not be worried about what others think, it takes courage to let my freak flag show a little bit every once in a while, but it is definitely worth it. (Thank you, Adriana). 




Wednesday, June 24, 2015

Squirrel!

I try to keep the backyard well fed and well watered, the critters appreciate it. Sometimes I think I spoil the critters as evidenced by this guy who was letting me know I was falling down on the job of daily feeding time.