Saturday, January 21, 2006

Christmas Here and There

If you read my posts below on a "professor's life" and such, you might think that I "skipped" Christmas. Well, I did fit it in. Here are a few pictures:
Where's the Christmas Tree? Well, see that little pine tree in the center? It has a red bow on it! That is our 2005 Christmas tree. It is a Black Hills Spruce...a tree I bought at Walmart during the clearance sale in September. I have been keeping it in a pot, so it came inside for the holidays and is currently a houseplant.


Of special interest to me, of course, is the fact that there is a TOMATO PLANT right there with all the Christmas presents. Yes, you are seeing right. That plant has ripe tomatoes on it. It is the plant that I plucked ripe tomatoes from at Thanksgiving. Sadly, however, I must report that the plant passed on to "plant heaven" not long after Christmas. I now only have 2 tomato plants living from last summer's garden....but, with nuture...I hope to have them back in the ground come springtime!

Here are a couple pictures from our Christmas Dinner at my husband's sister's house:

We had a terrific time! Lasagne,
Ham, Salad,
Taters....

Christmas Misc....Giftmaking

Even though my time was short, I needed to make "gifts from the heart and hand". On Dec. 23rd/24th I took time to make "firestarter" cups for friends and family who have woodstoves. This picture is of the basket of firestarters I made for our woodstove. How do you do it? Gather old candle stubs/ends/unwanteds, melt them down, put some sawdust or wood chips in the dixie cup, pour the melted wax over the top until the sawdust/chips are covered. Let cool. I threaded yarn through the top of the cups to pull them shut and make them quite "pretty". These are working fantastically! An old Girl Scout craft!

For momentary stress relief during the end of semester rush of early December (between Dec.5th - 21st), I began doing a little crocheting. Here you see an example of the homemade dish cloths that I crocheted. These took very little time to do...and I found making them quite relaxing when I had enough of grading papers....before the exam week hit! I actually used crocheting as a "reward" for working hard on grading papers.

The crocheted dish cloth became part of a "Snowman Soup Kit" that I made and gave to several people. The ingredients for such can be found on the Internet, including some ideas for how to write a poem. I used the ideas I found and came up with my own poem. These were a real hit!! The kit includes cocoa, marshmallows, peppermints, chocolate, and my homemade dishcloth.

Of all the gifts given, I enjoyed giving these homemade items the best! ~S

Surrounded by Papers


Here's a picture of me during Christmas Break 2004...another fine example of the daunting task of grading papers/projects when the Fall college term ends.

Although I have a home office, my livingroom easy chair is where I settle in when the stacks of 3-ring binders and papers are tall. ~S

A Professor's Life

It has been a month since I've had a bit of time to write in this Blog. My last entry was just as the week of final exams and the end of a semester were hitting. The flurry of work that came with that ending put a stop to my creative writings and meanderings here in the net. I had too much to do.

I know that when I was a college student, I used to wonder why I could never find my professor when I'd go looking for him or her. I'd see office hours posted on the office door, or in the syllabus, and generally, a professor might have been available during those times. I also really never gave it a thought as to what professors were doing when the Christmas break came along. My only concern as a college student was getting the grade sheet in the mail telling me what my handed in work had awarded me, and relaxing inbetween semesters.

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My First College Instructor Christmas - 1996:
My worst ever Christmas Break was many years ago (Dec. 1996) when I was an instructor at a University. The week before finals we had a horrible snow storm, and then during finals week, we had a huge blizzard. The blizzard closed roads and although the University tried to limp along with the staff that could make it in, basically, everything was at a stand still. For my courses, students needed to turn in portfolios of work (special education projects). We didn't have "finals" per say. I was unable to get to college because I lived in a different town and the highways were closed. To add to this, Christmas in 1996 fell on Weds of that year. The term ended on Dec. 20th.

I was finally able to get to college on Dec. 20th. When I approached my college office door, there were 3-ring binders/portfolio projects stacked 3-deep and 3 feet high leaning against my door. I had to move all of the projects to even get into my office. I began the arduous task or organizing all the piles of submitted work. I had to seek boxes to organize all of the items into, and since there was no way I could get the grading done there, I got a 2-wheel cart and took 3 loads out to my car. I took these home to my tiny cottage. Grades were due - NOON Dec. 26th.

Now, originally the projects would have been in my hands in a gradual hand-in progression, and although daunting, certainly a bit more manageable than getting these all at once. Oh...did I mention I had 40 students in one class? 25 in another? etc.....etc.....

I had plans to be with family on Dec. 21st and 22nd....so those days were not available for grading projects. Dec. 23rd was, although I also had to get ready for Christmas with my daughter. Since I was living by myself, I worked from sun up to sun down on those portfolios and papers. What sticks so graphically in my mind is my Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. I was alone, so I sat on my loveseat in my small livingroom, surrounded by those boxes, and steadily plowed thru grading all of those projects, while watching TV. I had friends that were like a mom and dad to me, so they would call every so often to see how I was doing. On Christmas Day, I was still working on the pile. I worked at a feverish pace...and around 3 p.m. on Christmas Day in 1996, my friends called me up and insisted I go out to dinner with them. They came by to pick me up....trundled me out to the van, and away we went. In my hands were the last of the papers. I had about 5 left to do. I insisted on taking them, as we had about a 20 minute drive. I sat in the back of the van, grading the last of the papers. My friend "mom" kept shaking her head. I finished that last little stack.

After our marvelous dinner - we went to a Christmas buffet - I was nearly to the point of having some time for myself. Late Christmas night, I finished averaging up the grades, and on Dec. 26th (exhausted) I drove the 22 miles to the college and submitted my grades before the noon deadline. I then drove 300 miles more (with a lighter spirit) to go and pick up my daughter for her Christmas visit. It felt so good to finally have some time off to spend with friends and family until the first full week of January.

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As I planned the Spring 06 courses, I tried diligently to make sure that the projects and papers are not going to bury me the first week of May, that they come in gradually across the semester...but, in reality....they will still bury me at the end.

~S

P.S. On a side note...I always wondered why a professor I came to know (Reno Parker) was ALWAYS at college during Christmas Break and Spring Break.....Now I think I know!!!!