To the five people who read my blather: you're sweet. Thanks. I assume I'm saying something with which you identify.
I have been contemplating my coffee travel mug.
It is metal. It is pink, but the paint is peeling off, so the metal is flaking through.
It was left behind by a student at Hinkley who never reclaimed it.
It has a handle.
It features a rainbow straw that I received for free at Starbucks before I stopped going to Starbucks---so maybe a year ago? I do not think she was supposed to give me the free straw, but it's perfect.
If you have No Idea Who I Am, you would look at this pink flaky rainbow combo and possibly determine that the owner is...gay. Probably a gay man.
Or a child. Possibly a child. A Child who drinks coffee.
Or a proud female who loves pink and is an LGBTQ ally.
None of these are accurate. You've met me.
I'm cheap and lazy.
The mug and straw were free.
This contributes to the confusion regarding 'Who I Am".
A woman with short hair like mine told me that currently female students---who are growing their hair very long, waist length in many cases-- said they prefer long hair because short hair means you went through trauma. You went through something and cut your hair off.
My response was simple. The long haired girls have no trauma because they don't have to clean their own shower drains. That's some trauma, and a reason for short hair.
Nothing is what it appears. Stop trying to attach a reason that fits your narrative to why I look and live the way I do.
I have only seven students in my Theatre 1 class. Ridiculously small. We meet at the table on stage at the beginning of class to chat about the day's plan. Some days something has happened in the world that I can see is effecting them. Or me. So we talk. I asked if this bothered them, if they'd rather "just do theatre", knowing that what I'm teaching is Theatre Is Everything----society, politics, religion, history. But I always check. I usually get a silent moment letting me know we're all good. The week before last, they said "Actually, kmart, we appreciate you. You're the only teacher who tells us the truth."
I gotta say, that hit me. Since leaving Littleton I've had a lot of work to do on myself. Part of what got me in trouble there was being too passive aggressive. Writing a blog instead of stanidng toe to toe with the bullies. I don't play that any more. I speak truth.
Weirdly ( or not), one of my Hink kids who attended Mamma Mia said I look and sound so much happier. I answered---within earshot of the AP who hired me---that I love Kennedy. I don't have a target on my back. The student replied "You speak truth to power. It's about time you're somewhere safe and supported." There are an insane amount of factors against this building, but none of them are against me personally. I told my former student it's a "good" fight, because it's wrong and corrupt, but I'm with others who are standing up, not the one being targeted.
Since Littleton I have lived Atticus Finch's words "I wanted you to see what real courage is, instead of getting the idea that courage is a man with a gun in his hand. It's when you know you're licked before you begin, but you begin anyway and you see it through no matter what."
I did not have real courage at Littleton. I was buillied and panicked, making horirble choices along the way out of fear. I regret every moment after Amy Oaks arrived.
I had real courage at Hinkley. That's where I found it. I was targeted for reasons beyond my own control, I faced admin and the district in person and toe to toe, even though I knew I was not going to win. I spoke the truth and I held against complete corruption. I was even called a racist and I went to HR and the union. Nothing was resolved, naturally, but I did not write a blog about it: I faced it. In person. And I was told to my face in front of witnesses that nothing was going to happen, because the admin-- a young man of color---who made the accusation, did so becuase he has a "fear of white women".
OK. I calmly replied that I have a fear of unhinged administrators throwing incidiary false accusations at me, and of men who are several feet taller and louder than myself. I spoke my truth. It did not matter. Though I did get a different evaluator---one month before the end of the year. The issue happend the last week of January. What admin hoped was going to throw me further under the bus backfired, as the admin who took over had been my evaluator the year before, and herself had issues with her colleague. I was in the clear.
The issue above occured because this particularly large and loud administrator had bullied his way into my face after an outreach event at the middle school, and made inapprorpriate jokes that I "laughed" at. Anyone with any social awareness knew what was acutally going on, I just wanted to be out of the situation. He later tried to claim I agreed with him in that moment because I laughed, and I pointed out that he was my admin and signifuciantly louder and larger than myself, and I was trying to get away. I said "I'm a theatre teacher, and as such I tell kids constnatly that what they are doing and what they think they are doing do not always match." That is when he stood up, slammed his laptop shut and called the three of us present---all white women---racists.
There. I blogged about it. That was....three years ago? I dunno. Time has no meaning.
Young actors frequently argue with me when I tell them they cannot be heard, or understood, or are not communicating their intentions. It is a laborious process to retrain them into understanding that what they think they are doing/ saying and what it appears that they are doing/saying does not match. The sucessful ones understand, and work to be more clear on stage and off. It works in real life too. Shocking, I know.
Those who do not take the direction fail at theatre and continue to be misunderstood in life. That's not on me.
As a Liberal White Gen X Woman With Resting Bitch Face, I know what I'm talking about.
Unless I'm truly paying attenion, my outside does not match my inside. Particulary as I get older and give no shits about what anyone thinks about me.
So my coffee mug is/is not me. It was free. It is beaten up and the pink paint is chipping. The rainbow straw was free. I am an LGBTQ ally.
Scene.