Archive for the ‘School’ Category

Travel

Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

While I’m still in the boarding school train of thought, we used to travel a lot. My Mom worked for Pan Am and my Dad for Thomas Cook. I’ve come to appreciate how lucky I was. By the time I was in fourth grade, I’d been to Paris, Brussels, Jamaica, England, Italy, Germany and Switzerland (I was too young to remember the last three), along with numerous trips home to Ireland. At the boarding school, most of the kids were children of diplomats. I knew kids from Belgium, Spain, America, Nigeria, England and Ireland. It was quite an experience to realize that we were all basically the same, and wanted the same things. Now, if only we could convince the adults that it’s better to work toward a common goal.

Free time at the boarding school usually meant making do with whatever was about, and your imagination. We had are own “hand-held” game back then, “Conkers.” It involved running a string through a horse chestnut and swinging at the opponent’s “Conker” with yours. Decidedly low-tech, but there is a “World Championship!”

Hey! Let's play Conkers!

Hey! Let's play Conkers!

When my brother made his confirmation, our Dad came down to take us out (a really special treat). Our younger brother was over in Ireland at the time, too. While my elder brother and I were in boarding school, he got to go to Brazil!  One of my brother’s friends was from Nigeria and, since his family couldn’t come to him, Dad took him out with us.

What knees! No long pants until you were fifteen. Better to wear out your knees then your pants.

What knees! No long pants until you were fifteen. Better to wear out your knees then your pants.

Neat

Friday, November 20th, 2009

When I was a kid, I went to a boarding school in Ireland for a couple of years (it’s now a 4-star hotel, the food has certainly improved). Up in the morning, dress, run down the drive and back, then in for breakfast. If someone didn’t make their bed correctly, the nuns would pull all the beds in that kid’s dorm apart. His dorm room companions, just back from the long run, would have to do them again and miss breakfast. The beds would be perfect the next morning (nothing like psychological warfare and setting the messy kid up for retribution). If the nuns saw my studio today, there’d be no breakfast for a week.

I took my kids there for a visit while it was still a school. The government had built a motorway that cut the drive to half it’s original size. I even drove them around to where it originally ended but they still didn’t believe me when I said it was miles long, uphill both ways . . . in the snow . . . barefoot . . . in wool underwear (at least, that’s true).

You're in for it, the shilling didn't bounce on your bed! (Spelt "scilling" in Irish)

You're in for it, the shilling didn't bounce on your bed! (Spelt "scilling" in Irish)

Another lifetime:

My brother and I at Our Lady's Bower.

My brother and me at Our Lady's Bower.

A little manners . . . Please!

Friday, October 30th, 2009

Erica Jacobs, a professor at George Mason University, has written an article where she gives mention to some books worth reading. One of them is “Caveman Manners and Other Polite Poems” written by David Steinberg and illustrated by . . . me!

Morning at school never changes.

Some of my students think this is when I went to school.

Guilty

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

Just when you think no one noticed . . .

Did you finish your homework?

Did you finish your homework?

Grumpies

Saturday, October 24th, 2009

I wasn’t in a bad mood but I was on a rush hour train, not the off-peak I first planned. How much is the upgrade?

Bad day on the moon.

Bad day on the moon.

Could this be one of my students?

Could this be one of my students?