tamarjacobson

Looking back and thinking forward

Category: Uncategorized

Emotional power

Quote of the day:

This is one aspect of teaching I hadn’t thought of until now – the emotional power teachers hold over children. [A student in class]

Tomorrow, I am on the road again, traveling back to my beloved Buffalo to see numerous old friends. But first, on the way, I must deliver a keynote speech. It is something different and I decided to use power point. And so, lately, I have been playing and experimenting with a lot that power point has to offer. What fun it has been! I decided to test out the almost final product with my students yesterday. They split up into groups representing faculty, graduate and undergraduate students, and administrators, taking their roles and duties seriously and writing feedback for me at the end of the presentation. I felt supported and encouraged by them, not to mention learning much from their valuable suggestions.

"Emotional power," one student wrote about at the end. I have been thinking about that since reading her words. I decided to place her quote right at the beginning of the presentation. Because, for a long time now, I have known that our emotions have an impact on our relationships with young children, but when I read the word, "power," it elicits a different dimension in the discussion.

More dramatic, even, urgent.

I’ll be away for a few days and am not sure about blogging time. I think I might be enjoying myself way too much, bathing and enveloping myself in the warmth of old friends who knew me then, and still know me now.

A year ago at Tamarika: A decision is made

Have a laugh!

Quote of the day:

Sometimes when life gets turbulent, a friend’s touch is the only thing that keeps us going. Oprah Winfrey

Tamar_paul_3

Click on picture to enlarge [thanks Sandy]

We had dinner last night with friends and I got to meet, Paul, one really classy guy. I could almost say I met my match in direct-ness and oh my, how he made me laugh.

Have a joyful week, everyone …

A year ago at Tamarika: Paradigm shift

Relationships

I have been focusing my mind towards the Origins of the Future. The semester starts to draw to a close and the work intensifies. I try to free and clear my way to large thoughts about the bigger picture, and, instead, am pulled back to piles of grading or last minute obligations. I have been wondering why I am so fascinated with research on brain development, specifically the parts about emotional memory. Perhaps I have always been a curious person. And yet, I have never seen myself that way. I know that I adore discovering things, uncovering, rediscovering. Have always felt therapy is like that, unraveling something deep in my mind. It feels like walking out of a dark cave and into a strong light. It feels like I have always known it somewhere, almost as in a dream. It feels like an awakening into the dawn of a really hopeful new day, a glorious morning.

While I was away, I attended meetings that gave me hope for young children’s futures, mainly because of the many great people who are concerned about, and who are tirelessly working for them. My own work becomes strengthened and confirmed after each gathering like that. After a surprising dinner with a colleague, which was both shocking and sad, I understood what Perry has been saying all along. It is all about relationships.

Indeed, origins for the future lie in our relationships with very young children.

But, for now, I must work on these bigger picture and other seemingly smaller duties of the week. Sporadic blog-posting is what I see ahead of me this week. But who knows? Life is what happens

… ah, but you know the rest?

A year ago at Tamarika: Changing plans

Away

Quote of the day:

For the most part, I don’t spend a lot of time beating myself up over things done or not done in the past. But I do want to try to learn from the past, using the feelings the past brings up to figure out how I want the future to be different. [An e-mail from my friend, Cheryl]

I am away for a few days. Limited access to a computer. But I am checking in. If you want to hear more from me I am telling my stories today at Ronni Bennett’s new site: The Elder Storytelling Place.

A passing thought

When I was young

I had a hole in my soul so big

I fear

my son might have fallen into it

Keep on …

Tnycartoon_070408

[New Yorker Cartoon]

A year ago at Tamarika: Maybe this will quell my anger

Keep on keeping on

Quotes of the day:

The only thing I knew how to do
Was to keep on keepin’ on like a bird that flew,
Tangled up in blue
.

Bob Dylan

This is the life of a family. This self-absorption, this shared separateness in the same room, this silence and slow time. We are three galaxies expanding side by side, we are entangled particles at lightyears’ distance. We are connected by superstrings. Richard Cohen

Easter_4_2

Happy Easter to all who celebrate! With love from darling Sasha!

A year ago at Tamarika: I ain’t your punkin

Think mediocrity

Years ago, when I was in the struggling to complete my doctoral dissertation phase, a parent of one of the children at our center, who was also a professor at the college, said to me, "Tamar, think mediocrity." He meant that if I tried to create the world’s best masterpiece dissertation, I would never get it done. His words released my brain from its perfectionist streak and I was able to write, write, write until it was finished.

From time to time, when I get stuck with a piece of writing, work or life project, I think mediocrity, and my brain is freed to breathe for itself. What a strange notion, you might be thinking, not to strive for excellence. After all, we tell everyone to be the very best they can be for the rewards, once we have arrived at the destination at the top, are golden. I have always tried to be extra special at whatever it was I was doing, even washing floors. I always said that I learned to wash floors from the one person who knew best how to clean. I met her on kibbutz in the children’s house where I worked when I was twenty one. Everyone was in awe because we got on so well. She was known to be a perfectionist and no one could match up to her expectations. However, I learned fast. She was especially impressed with how I wiped clean the light switches, without her having to tell me!

Competition for my mother’s love was great in my family. Her favorites were clear. As a child I had the illusion that if I could just be as strong, as great, intelligent, lovely as whomever her favorite was, whether my brother, a cousin, or friend, I would finally become her priority. I worked hard at that and, naturally, transferred those desires to the rest of my life: husbands, work, friendships, mothering, you name it! Mostly I would put myself in impossible situations where the die was cast before I started out and, somehow, I just could never match up. In the end, I started to realize that getting it right to become everyone’s priority was a futile task. It just was not going to happen.

About six years ago, it seemed as if I had reached the peak of my career. It was an exciting time. I headed up organizations, was recruited and sought out in the local early childhood community, invited to speak all over the place, and was even offered the opportunity to write a book. During that year I lost 40 pounds weight and looked and felt great. I was flying high. It almost felt as if I had made it, whatever that means. And then … one day, it seems, it was over.

We moved away and I found myself alone, anonymous, and without work. It has taken two and a half years to regroup, rebuild myself, and find my place professionally. Personally, I realize that fifty eight years later, I am still not my mother’s priority. Nothing has changed. I have to face the fact that I am just plain and simply me. Sometimes I do great work, give a terrific speech, write a good piece or two, but mostly I am as average as can be. No startling revelations or brilliant intelligence. On the whole, I like to get up in the morning, play with my cat, drink a cup of coffee and look out at the tall oak tree that stands outside my window. I do not get into a sweat if it seems I might be five minutes late for a meeting, or if my class does not go as well as planned. Somehow it does not seem as important to match up. I would not know anymore to whom anyway. All those so-called great people out there are just people, plain and simple, like me.

I joined the health club last week and as I was swimming in the pool back and forth, back and forth, in the lukewarm water with gentle meditation music piped through in the back ground, I started to weep. It felt like relief. It was as if I was wrapping my arms around me and warming my hungry, hole-in-the-soul spirit. It felt safe, caring, comforting. As if I have survived something. Like my favorite scene in The Last Temptation of Christ, when the angel saves Jesus from the cross and bathes his wounds. I can stop working so hard to be the most special professor, author, mother, daughter, wife, sister, friend, blogger … whatever. Just relax and be me and if people like or want me – great. If not, it does not matter. Not really. Not in the grand scheme of things. I think I was there for a short while, at the top, I mean, and although there was a thrill, a buzz, it did not bring me any closer to feeling extra specially loved or acknowledged.

I smiled through my tears remembering Jeff’s words: "Tamar[ika], think mediocrity."

A year ago at Tamarika: A few reflections

Knowing you, knowing me

Quote of the day:

This made me think how interesting, and unusual, it is that I know a lot of deep and important things about you, but nothing about your practical tastes and preferences! Jean, in an e-mail to me

I have been blogging for almost two and a half years and along the way have become quite close with one or two other bloggers. Close enough to e-mail from time to time. People I read daily, sometimes two or three times a day. And yet, how much do we really know about each other? Usually, we are drawn to people of like minds, but does that mean we are compatible in other ways? Are we night or morning people? What kinds of foods do we enjoy? Do we clean out the sink after brushing our teeth? Do we curse and carry on with road rage when someone cuts in front of us while driving? Do we allow the other to finish a sentence before jumping in? Do we use face cream, perfume, deodorant? How’s about talc? Do we saunter or walk briskly down the street? What kind of laugh do we have? High pitched, guffawing, from the belly, rasping?

I like to think of myself as pretty easy going, usually waiting to see what others choose to do or eat and then following suit. This, on the other hand, can drive people crazy. They find me indecisive and do not know what I want. I am not very good at small talk and so when I remain silent during those parts of the conversation, people sometimes see me as snobbish or as having a superior air.

Like anyone, it takes awhile to get to know me.

And then, again, does anyone ever really know anyone?

A year ago at Tamarika: Change is in the air

SOS Redbud

Just in from my friend Mira:

Please watch the YouTube video made by students in Colgate University’s teacher education program in their American School class taught by Professor Barbara Regenspan. The film carries the message that the money being spent on High Stakes testing would be used better to eradicate child poverty. They are trying to get 2000 "hits" in the next 3 days.