Archive for January 2008

The Burden of Self-Doubt

scrappybadger January 31st, 2008

If there were an award for lack of confidence or for the ability to see the worst in one’s self, I’m sure I would win it. At least once. I am plagued by unflagging self-doubt. I don’t trust my instincts. Sometimes I feel like I don’t even have any instincts though I know this isn’t the case.

This nagging diffidence pervades every part of my life, but today it is staring my teaching abilities square in the eye. I feel absolutely unprepared for the work I’m doing. My composition classes are going okay. After three years of teaching the first two semesters of composition I have something of a grip on it, but this first semester with American Literature is leaving me feeling bruised and battered. I guess it doesn’t help that I have a cold right now which cuts down on the time and energy I have for preparation. And I had little to no time to prepare in advance with such a short break between fall and spring classes. Regardless, I feel like a failure and a fraud.

I am a product of the public school system, and most days I’m okay with that. I got the basics. I think I’m a relatively intelligent person capable of interpreting, analyzing, and understanding the world around me to one degree or another. I’m fairly well read compared to lots of people I know, and I have a passion for literature and language that can only help in the classroom environment. I don’t, however, have a very good memory for history. I wasn’t trained well in classic literature and am too unsure of myself to ever broach the subject with anyone who seems to know even a little about it. My parents didn’t read to me; they didn’t do much reading at all in fact. It was rare as a kid to be around an adult who liked books. My mom read a little, but the books I remember seeing her with were ones like Flowers in the Attic and If There Be Thorns – sordid thrillers about violence and incest. As for my dad, I’m not sure he has ever read a book. He read magazines about car repair (he’s a mechanic), but even that happened infrequently.

I, on the other hand, loved books. My middle sister and I devoured them, and I still remember how much I loved the elementary school library. I’d visit, over and over again, the shelf to the left of a rarely used door near the back of the one room library. At eye level on that shelf was Misty of Chincoteague, a hardback book with frayed edges about the wild ponies of Assateague Island in Virginia. I must have checked that book out a dozen times or more until it felt like I was loaning it to the library rather than the other way around. I wish now that I’d stolen it, just never returned it to the library one of those times, but as a kid I wasn’t brave enough for such a thing.

I’m getting sidetracked here. I guess my point is that I’ve always loved to read. My sister and I would do it every moment we had the chance. I still remember Pa, my paternal grandfather, telling us that we were going to go blind once after he’d watched us hold up our books and read by the light of his headlights. We were all headed to a little steakhouse for dinner, and he was driving behind our parents.

Despite all this reading, I feel drastically under-read in the stuff that counts. I’m especially worried about what this means when I start to do my PhD work. I’m afraid I’ll be surrounded by graduate students who can quote Baudelaire, Socrates, and Thomas Hardy at will. It bothers me now, too, as an adjunct professor. I’m always waiting for someone to stump me with a question that I can’t answer. I know that a lot of it is first semester jitters. After all, I had them when I first started teaching composition, but knowing and feeling aren’t always the same thing for me.

I am not sure what to do with all of this academic self-doubt. I came back to my office this morning resolved to work out a reading chart. I thought I’d make a list of all the books I think I should have read already, put them on the chart, and figure out how to become well read within the next six months. Luckily, it only took me half an hour or so to see the ridiculousness of that idea. It isn’t possible. I’m teaching 5 classes, working as copy/style editor for the university and freelancing on the side, and trying to figure out how to start applying to PhD programs and study for GREs. Oh yeah, and I am also obsessing about foreign language requirements for most PhD programs, so I would also need to add “pick up a second language” to that list.

What is wrong with me? It isn’t normal to think you can do that much at one time. Either I am seriously delusional about my ability to work nonstop or I think I’m SuperBadger, possessor of extraordinary strength and willpower, able to leap giant stacks of books in a single bound. Or maybe I like to set impossible goals for myself in order to pat myself on the back later and say, “I knew you couldn’t do it. Good job.”

At Least I’m Not a BIG Snob

scrappybadger January 29th, 2008

Yeah, so I know it is a cliche for an English teacher (of any variety) to make fun of language foibles, but some of them are too good to pass up. I got this in my email today, and all I can say is that if they get increased presents then I want more presents too!

“We will increase the presents of a [technical support] staff members in these
buildings during this time.”

I really shouldn’t scoff, though, because I sometimes confuse incidents and incidence.

All the Places and the Spaces

scrappybadger January 26th, 2008

I come from a long line of people happy to stick close to the things and places that they know. Not only is most of my extended family in the same state, but also, with the exception of just a few, all live in the same general area within that state. I suspect they have different reasons for their lack of mobility, but when it comes right down to it I think that most of my family likes the comfort of being in a place with which they are intimately familiar.

It can also be claustrophobic and isolating. I want to see places, and the little bit of seeing that I’ve done this past year has just made me want more. Thus, I’ve decided to keep a wishlist, in no particular order, of places and spaces I’d like to visit.

I’ll start my list with Charis Books in Atlanta.

Oh, Queen Latifah, Not You Too

scrappybadger January 26th, 2008

Don’t do it; don’t buy into the idea that your body is still imperfect. Please, don’t hide the difficulty of being fat and the obvious pressure you feel to conform in euphemisms about “getting healthy.” Don’t pretend you are our friend, looking out for our “health,” when really you are peddling a diet program.

It was bad enough that they started covering your real beauty with make-up. It’s been hard to watch your demons manifest themselves in fluctuating weight as you try to make your body do and be something that it constantly feels the need to buck against. Now we have to watch you work for Jenny Craig.

Resist. Your fat is beautiful, and you know it. Don’t let them tell you otherwise.

Don’t let them tell me otherwise.

Quote of the Day

scrappybadger January 8th, 2008

I have two favorite quotes today.

Piig upon hearing yet another erectile dysfunction commercial:

“I am so tired of hearing about their limpy-ass dicks!”

Earlier in the day when I asked if she had a tissue:

“A clean one?”

“The Closest Shave You’ll Ever Know”

scrappybadger January 7th, 2008

Piig and I finally got around to seeing Sweeney Todd this weekend after several postponements. I had extremely high expectations, which I generally find leads to a little bit of disappointment, but the movie was actually quite good. It was good enough, in fact, that the almost 2 hour story line felt a little rushed.

Sweeney Todd was a must-see for me — a real triple hitter. There’s Johnny Depp, who I really like as an actor, a nineteenth-century setting right up my research alley, and the fact that its a musical. I love musicals — campy, weird, musicals. I don’t think most people would be able to guess that, but what can I say, I’m a big ball of contradictions.

I also really like Tim Burton’s cartoonish realism and realistic cartoons; he melds the two into something completely new. His dark humor appeals to my love of unhappy endings, and I have a soft spot for those pale characters, both real and cartoon, with the big, dark eyes. I don’t know why, but I just love them. As usual, he delivered on all fronts.

Lots of people have mentioned the violence in the film, but even that was classically Burtonesque. The blood, for example, wasn’t really the right color. It was heavy on the orange which made it more like the primary and secondary color swatches in an elementary art room than the gushing of a severed carotid artery. That makes sense, though, given that much of the slicing and dicing happens while Depp’s Sweeney Todd sings morbid show tunes.

There were even a few feminist messages in the movie. Without giving away too much I think I can say that the movie didn’t make light of women trapped, literally or figuratively, by men. It examined, ever so briefly, sexual depravity by way of Judge Turpin’s character and hinted at women’s sexual subordination and denigration. It also commented on a blinding (and ultimately deadly) obsession with beauty, and the only female character with even a small hope of a positive outcome complicates any fairytale reading that you could have of her future life. The movie comments, too, on classism, but it does so in a much more direct way, making it unlikely that the average viewer would generalize those ideas to everyday life.

Ultimately the movie comes back to something Sweeney Todd says within the first five minutes of the film. He tells a young sailor friend that life is difficult and sometimes it sucks; the man is young enough (and financially secure enough) that he simply hasn’t experienced that part of life yet. It’s something I’ve been feeling a lot lately as my young shine has started to wear off a bit. As I start to show the first few signs of tarnish, I have to acknowledge that nothing is as easy as it used to seem. It isn’t a realization I wanted to come to, just as Sweeney Todd didn’t want to be grizzled by years of hard work, false imprisonment, and thoughts of revenge, but there it sits nonetheless.