Hey Fourth Graders (and Mrs. Barnett!),
How are you doing? I've been thinking about you all week, wondering how you're doing. I (probably obviously, since I'm able to do this blog post), have power back, and am wishing, wishing, wishing it back on in Fair Haven for you all.
I'm sure you have Burning Story Ideas you've been adding to your WNB at home, that you've been enjoying the unexpected time with your family and friends. I'm anxious to get back to school and hear your stories.
Some people on Facebook update their status each day in November with something they're thankful for. We'll each start our own thankful list in our WNB as soon as we're back (you can, of course, start it before we're back if you want!).
Until then, though, I wanted to share a poem that I've been working on. Coreen, my best friend, suggested that we use a poem called
Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird by Wallace Stevens as a mentor to write our own poems about how we've gotten through the blackout and Hurricane Sandy.
So, I'm including my poem at the end of this post- maybe we'll all write our own next week as a writing homework. It would be fun to see how we all got through this hurricane.
See you soon!
Thirteen Ways of Getting Through a Hurricane
Invite
neighbors over
who you’ve
meant to have over,
but haven’t
yet,
and play
card games
by the candlelight.
Sleep in.
Pull all the
candles out,
from every
drawer
and cabinet
and shelf
and move
them around with you,
from kitchen
to family room,
to light your way.
Make two
trips to 711 to call family:
Cell phones aren’t working.
All’s ok.
Use
spaghetti noodles
to light the
gas stove
and cook
whatever’s
thawed in
the freezer
(it will be
bad by tomorrow).
Download new
books
on your
kindle
and read
them
under two
blankets
because it’s
chilly
without the
heat.
Hold your
breath
and scrub
fast,
fast,
fast,
in an ice
cold shower.
Then sprint
back
to the
aforementioned
two blankets.
Nap.
Take walks
through town.
When the
nights seem
to be
creeping by,
move to
Derek’s Jeep,
charge
phones
(still not
working, but just in case…),
plug the
laptop in,
and watch Parenthood episodes.
Take a trip
to Sickles
and stock up
on “necessities”:
salad,
turkey
sloppy joe's,
mashed
potatoes,
sandwich,
caramel
chocolate popcorn.
Do a
celebration dance
when the
power
comes
back
on.