Harper College, located in northwest Chicagoland, is a community college serving 40,000 students. Since the 2011-2012 school year, Harper College has a selected a title as part of their “One Book, One Harper” community read. (A community read is where a local library sponsors a community-wide book club featuring one title which is read and discussed locally. […]
This week
Teaching Authors will celebrate it's first Blogiversary! (I would insert a quick verse of "Happy Birthday", but that would require copyright permission.) So, minus the song, I have the pleasure of kicking off Blogiversary Week. (And yes, that's my eighth birthday...no permissions needed.)
I am not one to "Wow. A year already? How time flies." For me, time doesn't so much fly a Concorde, but like a crop duster, puttering low over the fields, with frequent stops for fuel. Very frequent stops. This year has seemed exceptionally long for me, partly due to my eye surgery last June. I was working with one eye for what seemed like months. (It was a convenient excuse for my numerous typos.)
What has this year meant to me? Well, without getting all "Miss American Farewell Speech," I can say that this year has been a blessing. Meeting new writers and teachers (and sometimes even in person!) gives me the one thing that all writers (teaching or otherwise) crave...the feeling that we are not all alone. We spend so much time in isolation with our chosen instrument of writing, living in our heads even in the presence of others, we forget that what we create in solitude is read by other people. Sometimes lots of them!
I still have that solitary confinement feeling as I try to wrestle two novels into shape, but when I sit down to write my blog, I have this wonderful sense of being surrounded by all of you. I can see you...even without the old Romper Room Magic Mirror (extremely dated Boomer reference). I see you with your coffee cups, stacks of "urgent" paperwork from the Central Office, reading us as a guilty pleasure, all the while feeling as if you should be doing something important. I see you too, you stay-at-home parents who have wedged reading this blog between play dates or homeschooling lessons or magically concocting an item that your child remembers at 10 pm he needs by tomorrow morning. (Slight digression...the worst case scenario I've heard was a mom who sculpted a boars head out of SPAM. Don't ask me why.) That all of you teachers and writers have found the time to visit with us on line is a humbling sort of honor. Please don't stop.
My secret guilty pleasure (which when you read this will no longer be a secret) is checking the blog stats a couple of times a week, to see where our readers are located. I know that you are from Alaska and Australia and Belgium. I know that there is a big bunch of faithful readers from the Midwest. It's a real mindblower for me, to know that someone on the other side of the world might read what we Teaching Authors have to say. In return, we are thrilled to hear from all of you, no matter where you live. We are all in this teaching-writing thing together. Writing and teaching are the hardest and most rewarding job you will ever have, whether you are in Topeka or Timbuktu. We look forward to many more Blogiversaries...as long as we keep hearing from you.
OK, altogether everybody, a chorus of "It's a Small World After All." Wait no. Those pesky copyrights again. Well just imagine I am dumping a cybershower of balloons on you right now, wherever you are. And in the words of the Great Maurice Sendak, "Let the wild rumpus begin!"
Out and Abo
I LOVE the birthday photo, Mary Ann. What a great picture and post to kick off our celebration!
And let me add a "happy blogoversary" to you all. I love what you've done collectively and individually here to make the blog fun and a great resource. Here's to many more years!
Congratulations and keep up the great work!
Well,I do recall promising myself, "Esther! You will never EVER blog!"
But I'm so very glad Carmela helped me see the Wonders of It All - and - the Wonders of YOU All, my fellow Teaching Authors, and that I over-ruled the Luddite who lives inside of me.
I've even mastered - well, maybe that's pushing it a bit - the Blogger Software, yes, Carmela? :)
I especially loved presenting with my fellow TA's this past March in Springfield.
I can't wait to share this Blogiversary when I speak to the Starved Rock Reading Council Wednesday in central Illinois.
Thank you, TA's, for having me.
Thank you, dear readers, for taking us in to your hearts and classrooms and writing rooms.
Thank you, Greg and Hevindester.
And Esther, I say "Yes!" you have mastered Blogger. Pat yourself on the back. I'm so glad you agreed to be part of our great TeachingAuthors team.
Carmela
Happy Happy Blogversary to some of my favorite people, and one of my favorite reads!
Happy Birthday from Australia! I always enjoy this blog and Google Reader amkes sure I never miss a post :) Sandy
Thanks Bobbi and Sandy!
Speaking of birthdays, today is our very own April Halprin Wayland's birthday. April, I love that your poem for today is called "Birthday." And the image of floating on "Feather River" is so lovely. I'm wishing you a Feather River-kind of day. :-)
For readers who haven't seen April's Poem-A-Day challenge, check out:
http://www.aprilwayland.com/poetry/poetry-month/
Happy Blogiversary! And may you have many more.