Reflections

MLK Day 2024: Listen to Those on the Margins

Martin Luther King Day, 2024, finds the world wracked by war, teeming with refugees fleeing various persecutions, people suffering from deep poverty, while a minority of world’s people live in the wealthy ignorance of privilege. How do we change this? How do those of us who live in the wealthy parts of this weeping world…

“Poems for a Deadly Troubled Time” Philip C. Kolin’s White Terror / Black Trauma: Resistance Poems about Black History

Philip C. Kolin’s beautiful new book, White Terror Black Trauma, serves as a guidebook on American history. Its poems lead the reader through a history most of us were never taught: the centuries of white violence inflicted on black people. From 1619 and the violence of American slavery, to the era of lynching, the Tulsa…

You Can Help to Resettle a Refugee

Yes, you can. It might be the most patriotic act one can take these days. The world is teeming with people on the move from war, climate disasters, political repression. Perhaps the most vulnerable refugees today are LGBTQ refugees. These people simply seek to live safe and happy lives. But in many countries they are…

Aging: A School for Confidence

Aging can teach us many lessons. Its difficult ones include humility and fragility. But some of its lessons are consoling. One of its most consoling lessons, that I have only seen recently, is confidence. I see this in my work as a teacher. Not my teaching work with students, but my work as a teacher,…

Aging: A School for Humility

It’s powerful, for sure. For me, the experience of aging brings about a constant and growing awareness of one’s fragility, the temporary quality of our bodies and our days. Various health concerns emerge and cause one to embrace a kind of caution, a slowness. Whether it’s cancer or vision or the various and surprising pains,…

The Healing Power of Green

I find myself in Washington, D.C.’s Rock Creek Park more than once a week. Sometimes I just drive through a section of the park, sometimes I go for a hike or a short walk. Sometimes I bring lunch and sit. Sometimes I write. There’s something about the woods, in every season, that I find soothing…

Teaching Year #34: Letting the Literature Lead

Teaching Year 34 is done. Like most school years, this year held some wonderful moments and some heartbreak as well. In the classroom, the year felt successful. We had some great encounters with American Literature. From Anne Bradstreet, Emerson, Wheatley, Dickinson, and Douglass, to Whitman, Sandburg, Hughes, Coates, Silko, Clifton, and Espada, many of my…

Loading…

Something went wrong. Please refresh the page and/or try again.


Follow My Blog

Get new content delivered directly to your inbox.