Hallway Reader

Today I walk into the school, sign in at the front office and attach my volunteer sticker to my orange sweater. The ladies sitting at the desks know me well and ask me about my weekend. I grin, say it was fine, then we make small talk about the weather for a few minutes. I’m eager to start down the hallway. The people in charge had me sign a volunteer agreement form when I registered the kids for school. I am allowed to slip in and out of the library and the third grade class, to shelve books, sort papers. Library isn’t ever bad, but my favorite place is third grade, Ms. P’s class.

If I am being honest, I can say I didn’t volunteer to benefit anyone other than myself. My own third grader has such a poor track record of passing on important dates and bringing home essential homework that I found it necessary to have a physical window into his world. I wanted there to be clear communication between myself and the other grownups in his life, and volunteering was my ticket. I hired a college girl to watch my littlest kids during naptime, and now I walk the eight minutes over to the school on Tuesday and Thursday afternoons.

The kids are a rainbow of colors, a jumble of busyness. Their eyes light up when I enter the room. I am just as excited as they are–we get to read together. Disappointment is immediate if their name doesn’t appear on my list, the one given to me by their teacher. I don’t know why they like me so well, but maybe it is the magic that happens in the hallway.

I only have two or three kids in a group with me. We sit cross legged on the floor right outside the door and I introduce myself. Then I invite them to sit close next to me and I whisper-ask all my questions.

What’s your name? What do you love to do? Tell me about your family, where you live. What do you want to be when you grow up? What languages do you speak?

Then we get down to business. “Are you ready to read? I love reading. I want you to love it, too.”

They are obviously the struggling readers. The first time–no, second, third and every time–I am shocked at the low level of reading. My four year old at home can sound out words as well as many of these third graders.

I consider the soil where they are growing. I have no deep knowledge of what their home life is like, if they’ve ever been read to in English outside of school. My initial guess is no, and most kids confirm to me that they only speak a language other than English at home.

How have they been moved up to third grade without becoming fluent in basic vowel sounds or sight words like it, as, the?

They are eager to please me, but I wonder why there isn’t an afterschool resource working with these kids to nail phonics?

Or am I judging this all wrong? These kids have a whole extra set of rules: to learn, in English. I cannot separate out kids who happen to be bilingual from underperforming readers without becoming too nosy. The former are our future translators, negotiators, doctors, nurses–unlimited potential. They could race to the finish and a second language is just an extra badge on their chest. But the latter, their future hangs in the balance. And all are on the cusp of becoming literate. It is crucial. We have got to get these kids reading. Third grade reading proficiency is the top predictor of graduating from high school. High school graduation predicts success as an adult.

Kids grow up into adults. Adults run the world.

Therefore (if for no other reason at all, but there are a billion reasons), kids matter. Every single one.

Reading is a lifeline.

In How Schools Work (2018), former secretary of education, Arne Duncan, describes how his mother began an after school tutoring program in Chicago:

Her center started in 1961 after she volunteered to teach a Bible study class at Kenwood-Ellis Church. She gathered the kids around at her first class, a little nervous. She was a young white teacher and these were all nine-year-old black girls from the neighborhood. Each child took up a Bible, and Sue instructed them to open it to a certain book and page. She read the first couple verses and then went around the room. What she found was that none of these children could read. They were all in fourth grade, and they were all functionally illiterate.

From there, she decided that it wasn’t Bible instruction that was needed but instruction, period. She began an after-school program with virtually no money, getting the church to donate space.

(How Schools Work, pg. 160)

This is incredible to me, completely simple, fundamental, obvious. Yet most of us haven’t a clue. Maybe we are just too consumed by our own problems, but if you are reading this right now, literacy isn’t one of them.

Kids need to have their basic needs met. All kids.

Arne describes how everyday his mom would bring in twenty-five pounds of apples and three pounds of cheese for the kids to eat. Her motto was with love, support, and high expectations, any kid could succeed.

But first, love in action.  

What good is it, my brothers, if a man claims to have faith but has no deeds? Can such a faith save him? Suppose a brother or sister is without clothes and daily food. If one of you says to him, “Go, I wish you well; keep warm and well fed,” but does nothing about his physical needs, what good is it? In the same way, faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by action, is dead.

James 2:14-17

This is where we begin, friends. What door will you take to helping others? Feeding those who don’t have food? Reading? Pulling children close to you and whispering words that say I care about you?

Christians who are concerned about planting churches in needy areas, seeking to convert lost souls and proclaim the Gospel–do you realize the kids in your neighborhood are hungry and illiterate?

Your feet are on the floor. Walk out of your door and see who you can find.

{September}

I wrote the book and have wrapped it all up on this blog, but the story hasn’t ended. We have now been in the big city for two and a half months. The roots are in the ground. I have met every neighbor within a block; the teens across the street, the stern grandpa next door, the darling retired couple with the barky dog, the couple with the chickens, the artist who lost her husband two years ago. There was a mystery episode of a huge nasty lizard in my backyard (escaped from the newlyweds’ doggy door). We picked and canned the peaches from our elderly neighbors’ tree. We have shared birthday parties, pies,beans and cornbread, bar-b-que.

Just today we entered new territory when our kitty climbed a tree in the backyard. We were away from the house at the time and when we returned home, a full-on watch party was happening in the backyard. People were genuinely concerned about the safety of our cat, an animal that the good Lord has graced with supernatural reflexes. They were taking videos and sipping drinks and pondering solutions. This is worlds away from the universe I grew up in.

When we moved, we landed scared, intimidated, and slightly prejudiced. This is the honest truth. We didn’t remember homeless or prostitutes on the corners. We’d forgotten how many denominations and opinions and languages there were. We’d been cornered away from most color and class for nearly a decade. As we had risen the ranks from poor, starving college students to debt-free, middle to upperclass parents, we carried our privilege with us. It didn’t feel heavy, as we had acquired it quite naturally and mostly everyone else around us had the same swanky luggage.

If I were to glance over my shoulder, I could see the path that brought me here. And if I peer way back in the distance I can see the first house I grew up in with plywood, rebar, and gravel floors. My dad filling the bathtub with warm water by the five gallon bucketful. The ladder that leaned up against the landing to the second floor. The walls with the horse hair plaster that crumbled off in chunks. There were years complicated by living with a very sick dad. The shame of wearing my brothers’ hand-me-downs and pretending I didn’t care.

I don’t like looking back. I prefer a steaming hot shower and shiny wood floors. I like early morning runs in the mountains and not laying in the buggy heat of an unairconditioned house, willing myself to fall asleep. I like RX bars and toilets that flush.
As a grownup there was no one in my circle telling me this kind of life wasn’t a God given right.

But it was time to peek back and remember that character wasn’t built in a spotless speck house situated in paradise. And we were fooling ourselves if that little seed of struggle early on in our life wouldn’t grow into a tree that bore fruit. It necessitated a move from comfort to dependence, or else we would become the world who demands social justice but offers nothing of ourselves.

We wanted to integrate. To de-class, desegregate. We were concerned for our kids. It was too easy to picture them growing up in a nice house with this fundamental view of privilege.

This took guts and a lot of uncertainty. Because no matter how poor I grew up, I am still white. I can only backtrack so far before it looks like I’m trying too hard.

It wasn’t comfortable to enroll my kids in the neighborhood school when just last year I walked around quite believably as a confident I-can-manage-life-without-any-help homeschooler. (Have you read the book? The joke is on me!) I was preaching to the choir when I should have been sitting in the service.

The big moment of truth came when we walked into Meet the Teacher night and we were in the minority. We were the ones being eyeballed. We were the ones speaking English as our home language. What was this new life going to be like? Would we find something in common with our neighbors?

In Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland the Queen quips, “Why, sometimes I’ve believed in as many as six impossible things before breakfast!”

Of course she is speaking of the intangible, the dreamlike, the preposterous. She is fiction, after all. But I’ve asked myself for a long time now if I’m brave enough to actually do the six impossible things, whatever they are, and beginning with small impossibles.

Meeting the neighbors.

Looking someone with an addiction in the eye.

Listening to a stranger’s story and crying with them. Or crying in the presence of a stranger as they listen to your story.

Maybe it is putting supper on someone’s front porch. Or hiring a babysitter to watch kids at naptime so you can volunteer at your kids’ school. Maybe it is answering the phone every time it rings instead of checking caller ID first.

Being brave isn’t limited to what one can do on one’s own strength. It is just what happens when I loosen my grip on what I can control to catch hold of God’s greater beauty.

It is a fantastic thing to aspire to when you think about it. It isn’t flashy, but it is thrilling. Six impossible things…and then six more. Repeat.

We have now been in school for one month.

We no longer feel quite the amount of tension as when we moved here. It has taken some confessing on our part to weed out our misjudgment and seek a better understanding of the cultures around us. It demands quiet introspection and tuning out what the world is screaming is important. I walk kids to and from school each day, my eyes open for the people in our path. Twice a week I go into classrooms to assist with reading groups and other tasks. I am falling in love with kids and teachers I would have never known.

It seems holy even if we’re taking teensy little steps. They are steps nonetheless.

An Easter Intermission

Good Friday is here, and I am alone with the kids, dying eggs. My patience is thin and thinning with every sploosh of colored water landing on the kitchen table, every crack followed by an “uh-oh.” The baby has a bowl in front of her and she is smashing her egg into a green vinegary soup. After she threatens to eat it, I hold my hands up. “Okay, okay! We’re done with the eggs. Go outside and play until they dry, then you can hide them.”
After I shoo them outside and survey the damage, I read the crayon writing on the eggs. One says, “Jesus Is Alive!”–classic Easter egg design. One says, “Foy {hearts} pancakes,” and another, “Luke STINKS.”
Not one of these precious eggs has been lovingly dyed. And within two hours, most of them will be stuck in a pokey sagebrush plant in the backyard for some neighbor dog to rescue.

It is almost too windy outside, but I lamely hide the eggs in visible sight and call the kids to come and find them. They spend the rest of the afternoon wearing out all the hiding places as if this were the most epic game ever. Their joy is perplexing. What a normal, boring thing to do, hiding and seeking boiled eggs on a windy day in my prickly backyard.

And then I see them clearly, the clues.

The hunt.

“For the Son of Man has come to seek and to save that which was lost.”

Luke 19:10

The plain, unbuffed humanity.

He had no beauty or majesty to attract us to him,
    nothing in his appearance that we should desire him.
He was despised and rejected by mankind,
    a man of suffering, and familiar with pain.
Like one from whom people hide their faces
    he was despised, and we held him in low esteem.

Isaiah 53

The Purpose.

God was reconciling the world to himself in Christ, not counting people’s sins against them. And he has committed to us the message of reconciliation. We are therefore Christ’s ambassadors, as though God were making his appeal through us. We implore you on Christ’s behalf: Be reconciled to God. God made him who had no sin to be sin for us, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.

2 Corinthians 5:19-21

 

Every day and every breath is pointing us to Him, even cracked eggs that spell out the insults of a brother. The monotony of messes, the methodical cleaning up of them.  Jesus came in ordinary flesh to redeem ordinary people. He isn’t counting your sin against you–don’t you want to be found?

 

 

 

 

 

An American problem.

For the past several years, I have been thinking about how one traverses the gap from Have to Have Not. Plenty to Sufficient. Lavish to Meager. It is all very well that we understand the American Dream and our own version of it. But I am convinced Jesus came that we might not pursue the American Dream, but search for something far better. After all, the Son of Man, who came to serve and give his life as a ransom for many, claims He didn’t even have a place to lay His head.

The thing is, most of us start out incredibly rich. Forbes published an article a couple years ago titled Astonishing Numbers: America’s Poor Still Live Better Than Most of the Rest of Humanity. The term “poor” negates itself when we zoom out to see the rest of the world. In America, our basic needs–food, clothing, shelter, are essentially met from the day we are born until the day we die. Therefore our goal, our American Dream is usually to improve in every aspect of life. Bigger salary, larger home, more gratification.

We live in a day where our lives are almost 3-D. Media surrounds us in every form, not just the newspaper that, ten years ago, we could choose to leave on the driveway in it’s soggy plastic wrap. The lowly telephone has morphed into a pocket gadget that accompanies us everywhere, internet in tow. The standard of living is molded by every social media gathering place, every app at the tap of a finger. Here are a thousand pictures of what you could want and don’t yet possess. The sky is the limit.  Our American Dream becomes exponentially bigger then–become a renowned scholar! write a book that changes lives! make seven, eight figures! Imagine and create a dream wedding fit for a queen! Indulge in only the highest quality of food and clothing! Go places no one else has ever been. Build a dream house, no corner unadorned. Be famous, admired. Have followers.

We are incredibly me-centered.

But Jesus twisted all we thought was right and noble and tipped it completely upside down when He said, “he who loses his life will find it.” “He who is last shall be first.” “Do things in quiet, where no one sees.”

It is hard to grasp, this idea of giving up more to have less, yet being better off for it. And, for those us who just happened to be born into a country where we “live better than the rest of humanity”, it is nearly incomprehensible. My kids cannot grasp the idea of having only one choice of cereal for breakfast, heaven forbid they ever become familiar with true hunger, starvation.

How do we wean ourselves off ourselves?

Jesus said it would be easier for a camel to fit through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the Kingdom of God. Well now, we have a problem! Something has to change, and it looks like it is going to be me.

the beginning.

It is funny how words cloud up the brain and threaten to thunder and shower when one is driving a carload full of babies in the afternoon. It happened to me just yesterday as I took the achingly slow route back home, praying that our sweet Lord would put them all to sleep so I could find a few quiet moments in my day.

I was two for three, the third making a mess of hot cocoa in the backseat. Alas, I cannot write or record anything when my eyes are on the road, even if I wanted. But I was thinking how tremendously lucky I was to be able to drive to town for no reason other than to play at the park and pick up gift cards (for teachers) at the drive-thru gourmet coffee place, where they gave me a gratuitous latte and two Not-So-Hots (chocolate) for the boys. Then I was able to return home taking the long way without even blinking about the cost of gas. My biggest concern for the day was that my two year old might not take a nap.

It was nearly thirty years ago that my folks took on the position of foster parents at a Christian group home, a modern day American orphanage. I would have been five and a half, the summer before kindergarten. It is funny what the mind remembers, and I had the advantage of being an innocent little girl with zero street smarts. The worst thing I did that summer was to try and bathe the kittens in a five gallon bucket of water. My dad, who was actually no fan of cats, rushed to the rescue of the poor kittens and dumped the bucket of water on me instead. He hollered something like, “You just see how that feels, Pearl!” and then he told me I couldn’t come inside for the rest of the day, not even to change into dry clothes. I cried for a long time, wet all the way through.

In his defense, he was having a rough summer. Plagued by serious health issues and filling in as a temporary dad to a dozen emotionally abused kids was a difficult spot. My accidental, almost-drowning kittens incident probably pushed him over the edge.

The youth home survived on donations from churches. There was a sweltering room–or was it a whole building? jam packed with stacks and stacks of second hand clothes. A big freezer that, in my memory, seemed to be freestanding outside near tall trees. Inside were donated baked goods, mostly white bread on the verge of molding–a cold, stinky smell I can’t seem to forget. A pen full of pigs where we tossed our apple cores. A smelly, murky lagoon behind the horse barn.

One day the kid in charge of setting the table did not do his chore so we ate little piles of corn straight off the table with our fingers. Another time I was playing under the slide when I felt something wet. I looked up and saw the twins peeing down on me, laughing.

There was a large gravel circle that connected the handful of houses, each one inhabited by a makeshift family. Most kids wouldn’t return permanently to their biological families, though they all desperately hoped they would. When an older kid got in trouble, they were sent out to walk the gravel circle a few times. When you are a foster parent caring for children that technically not yours, your choices of disciplining a child are limited. I am pretty sure my dad’s dumping a bucket of water on me wouldn’t fly in foster care, not then, not now.

That summer was the first of my life where I was physically and socially aware of things around me. Surely character shaping might have been going on before. But the summer before kindergarten, for me, opened my eyes to a world that isn’t fair or always kind and loving. Sometimes you get peed on and sometimes the only bread to eat is moldy. Sometimes you walk the gravel circle and feel alone. These are the kind of lessons that linger.

In the car yesterday, I thought about those kids that spent the summer with me at the youth home. They stayed longer than I did. Some didn’t leave till they aged out. I wonder what their lives are like now as grownups. They were all older than me then–they would be at least 35 or more now.

I wonder if they have raised their own kids, if they are able to afford fresh bread and new clothes. If they worry about spending too much on gas. When you grow up and the best you have is second hand, how does it affect who you become?

And ultimately, if Today is all I have, am I living the best version of it given what I know?