Writing teachers need to write themselves.
I am participating in the Slice of Life 2015 Challenge,
where I attempt to write stories and narratives about moments in my life.
I apologize if this blog post veers off the informative "literacy lens" I usually write through.
This month I am pretending to be a writer, for my students' benefit (and my own).
Writers write.
#SOL15
Last week, we had an incredible amount of fog in the mornings. The day it cleared, I was driving up the big hill by my mom's after dropping my children off at her house, when the sun overtook my windshield. Overtook is the word I choose, because it really did seem to fill the sky with its massiveness. It was a giant orange ball of a sun, just glowing like it was on fire. I couldn't take my eyes off it. So, as I turned at the top of the hill, I kept looking off to my right to look at it. That's when I saw the log cabins.
I have grown up my whole life in this stretch of streets, and I have to say I was a little surprised to see two log cabins in front of me. I always knew there was one preserved there in this little stretch of trees, but I guess I didn't realize there were a pair of them. And today, there was a giant sun rising out of the trees behind them. I made a fast left, went back through the old neighborhood, up the big hill again, and this time parked my car.
All I had with me was my iPad, so I pulled it out and got out of the car. I spent a few minutes taking some pictures of the cabins, because our 5th grade is studying the Civil War and Abe Lincoln, and our 3rd grade is moving on to Pioneers next. I guess you can say that my mind is in the past. I think using images like these can help give our students a picture of what the setting of the time period might look like, and perhaps what it wouldn't look like. There are definitely some modern footprints in the images, too.
I spent the whole day driving to work that day energized, and possible lessons raced through my head. I saw something new that might have been staring at me for quite some time. I guess all I needed to do was take the time to notice it.
The cabins are very cool! There are not very many of those left in this world so we have to appreciate them.
ReplyDeletereally cool! I love these log cabins. Wonderful that you were able to get pics.
ReplyDeleteawesomely cool pictures! They make me want to go there and explore. Like right now!
ReplyDeleteI love your first paragraph- the imagery is so strong.
We used to stay in log cabins at my summer camp up in Wisconsin, and I would always think about how people actually lived like that in the past. I bet your kids will love seeing them!
ReplyDeleteWe used to stay in log cabins at my summer camp up in Wisconsin, and I would always think about how people actually lived like that in the past. I bet your kids will love seeing them!
ReplyDelete