Monday, December 8, 2008

Wedding


I haven't blogged in so long! I was inspired by Shauna, whose blog is far more lovely than mine will ever be...but she linked to me, and what's here is pretty pathetic.
I never thought I'd be the kind of girl to get into wedding planning. I mean, I was on an undefeated little league team (right field, so no thanks to me). But finding food and photographers and pretty places and dresses is not so bad. Plus, with my Franklin Covey planner, I'm pretty unstoppable.
What do you think of that fluffy swan caketopper?

Thursday, August 28, 2008

America, now is not the time for small plans.

Ringing of Revolution

By Phil Ochs


In a building of gold, with riches untold,

lived the families on which the country was founded.

And the merchants of style, with their red velvet smiles,

were there, for they also were hounded.

And the soft middle class crowded in to the last,

for the building was fully surrounded.

And the noise outside was the ringing of revolution.

Sadly they stared and sank in their chairs
and searched for a comforting notion.
And the rich silver walls looked ready to fall
As they shook in doubtful devotion.
The ice cubes would clink as they freshened their drinks,
wet their minds in bitter emotion.
And they talked about the ringing of revolution.

We were hardly aware of the hardships they beared,
for our time was taken with treasure.
Oh, life was a game, and work was a shame,
And pain was prevented by pleasure.
The world, cold and grey, was so far away
In the distance only money could measure.
But their thoughts were broken by the ringing of revolution.

The clouds filled the room in darkening doom
as the crooked smoke rings were rising.
How long will it take, how can we escape
Someone asks, but no one's advising.
And the quivering floor responds to the roar,
In a shake no longer surprising.
As closer and closer comes the ringing of revolution.

Softly they moan, please leave us alone
As back and forth they are pacing.
And they cover their ears and try not to hear
WIth pillows of silk they're embracing.
And the crackling crowd is laughing out loud,
peeking in at the target they're chasing.
Now trembling inside the ringing of revolution.

With compromise sway we give in half way
When we saw that rebellion was growing.
Now everything's lost as they kneel by the cross
Where the blood of christ is still flowing.
To late for their sorrow they've reached their tomorrow
and reaped the seed they were sowing.
Now harvested by the ringing of revolution.

In tattered tuxedos they faced the new heroes
and crawled about in confusion.
And they sheepishly grinned for their memoroes were dim
of the decades of dark execution.
Hollow hands were raised; they stood there amazed
in the shattering of their illusions.
As the windows were smashed by the ringing of revolution.

Down on our knees we're begging you please,
We're sorry for the way you were driven.
There's no need to taunt just take what you want,
and we'll make amends, if we're living.
But away from the grounds the flames told the town
that only the dead are forgiven.
As they crumbled inside the ringing of revolution.

Sunday, April 20, 2008

Weekend



Bodie likes this one grey dog in the park who
is 3-4 times her size. The dog is beautiful,
with long clumsy limbs and a sweet face.








As my mother pointed out at last night's sedar
(a word, by the way, is not recognized by a goyisha Word's spellcheck) that jews have celebrated this holiday in harder times than this. You know, the Israelites fleeing, the Holocaust, etc. She says this every year, and it's always sweet. About as sweet as Bodie when she sleeps on Saturday afternoons. I should call this my bdog...

Saturday, March 15, 2008

Glorified science fair?

This is the example on the AERA(American Educational Research Association) website informing me how I should make a poster for this "poster session" I'm doing next week in NYC: There are several problems with this example:
  1. I can't read it. Can you?
  2. I don't have any snazzy "literacy" graphics
  3. I don't have any data collected, so I don't know what to put in the "data collection" section
  4. I haven't passed the Institutional Review Board, so it's not okay to put any written student work on the poster. I'm staying on this side of caution, as per usual, so my poster is gonna be hella boring.
  5. I haven't done the research yet, so my only conclusion for the "conclusion" section is that perhaps my project does not yet belong in this grad school science fair...

It's sort of ironic that in preparing for an "education" conference, no one has really told me what my homework is, given me an exemplar and a non-exemplar, or scaffolded my learning so I could be successful and feel that I've achieved something in publishing my ideas....ironique.

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

1987

My father bought me a Nintendo game system in xmas 1987.
I had a black and white TV in my bedroom, but I was convinced I could see colors. I wasn't just being difficult.

I played so much I had to stop reading books for a year; every time I would open to a new page, I would see Mario jumping through the letters as through they were coins, and it became increasingly difficult to enjoy the book.

I would listen to one of two cassettes on my walkman: Dream of the Blue Turtles by Sting, or Imagine by John Lennon. "I Hope the Russians Love Their Children Too" and "Jealous Guy" were my favorite songs, particularly the former, which I was also somehow disposed to dance to ("there is-a no monolpoly of common sense on either side of the political fence!").

I would hold down the A button while I jumped Mario over the gaps in the stone pavement, and the sky was so gray it was blue again...

Monday, March 10, 2008

Education School

It's kind of repetitive, right?

I thought so tonight, for sure, when ed law droned on and on and all I wanted to do was read dlisted.com and drink wine.

Did you know that a teacher's contract is considered property and protected by property law and that kids have more free speech protection than teachers do?  

I learned that in the reading, I could have skipped class.

Back to dlisted and wine....

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

This is what happens

when your father and your uncle
have the same name.

I can always babysit, l'il Jude.

Monday, February 25, 2008

Sunday, February 24, 2008

Saturday, February 23, 2008

Bodie's here!

Such a bushky....

Sunday, February 17, 2008


All the kid from Brookline ever really wanted was snow, and Southern California finally delivered...on the ground anyway.
Happy V Day!
xo

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

San Francisco

is nice and all.  
but the weather...I wasn't warm for one day when I lived there, not even one.  Colder than New York somehow, because the jackets are thinner.  
No complaining, it's beautiful, even on evenings after a conference, especially with Shauna Leytus in tow.

Monday, January 21, 2008

One Day


"One day all children in our nation will have the opportunity to attain an excellent education."  Wendy Kopp said it best, but Ari and Andy and I stole the first two words from TFA's excessive PR campaigns and said them whoop-whoop style as we walked around D.C. at a the 15-year conference.  

This weekend was a reunion of sorts.  Ari and Andy came in from Brooklyn and San Francisco respectively, and we threw a little bday party for Ari, Carrie, and MLK.  Fun was had by all: ethno alley in Venice revisited, a little beer pong, some homemade cake, and we were 21 again...

Saturday, January 12, 2008

Oaxaca '08! Good times. Oaxaca, Puerto Escondido, Oaxaca again with Ben y familia. First leg with the Cohen/Saperstein/Spector/Rutmans in tow.

There's too much cheese in Oaxaca.

Stone soup is really good. They seem to keep it a secret, so you'll have to visit to learn the details.

Little planes are scary.

Vacation is best.

Back!

I know it's self-contratulatory and unnecessary, but godaddy auto-renews and I still own jessenoonan.com. What's a girl to do but blog? I mean, it is 2008!

I've been sick since Thursday.
Here's the thing about coughing: it feels like it's going to be satisfying, but it only makes it worse when you start. An itch you can't scratch. Kind of like mosquito bites.

Should Ben and I get a dog?

Back to the diss.