The AtHome Pilgrim

Musings at a Slower Pace

AtHomePilgrim

AtHomePilgrim
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"Nel mezzo del cammin di nostra vita," I find myself still asking some of the same questions I did when I was just a punk kid. The Big Things confuse me. Fortunately, though, many little things delight and amuse me, and some Big Things--my wife, our kids, our bird and bunny visitors, food, baseball--make me very, very happy. In my pilgrimage, I try to be guided by the wisdom of dear old Auntie Mame: "Life is a banquet!"

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OCTOBER 15, 2011 8:27AM

What Can I Say?

Rate: 29 Flag

And so I labor under uncertainty here at the keyboard, torn between describing this dark night of the soul (ah, you should read those discards—very moving, very clever) and trying to use words to nudge myself toward the light, between baring my sorry soul and trying to bear my spirits upwards, all the while thinking that the truly compassionate thing is simply not to inflict myself on anyone. 

Ironic that a wordsmith would be without words, though. But understandable, too: I’ve been inundated with words lately, it seems, and rather than being instruments of craft used to shape objects of Truth and Beauty (one and the same, as we know), they have been hammers beating constantly, not precisely like the cartoon hammer in the old Excedrin commercials, but the powerful mallet of the blacksmith beating on my anvil head.

No, this constant flow of words has been like the water torture our region has undergone: a constant drip alternating with frequent torrents, that represents neither the wellspring of life nor the creative pool of the imagination but a flood of dirty water that overruns the land and muddies everything it touches.

Much of what I’ve been writing and editing lately has been test items, which are boring (I like to tell stories; test items have no stories) and made difficult when the client wants a chunk of the multiple-choice battery to represent higher-order thinking skills, which (sorry) multiple-choice items are not suited for. But that is beside the point.

The point, an ironic one, is that crafting multiple-choice test items means writing solid distractors—the incorrect answer options that are somewhat plausible, of relatively equal length, not mutually contradictory (that’s a tipoff), and parallel in construction.

Distractors. Seems fitting, no? Focus on distractors has distracted me from my real passion, which is trying to use words to express . . . to express . . . ah, what? I cannot finish the sentence.

 

Which reveals the nub of the problem: for all the distractedness has left me at sea—adrift in the boundless Sargasso Sea, clammed up by clinging seaweed that chokes down words, becalmed (but not calm) by the airless Doldrums, the absence of circulating air preventing the giving of voice. 

Or is it the airiness inside the head, the echoing of a chill wind within vast empty spaces? 

We’re not talking writer’s block here. We’re talking nothing to say, no worthy utterance to offer, udders utterly empty of verbal sustenance, of wisdom, even of humor. The valley of dry bones rattles in my head, and bone on bone, without the cartilage cushion, makes for halting and painful movement. 

My legs are cramped each night by sitting so many hours at the desk. My mind is cramped each night by so many hours of using words for base purposes. Perhaps that is my affliction—the feeling that I’ve been forced to defile the Holy of Holies by using words as bludgeons to sunder Those Who Know the Answers from Those Who Are in the Dark, deemed not worthy by those who believe in assessments as the be-all of education, when in truth those cast asunder are the children of God as thoroughly as the worshippers of tests (perhaps more so) who just maybe (ya think?) need to have their understanding assessed differently—or who need to have their curiosity provoked more creatively in the first place. 

But it’s wrong to blame it all on assessments, however damnable they are. No, the problem is that I’m afraid that actually beginning to write will open the floodgates of feelings and thoughts only to find that rather than holding the healthy waters of a reservoir, they contain a cesspool. 

No, the problem is that I’m tired of wallowing in that stagnant, sluggish, diseased muck and wish to drink from, but have not yet reached, the refreshing water of the oasis—and, indeed, it seems far beyond the most distant horizon.  

Until I am cooled by the shade of the sheltering palms, until I can rest alongside the life-giving waters, until I can find voice in praise even of the stark beauty of the dunes (for Beauty is Truth), what can I say? 

 

Words © 2011 AtHome Pilgrim.

All Rights Reserved.

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In casting about for expression, you've expressed some very significant things, about writing, about the sclerotic mentality of educational testing, and about the bane of modern life, distractors--and you've said it with grace and force. It is my fervent hope that you get to that place you want to be, that place where, as Wallace Stevens says, "forth the particulars of rapture come." It's my belief that you will.
So...this is essay, not multiple choice?
Even your so-called tag "drivel" is divine, Pilgrim.
w jerry here and this should be a Cover. r.
The words you use here are filled with such poetic beauty that images are still floating in my head. Whatever you did to find these magnificent words, keep doing it. Let it flow, I assure you that it will will be like the vibrant waters of a spring fed lake.
rated with love
Another reason to despise "The Test"...that the writing of it anguishes the soul of those assigned the task.

But placing "Beauty and Truth" together took my mind to another completely different place...Emily's poem I memorized in 10th grade. "I died for Beauty but was scarce, adjusting in the tomb. When one who died for Truth was lain in the adjoining room..." A couple years later I was in a graveyard with friends. I recited the poem with full out expression. They clapped.

Thank you for your words. They evoked a beautiful memory. Tis' true.
The process...the birthing.
We keep writing, even when we're writing dreck, for those moments of beauty. Even while you're thinking you're writing nothing of import, you're resonating with the rest of us, who know these moments all too well. I offer you this quotation by Flaubert:
“Human speech is like a cracked kettle on which we tap crude rhythms for bears to dance to, while we long to make music that will melt the stars.”
― Gustave Flaubert
My advice is to read some wonderful literature to inspire you and to remind you of the power of words--your words.
Pilgrim: You can say whatever you want, whenever you want. I'm sure it will be in your usual eloquent manner and my eyeballs, along with the higher sense you call on, will be there.
I'd say you pretty much said it, and you still got it.
No advice, just witnessing and agreement about one of the deeper potholes in a creative life. Creating for dollars can land one in a doozy. The creativity cow can only give so much milk, then is done. Maybe an autumn walk and some squirrel/bird-gazing will poke old Bessy in the udder.
Jerry explains things better than I do.

I was about to pound on your virtual door and demand you come out and play!!!! And I was half afraid real life had turned ugly or something.
Creating exams is one of the dullest experiences in life. They take away the life force, the creativity, and never seem to be that effective anyway. So, were I more zen-like, I would say they are an exercise in futility.
And this type of work makes one second guess oneself.
Trust me, if this essay shows me anything, is that you are one of the finest writers I've ever met.
I'm glad you are writing.
You're editing and proofing tests? I'm jealous. If you really want the fountain of your creative juices to dry up try proofreading Terms & Conditions in 8 pt type. R
nothing to say? pffffft. look up there, 'grim. the evidence is right before your winking eye. i'm howling at "witless witness wetness... no wontons." and it's a good thing i'm laughing, because i never thought i'd like the actual person who writes those oh-so-plausible but not-quite-but-could-it-be-?? B, C and D choices on those damnable tests that an overthinker like me would wonder and wonder about.

i used to have nightmares about the sargasso sea. still do. we must have read the same book, old friend. :)
problem with Sargasso Sea for me, I'm a Caribbean woman, and there's this novel...well, let's say the Sargasso Sea invokes a hell of a lot for me, and it's all interesting
It seems that the ability to write so well when there is nothing left to say is one that you manage well.
Of course, there is ALWAYS something to say. For me, the struggle you write of so well here is something of a battle.

Write on AtHome. Write on.
Oh what splendid inspiration is derived from your most elegant prose. Here's to Beauty and Truth! Down with wanton cesspools. (I've always been negative on cesspools)
What D Skirt said is just perfect. If this is nothing to say, hokey smoke Bullwinkle! We've all been in this place, sometimes you just have to wait it out and occupy your mind with other things.
Sounds like someone needs a distracting getaway AtHome. A break from thinking what you might write about, absorbing some new experiences and then wait and see what pops out. Worst case is you get an enjoyable vacation.
How about a nice ice cream cone on a late summer walk? Something to get you outside more. You may have a bit of that kind of problem.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EnPIOH8bCfk

Jim Bronson explained it better than I could.

I can only tell you it's not drivel.
Jerry: I fear it's gone past being merely sclerotic to being actually brain dead. As for the rapture (small r), working on it, with my spiritual coach, though she finds me sometimes an obstreperous handful. Thanks for the confidence you show.

dirndl: Life, strangely, is full of multiple choices, which we essay to undertake, filling in the blanks as we go, looking for a matching soul, until we reach completion. Or something.

JW: Thanks for the thumbs up. All the responses from you folks mean more than would a cover.

RomP: Sometimes, though, it feels like I'm just ice fishing . . .

Mime: I didn't know of Emily's poem, so thank you for that. As always, she's spot on. (I was thinking Keats.) Looking forward to hearing your voice say the lines some day.

Sheila: Sometimes we fear it's a little monster coming out . . .

FLW: What does Flaubert have against dancing bears???? ;) Thank you for your resonance; always good to have a companion on the journey.

Miguela: Sounds like good advice (though sometimes one hangs one's head at the sight of real wordsmithery).

Scarlett: I thank you for your friendly eyeballs and attentive mind: you're very kind.

Matt: I thought the ointment would cure it . . .

greenie: Potholes indeed. And the DPW refuses to come along to fix it! Yes, need more outside time. I've been resuming walking, which helps. Somewhat.

vanessa: I understand the necessity for assessing learning, but the now past fad of alternative assessment made a helluva lot more sense (as did the now past phase of differential instruction for different learning styles). But now, it's teach to the test--which means there must be tests. Sigh. Just a warning: you probably won't hear much from me for the next couple of weeks as I continue to slog through this crap. And your last sentence? ¡Gracias!
Julie: Glad you're glad. Thank you.

Trudge: You win. I think you get 8 points for that one.

Candace: 'grim seems about right some times . . . Thank you for overcoming your deep-seated revulsion to test item writers; much obliged! As for the book, I merely saw the movie.

vanessa: See previous sentence.

JD: I always thought it was pretty cheap when all one can write about it not writing . . . and yet here I am.

Dr. Krane: Nothing's worse than a wanton cesspool. ::Shudder::

Bea: My frustration is that the "other things" have become such an occupying force that they squelch all the natives! Thanks for the solidarity, though.

Abrawang: Yeah, a vacation would be nice. Not in the cards, though. Maybe I'll do what Mrs P's administration advised back when she was teaching high school: take a mini-mind break.

Lea: I like your Rx, doctor--nothing that a good ice cream cone can't fix!!

ChiGuy: Only problem is, I really, really, really hate motorcycles . . . Oh! It's a metaphor! Doh!
Dear Mr P, may you find time to stroll hand in hand with Mrs P under the sky of universe and in the garden of life ... and may they bring words of Beauty and Truth to you soon.

I have missed you but take your time ... take care of you ... and words rich in beauty will follow.
Ah, give yourself a break, Pilgrim. Live a little. Do something to stretch yourself, something you don't normally do, something instead of writing. You'll be dying to get back to it, I suppose. But as everyone else says, you're the best, even when you think you're not.

PS I call them sweet distractors rather than solid ones. Isn't that funny?
Your words, Pilgrim, remind me of the ache that ushered me out of my last classroom because I dared to believe in and trust the hearts of my cherubs, because I dared to create as many possibilities as I could imagine to allow them to share with me what they knew and felt and made of their world, of the knowledge I tried to share with them, of the meanings of and life of words, words that could be theirs if only they could be less afraid. I dared to listen and learn from them. I dared always to ask them to write - essay answers. Show me what you understand ... even if you need to bend one of my questions in order to make it your own. Dear God, I miss that. I miss the heartbeat of it all. I miss all that my cherubs shared with me ... still share when they find me. You speak here to all that is life for me ... allowing words to live and love and expand and grow. I remember one student whose eyes dimmed as he hunted for words to write, but when I asked him if he could draw for me what he understood, the pencil began to fly and what he drew was ... pure eloquence.

Oh, Pilgrim, your words allow me to see the sea and to find the oasis once more.
Nothingness but with flair my dear!
Kate: Time, ay, there's the rub, as Hamlet might say.

Lainey: Nothing sweet about distractors to my sour mind. ;) Your advice is good, of course. Just wish I had the time to take it. . . .

anna: Sounds like you need to get back to the classroom: students could use your inspiration!!!

tg: Ah, well, if it had flair . . .

Kathy: Bless you for thinking that.