From School Site

Today, we continued working on our critical thinking/problem solving unit with a gallery walk of riddles. Spread around the room were nine different riddles of varying difficulty:

  1. Two fathers and two sons are in a car, yet there are only three people in the car. How?
  2. Forward I am heavy, but backward I am not. What am I?
  3. What starts with T, ends with T, and has T in it?
  4. What is it that no one wants to have, but no one wants to lose either?
  5. Mary has four daughters, and each of her daughters has a brother. How many children does Mary have?
  6. Two in a corner, one in a room, zero in a house, but one in a shelter. What is it?
  7. I am an odd number. Take away a letter and I become even. What number am I?
  8. A word I know, six letters it contains, remove one letter and 12 remains. What is it?
  9. Poor people have it. Rich people need it. If you eat it you die. What is it?

Students moved in their table groups from riddle to riddle and discussed them as groups. Some of the riddles were quite easy for the groups (numbers 1 and 3); some were a bit trickier (numbers 2 and 5); one was all but impossible (number 8), which stumped all but one student, a sixth-grade girl.

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We used three riddle classifications to identify them as we went through the answers:

  • word riddles, which contain hints within the words itself;
  • faux-math riddles, which are actually just word riddles;
  • pure riddles, which have no clues hidden in the text.

We discussed how the riddles work and how various riddles use language to trick our brains to ineffective ways of thinking based on how we usually use language.

Monday

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World Reaction

France

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UK

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Sweden

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Finland

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EU Parliamentarian Valérie Hayer

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Thirty years ago, when I turned twenty-three, I was in something of an in-between time. I’d finished college, but I wasn’t working full time. I took a couple of classes that spring 1996 semester because I could: I was working as a waiter and getting mostly night shifts, so I had the days fairly free. But I was beginning to prepare for my coming adventure: in June, I left for Poland the first time, and while I didn’t know exactly where I was heading in January of 96, I knew I was going somewhere.

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Now, thirty years later, back in the States for twenty years, our own daughter is starting college and our son is about to start high school. All the questions ranging about my thoughts in 1996 — Where will I land? What will life be like there? Will I find some form of fulfillment there? — have found their answers and raised more questions, in turn answered with still more posed. Many of those questions have reformed now with different subjects: Where will L land? Were the Boy? Will she find there the fulfillment she seeks? Will he?

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The transformations in the world too play their own role in these questions. Thirty years ago, the Iron Curtain was history with the Soviet Union itself history and with it the Cold War. There was a certain worldwide optimism, I think, that things might actually improve, that the threat of worldwide annihilation might be a thing of the past. Now, a resurgent totalitarian Russia threatens European peace, an increasingly bold China eyes Taiwan and considers, and the current administration is doing its damnedest to turn the US into a full-on fundamentalist-Christian fascist theocracy. That hopeful future gave way to an increasingly uncertain and worrisome present with new worries like the overall negative effects of AI (will it defeat us by initially dumbing us down even further or by gaining consciousness and taking over?) and ever-worsening (in part, due to the massive energy demands of AI) global warming. It’s a real challenge to find much optimism for our children’s future, to feel there’s much of a chance that their lives will be better than ours–all parents’ hope.

Sunday Music

We’ve heard the piece so many times that we all find ourselves humming it throughout the week. E’s been working on his district- and region-band music with the hope of a state band callback. His work on the solo element has gone from halting and angular to smooth, melodic, and emotive. The tone is rounder, fuller. 

Walking to the car yesterday after the regional auditions, he explained where he thought he had messed up. He missed a scale the first time through—one of the easiest scales, he noted—and also fumbled a brief independent passage. Still, he said he felt better about the solo overall. Not bad, but not great.

He talked about the sight-reading portion, realizing too late that he should have practiced using only the thirty seconds allowed to preview the score before playing. “I should’ve done that sooner,” he said quietly as we pulled out of the parking lot. 

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Morning sun

It’s a familiar truth—for all of us—but especially for him: anything short of perfection can feel like failure. In that way, he reminds me of L. She would come home upset after a test and proclaim that she had failed, only for us to find out later she’d made a 93. “That’s failing for me,” she’d say. With him, it’s not academics so much as music. As long as his grades are solid, he’s content—but with performance, with auditions, the standard is relentless.

Earlier this week, he talked about one of his motivations for pushing so hard: making first chair at the state level. L, after all, was a state champion three times. In her sophomore year, her school volleyball team won the state championship. In her senior year she finished first in the state in high jump, third in javelin. K assured him there was no need to measure himself against his sister, that this competition existed mostly in his own head. He explained he understood: whether he believed that or simply said it to ease our worries about the pressure he puts on himself, I’m not sure.

What became clear this week is just how hard he is on himself—harder than assessors and judges are on him. This week, we received notification that, for the spring season, he will be playing first chair trombone with the Carolina Youth Symphony. “But it’s only in the Repertory Orchestra,” he said. I expected the news to thrill him. Instead, he was quiet again, focused only on the fact that there are two levels of orchestra above his. To him, this felt like another shortcoming: first year out, and “only” Repertory.

After one rehearsal, his school band teacher—who also conducts with the youth symphony—pulled me aside. “One year,” he said with a smile. “He’s making great progress. He sounds great.” It’s good to hear others say what you already know about your child, even if he himself can’t quite hear or admit it yet.

Later this week, we’ll find out two important things. First, whether E made All-Region Band. I’m certain he did. The amount of practice he puts in was impressive—even to me, a non-trombone player, I can hear the difference. The second is whether he’ll receive a state callback, a chance to audition for All-State Band—the most competitive of all the ensembles he’s aiming for. We’re not a big state, but still: thousands of middle-school trombone players. We really don’t know what’s out there.

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Morning work

Still, I love to watch him want it. I love that his teachers encourage him, that his private instructor remains enthusiastic, reminding him that this curve is steep and that mistakes are not failures. And I love, even in the quiet drive home after auditions, that the music is still there—rounder now, fuller—filling the house once again.

Punch Brothers “Familiarity”

One of the greatest pieces of music ever created. Complicated, beautiful, perfect. The alt rock feel of Radio Head, the complexity of Yes, the harmonies and pop sensibilities of the Beach Boys, and the virtuosity of the greatest musicians all played on traditional bluegrass instruments. Stunning.

Final Friday

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Tonight was the Girl’s final evening at home. She heads back tomorrow for her second semester of college. (Is it only her second semester? How is that possible? It seems she’s been studying forever, and we’ve only just begun this adventure in independence and eye-watering expenses.)

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“What do you want for dinner that final night,” K and I asked her. She thought for a while and replied, “Fettuccine alfredo.”

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“With shrimp?” It’s her favorite, and I would have been surprised if she said no, but “No” was indeed her response. “With chicken, I think.”

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But how to spend our last evening together? We long ago realized that we are only a small part of our daughter’s circle, and that meant we’d only have a little time with her this evening. “I want to go visit M one last time,” she explained. M, her closest friend from high school, studies at Fordham; they only see each other when they both happen to be home. So a family movie was out, and besides, there’s not much socializing with a movie. Additionally, since the Boy has regional band auditions tomorrow, he would be more than reluctant to spend so much time away from his trombone on the evening before such a significant audition. In the end, we played cards.

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One last free laundry

First Day Back 2026

I went into the teachers’ workroom to make a coffee. It was the first day back, and some teachers had brought their kids with them. When I opened the door, I found three energetic children playing with balloons.

“Do you want to see what we’re doing?” a small blonde girl asked, her ringleted hair bouncing with excitement.

“Of course I do,” I said.

She grabbed a balloon, puffed out her cheeks, and forced air into it with all her might until it inflated just a little. Then she opened her mouth. The blue balloon shot across the room, and she erupted—squealing, jumping, delighted. She chased it down and did it again.

I smiled and walked away. Hearing her repeat it a third time, I felt unexpectedly envious.

It was such a simple act, yet it held her completely. Children can endow the smallest things with meaning, with such intensity that repetition never dulls the pleasure. Each time is new—better, even.

Fifteen or twenty minutes later, when I went back downstairs to get pork for my lunch, the kids were still there, still playing with the balloons, still just as excited.

When did we lose that kind of wonder? Why do childish pleasures cease to be adult ones? As a fifty-three-year-old, I find nothing remotely appealing about blowing up a balloon and letting it fly away. I wouldn’t do it once, let alone again and again. If I did it at all, it would be to entertain children—and even then, my pleasure would be borrowed, derivative of theirs. Otherwise, it would feel like a chore, something to check off before a birthday party. And knowing I could pay someone else to do it, I probably would.

Children don’t outsource joy. They might share it, but even that has to be taught. Their pleasures are closely held.

What, then, are mine?

I don’t think I have many. Most of what I enjoy I’m happy to share—or no one else wants. I’m the only one in my family who likes whiskey. I’ll offer a puff of my cigar, though I know my wife won’t take it. And what pleasures I do have, I pass easily to my children.

Just before Christmas break, I came home with small treasures from my students and gave most of them away. Lena claimed the Starbucks cards. Both kids went for the candy. Ginger took the restaurant gift cards and tucked them away for busy weekends. I let them—all of it—without hesitation.

That ease, too, is a kind of privilege.

It must be a particular first-world luxury to carve out moments so carefree that our troubles dissolve into the fog during an evening walk. We have worries, yes, but nothing dire. Poverty is distant, almost unthinkable. We do not worry about our next meal.

And yet, how quickly could it all unravel? How quickly could democracy slide into chaos? How fast could our civilization collapse and leave us worse off than before? We like to imagine that people in poorer parts of the world know how to survive with less, that hunter-gatherers endured without any of the technologies we now depend on.

The preppers who populate my social media feeds—once you watch one, the algorithm supplies the rest—are convinced collapse is imminent. They warn us where not to go, what to stockpile, how to survive martial law and total disorder. But can anyone live a fulfilled life while obsessing over collapse? To call oneself a prepper seems to require abandoning nearly every other concern.

Perhaps that is the core of first-world nonchalance. We live in a world that feels inevitable, permanent, destined. Even its collapse is hard to imagine. To suggest that food might one day be hard to get—or that entertainment might disappear—feels as absurd as waking up without arms or legs. We are too accustomed to having the world at our fingertips, carried in the microcomputers we casually call phones.

So what do we make of first-world luxury? Of privilege? Of the innocence of childhood?

I see it in small rituals: walking the dog at night, schedules snapping back into place, students lining the halls—eager, a little sad that break is over. The Christmas decorations came down at school today. Our own sad little tree will linger until the weekend, or until my mid-January birthday passes, and then it too will be gone. Another Christmas season ended.

And yet each one seems to close with more uncertainty than the last. Political turmoil deepens. Environmental collapse feels less abstract. There is a troubling naivety—perhaps even selfishness—in those who greet this with confidence that, before it gets too bad, salvation will arrive.

A new year. Another war. New threats of evil.

And still, we go about our business.

What else could we do?

Visiting Aunt D

Aunt D is a saint. A generous soul with a kind heart and a desire to throw her arms around her entire family and pull them close for a never-ending hug. My memories of visiting Aunt D stretch back to my childhood, to an age younger than the Boy. We spent alternating Thanksgivings with Aunt D and Papa’s extended family in South Carolina and Nana’s family outside of Nashville. That constituted the majority of our visits.

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We haven’t spent a Thanksgiving with Aunt D in probably a decade, but she almost always arranges some kind of family gathering around the holidays. This year, we missed the reunion, and the plan was to have a mini-gathering last Saturday. Alas, Aunt D was sick, and the whole get-together had to be canceled. But the holidays are just not the same without a visit to Aunt D, so we drove through the pine forests on pothole-filled roads (a staple of childhood memories of visiting SC) today for a quick visit — our first since Uncle M’s memorial service this last summer.

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