Due to the crazy schedule I have this week, I almost was not able to give some reflections. The intensity of my final few weeks at the school where I work has increased due to the departure of one of our faculty, and the other faculty members who, like me, are not planning to return taking their last PTO days and leading to a coverage crisis. You see, the school I work at is a bit different - when a teacher is out, other teachers have to cover their classes, which makes for more strain on the rest of us. It is not the fault of the teachers who take a day off either - many of them really earned that time and need what is called a "mental health day." However, the leadership of the school seems to have a sadistic desire to punish the rest of the faculty so they have a flawed coverage system. Although better solutions have been proposed by many of us, they often go ignored or explained away by their own reasoning, much of which doesn't make any sense except to them. Coupling this coverage issue with a lot of unnecessary meetings, and already intense schedules dealing with a demographic of kids who seem to have anything on their minds except learning (not all, but a significant percentage of them anyway), many of us who are teachers at this particular school are feeling signs of burnout. Many teachers there suffer from disrupted sleep patterns, blood pressure issues, and stomach discomfort that could be the genesis of ulcerative development. Yet, the administration turns a deaf ear in many cases. That is where I am at, and one reason why I am glad to be moving onto a newer chapter soon. Being that this school is supposed to be a Catholic institution as well yet Catholic identity is conveniently cherry-picked to meet the minimum requirements of what it means to be a Catholic school, it also has a drain on many of us spiritually as well. Being in Baltimore the past couple of years has felt like I have been in the desert, and the oppression over this place is mind-numbing. When one reads in Ephesians 6 about "powers and principalities," it immediately brings to mind many of the things that dominate this city - radical politics, urban blight, a general dismissal of standards, etc. The Baltimore of 2026 is definitely not the city I remembered as a kid in 1975, over 50 years ago. Baltimore had its issues then too, but it seemed like a different world back then. Oddly, once one leaves the city limits and drives a few miles into the outlying suburbs, much of that oppression disappears. Today, for instance, we took a drive up to the nearby community of Cockeysville to visit an Amish market, and to be honest, it was one of the best days I have had in a long time. Of course, getting my hands on some good Amish baby Swiss that I am currently enjoying as I write this now didn't hurt either - nothing like fresh dairy from a Penn-Dutch market! And of course the homemade whoopie pies too - my goodness! If you have never had the pleasure of experiencing the taste of a whoopie pie, you are missing out. It is a confection that consists of two cakey cookies in between which a thick lard-based sweet cream is sandwiched. While one of them is more than enough to indulge a sweet tooth, they are a delicacy. The Amish market in Cockeysville is very similar to the one that we had in Hagerstown, in that it is a wide open space with a variety of vendors selling authentic Penn-Dutch crafts and food. While not nearly on the scale of places like Lancaster, Holmes County, or Shipshewana, it is still a taste of my own roots too - I grew up with a lot of this food and have enjoyed it for years. It is a familiar taste of home in a city that grows increasingly more foreign to me with each passing day. These are the moments that make it all worth it.
On another note, I have been slowly rebuilding much of the library I lost in Hagerstown a couple of years ago, and to be honest, I am starting to run out of shelf space. Fortunately for me, printed books are pretty economical to come by on both Amazon and Ebay, and having the advantage of a stable income has made rebuilding somewhat easier because now I know more of what to look for. In the past month, I have started to gain back some of my Middle Eastern Christian library, including a number of books on Copts, Assyrians, Armenians, and Maronites, as well as some good ideological texts that have shaped my own worldview, including the writings of the late Lebanese poet Said Akl and of the Colombian philosopher Nicholas Gomez Davila. These, as well as several online texts of books I either once had or always wanted, have gotten my library back up to a workable level again. In assessing what I have in my library currently now, I think I have recovered about 40-50% of my original books I had, and I am being nuanced at this point because where I live now is also a temporary space and I have to wisely purchase what I can currently manage due to the temporary nature of my current living arrangements as well as the fact I am cramped in a smaller space than what I was used to. The point is I am recovering, slowly and steadily but at least at a better pace than it took to get many of my original books I had. Once I am able to move to a more permanent place, I will plan on a more cohesive office space as well, because my plan is to rebuild as quickly as I can allow myself to, and that includes a better place in a better location. This leads though to some factors to consider.
As I mentioned, I am not getting a new contract at the school where I currently work, and while a part of me is hugely relieved, I need to come up with a plan going forward, which means in particular securing another position. I am pretty much established now as a professional educator, and I have a number of feelers out for other schools that I could possibly work with. I have had some interviews already, and am just waiting for a call back on some of them. Over the next couple of weeks, I need to carve out times to draft some cover letters and submit a couple of applications that I am looking at now, and hopefully and prayerfully one calls me soon. As other schools are reaching the end of their academic year as well, the needs will be out there to fill faculty positions, and what matters at this point is landing the right one. In the interim, I have funds thankfully to hold me over, and I also have the option of applying for UI benefits or, if push comes to shove, I can do some administrative work for a while until I get something I want. I am in a much different place than I was some years back, as now I do possess the Ph.D. as well as having a couple of years of educational experience added to my resume, so we'll see what happens. For those reading this, please keep me in your prayers too. Additionally, I have an annuity - a 403b - I can close out and that will provide some funds to live on for a short while too until I get another opportunity that opens. I am trusting God is in this with me, so I will also trust where he leads me at this point.
I have talked much in past weeks about opening a new chapter, the uncertainty of the "unknown frontier," and other aspects of this situation, and there will be much to reflect on in retrospect once the dust starts to settle a little. In all honesty, I have felt like the past couple of years have been a huge state of transition for me - after a sudden move from Hagerstown that wasn't planned, and the subsequent relocation to Baltimore, I have felt like I have landed in a foreign country. I don't feel a permanence, I don't see any roots here, and all I want is a way out of here. I know I have to make the best of my situation, and I do try to do that, but there are times it is really challenging to do it. I talked to one of my fellow teachers - he teaches Spanish at the high school I work at, and he is also of Catalan ancestry from Spain - and he expressed the same feeling he's having in our conversations too. I will call him by his first name Steve, and he's become a good friend. Steve has a good history - he was in Spain for many years, is a veteran of the military here, and also achieved earning a Master's from Georgetown. Yet, much like my own story, his was fraught with challenges - I won't go into the details of that here out of respect for the sanctity of his confidence, but he overcame a lot to get where he is now. He is also close in age, being one year older than me, and that I think gives us that Gen-Xer "old man" comradery. I will get into my perspective as an aging Gen-Xer in a bit, but I value Steve as a close friend now, perhaps one of the first I have established since moving here. As a fellow eccentric as well, Steve lives close by the school in a similar rowhouse with his Serbian-born wife, and the guy raises chickens in his back yard! He blessed us with a couple of dozen fresh eggs a couple of weeks ago, and you gotta admire a guy who can farm chickens in his backyard in the middle of the city! And, the eggs were amazing too - farm-fresh, and they helped bake some muffins as well as providing Barbara with a few good breakfasts. So, reflecting on my friend and colleague Steve, what does it mean for people like myself, him, and so many others when we start getting the realization that we are the old men now? Let's reflect on that a little.
Two of my all-time favorite movies are the Grumpy Old Men films that came out in the early 1990s. When those movies first came out, I was a young 20-ish adult barely out of high school and just starting my life in college as well as soon being newly married. Back then, I was "the kid" to so many, and the two characters in the movie - played masterfully by Walter Matthau and Jack Lemmon - were at the time part of my grandparents' generation. My grandparents then were still relatively young - they hadn't even reached their 70s yet, and my parents were still in their mid-40s. Three of my four grandparents were still alive then - my paternal grandfather, Melvin Thrower, had died of cancer in 1980, not even reaching 60 yet. Family was not close then in all honesty, but they were still there. Moving ahead just over 30 years, and all of my grandparents as well as both my parents are now gone - my maternal grandfather, David Strahin, just passed away two years ago at the age of 98. He outlived my mother by two years. His passing was interesting in that he was both the oldest and last surviving of his siblings, and his long life gave me some hope as well. I was not all that close to my grandfather - in all honesty, I never could be because he never saw me for who I was, but only what the skewered perceptions he had of me - judging me through the lens of my mother, who had been estranged from him for years - was, and thus to share things with him would be like casting pearls before proverbial swine. Losing my parents and grandparents was both a relief as well as a bit jarring - it was a relief because over the years they had cast almost a dismissive or judgmental shadow over me. They never celebrated my accomplishments, did not care to know who I really was, and for some cousins even today, I am still a by-line in a joke that is not all that funny. That part was liberating, in that now I could be the person I wanted to be without constraints of others, and I am thankful for that. On the other hand, I had actually gotten closer to Mom in particular just before she passed away just over four years ago, and I miss those morning talks we had when we would drink coffee and talk about all sorts of stuff. Of all my forebears, Mom did try and I also began to understand her better too. I was glad to be there for her when she finally did pass, and I got a lot of closure from that too. With my dad it was a bit different - for much of my adult life I was somewhat estranged from my dad due to differences with him I had over the years - I never felt he truly appreciated me, and although in his last few years we started to reach out and talk more, we never had the relationship we should have had. Thankfully though, I got something from Dad I did value - the family pictures from his side of the family tree, as well as many other items. And, I got closure with Dad too - once he passed on, I released a lot of things about him I had been holding onto, and I forgave him; there were many good memories of Dad too that I still remember, and despite our somewhat strained relationship, I loved my dad and I know that underneath all the other junk I believe he loved me too. And, there were things that I was proud of him for too although I still wonder if he was proud of me for things - he did serve honorably in the Army during Vietnam, and there are things he kept meticulously as records, and a trait I think I got from him was that there were sometimes 3 or more copies of the same thing he had. Further, I also feel that Dad made his peace, and I think Mom did too, in their last moments before they drew their last breaths. Not having either of them here now makes me appreciate many things about both of them I hadn't seen before, and that is a precious inheritance in itself that is of more value than any dollar amount. Experiencing the mortality of my last forebears though has led me to reflect on much as the lone surviving descendant of my immediate family, as well as reflecting on the reality of being an aging Gen-Xer. So, let me get into that now.
Do you ever feel like you are still a certain age in mind when you are older in reality? That is where I am now. I think on many levels much like I did as a 20-something college student over 30 years ago, but then I look at the lisinopryl I have to take every morning for my high blood pressure, as well as the set of dentures I have to wear now which have made eating things like nuts an impossibility - I have to eat slower, with smaller bites, and even in less quantities than I used to. The 20-something me from years ago recalls when I could eat an entire 16-inch cheese pizza by myself - today, I eat two pieces of a 12-inch pie and I am full. I look in the mirror and see that my hair is more white than it is black like it used to be, and I also notice the skin on my hands looking different. I also tire out easier now, and there are days my body is so stiff it's hard to move. I know I am getting older - the cells in various parts of my body loudly remind me. But, in my mind, I am still that 20-ish kid from over 30 years ago. So, when I am watching those Grumpy Old Men movies about the two old guys trying to outdo each other with physical ailments ("farting razor blades" versus intense lumbago), I then catch myself talking with people my age about what type of blood pressure meds they take and compare the effects with them. There is a bizarre absurdity to that, but that is the fact of life now. But, then I hear that a 17-year-old student of mine had a stroke and I am thinking my God, he is so young! The young man is currently recuperating in the hospital now, but the shock is still there - so young, and yet he experienced something people 50 years older than him would normally be at risk of having. I feel older, but also am thankful for being blessed for not having a stroke based on what that poor 17-year-old student of mine just went through. For those reading this, pray for him too, because he really is a good kid and is one of my better students too. Those are the things an aging 56-year-old Gen-Xer is thinking about these days, and it is a reminder that our own mortality is a reality as well.
Thanks for allowing me to spill my guts like this to you, and your reading of my random thoughts is greatly appreciated. See you next time.