487 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
487 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
_____________________________________________________________________________
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---------------------------- I Bleed for This? ------------------------------
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------04.07.96-----------------------------------------------------#040------
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An Open Letter to Superintendent Grimmel
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apppreciated by IBFT
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by Robert Alter
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Dear Superintendent Grimmel:
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I have received your letter asking why my daughter Greta is not attending
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your school system. I want to try and answer that.
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I would like to avoid conflict between us by saying that Greta will be
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attending a private or alternative school, but the truth is that she will
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not be attending any school. I would also like to be able to say that my
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wife Jane and I are not aware that Greta must attend school by law. But we
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are. We are also aware that the State has penalties in such cases. But we
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don't care.
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I assure you that what we are doing we are not doing lightly. We don't
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break laws lightly. Where the touch of the State is soft on the shoulder
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of our family, we do not shrink. We pay our taxes, we get shots for our
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dog, we register our car and drive it slowly. We don't disturb anyone's
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peace, and we don't litter. We are good neighbors and good people.
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But at this touch - where compulsory education touches the life of our
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daughter - you must excuse us if we tell you to lay off. This law we
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choose to break.
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In a word, no.
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This is our beloved daughter, whose body and soul were given by God into
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our keeping, and you cannot have her.
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This is the heart of the matter. Let me try to explain.
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Greta is more ours than yours certainly, but she is really God's. Jane and
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I are her mother and father because God needed a woman and a man to lie
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down together and prepare a place for a human soul that was ready to
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incarnate on earth. God wanted Jane and me to take care of that soul - to
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nurture and protect it - until the time it is ready to go out on its own
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and do the tasks God has appointed for it. Our responsibility, as we see
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it, is to protect that soul from all harm so that it may grow according to
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its own laws. Sometimes I think of myself as a temple guard, standing
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before the sanctuary of the Lord, making sure that the unholy do not
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enter.
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Does this seem silly and overblown to you? It does to me too, a little. I
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mean, all I want to do is answer the question, "Why aren't we sending
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Greta to kindergarten?" The problem is that every time I think I have
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answered it, I say to myself, "No, that's not it, there's something under
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that." and then I go to that deeper level, and there's a level under that,
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and so on until at the bottom of it all is God. I have a responsibility to
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God to protect this being that He has sent me. That is the heart of the
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matter.
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I don't know you as a man, Superintendent Grimmel. All I know is that you
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share the values that inform the compulsory public education system in
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the country. You, your principals, and your teachers share those values.
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Some more, some less, but you've all got your fingers in that pie.
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Frankly, I don't trust a one of you with my daughter's spirit. This is my
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beloved daughter, in whom I am so well pleased that I sometimes cry just
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thinking about her, and I will not hand her over to you.
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Let me introduce my daughter.
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Greta is five, fair, blond, blue-eyed, and quite beautiful.
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From birth she has "toed-in", especially her left foot, so she has to wear
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orthopedic shoes. We do special exercises every night.
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One evening when she was two, lying in bed waiting for her story, Greta
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started singing the words, "My tushy feel good, my vagina feel good." The
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tune was quite pleasant, and she sang it for about ten minutes, the same
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words, the same tune, over and over. Then, with one last "My tushy feel
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good, my vagina feel good," rising to a kind of crescendo of pure
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well-being, she looked up at me and said, "Know that song?"
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When she was 18 months old, she fell while carrying a glass of juice and
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slit her right wrist down to the nerve. She lost feeling and control in
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her hand and had to be operated on by a team of surgeons with fancy
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equipment. She was in the operating and recovery rooms, on her back with
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masked strangers doing strange and hurtful things to her, for eight hours.
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The operation was successful though. The nerve has regenerated completely,
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and except for her index finger sometimes wiggling about aimlessly, her
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hand is perfect. There is a scar that looks like a wishbone on her wrist.
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There are scars inside too. To this day, she distrusts many strangers,
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especially men, and she doesn't like to be separated from us, and she is
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frightened of people wearing masks.
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She loves to swing on swings, and play with other kids, and carry small
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objects around all day, and tell time, and open car doors, and eat, and
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talk. She dearly loves to talk. I have never met anyone who talks more
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than Greta.
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When she was three, she fought for and won the right to choose her own
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clothes. Sometimes she comes down the stairs looking like a pile of
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laundry.
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She has an incredible memory. Sometimes she'll say to me, "Hey Papa,
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remember the time when..." and then she'll narrate an incident that
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happened so long ago and with such minute detail that I, who have
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forgotten it entirely, just listen in amazement.
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She is very smart. I'm smart too, and I know the expectations people lay
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on you when you're smart, and I am frightened by how smart Greta is.
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She laughs hysterically when tickled. Cries unmercifully when hurt or mad.
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Sometimes, if she doesn't get her way, or if she's lonely or just bored,
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she whines and whines until I go crazy and tell her I can't stand it
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anymore, and then she either stops and gets it together or bursts into
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tears.
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She loves all beings littler than herself. Babies, chipmunks, birds,
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insects. Her favorite stories are the ones I tell her about Thumbelina,
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who lives in a hole under a tree near our cabin. One morning, when I was
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in a rage at our cat and hitting him because he had peed on the floor, I
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looked over at Greta and saw a look of such intense personal hurt and
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disappointment in me that I stopped and went over and held her.
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She has a basically bipolar view of the universe. To her way of thinking, a
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thing is either Yuk or Yum. One does not have to probe very deeply to find
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out her opinion of something. "Hey, Greta, wanna help me clear the table?"
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"Yuk."
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She writes songs, flowing spontaneous songs that she sings all day. Her
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latest one is called "Flowers":
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Flowers at breakfast time
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Flowers at lunch time
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Flowers at dinner time
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Flowers flowers flowers
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Boom boom boom
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Flowers Flowers Flower
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Boom boom boom
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Flowers in the spring
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Flowers in the summer
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Flowers in the sun of the east.
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When Greta feels insecure, she likes to stick her thumb in her mouth or
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her fingers in her vagina. Once she's plugged in, she feels better.
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She is not conscious of being naked. I have seen other little children
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titter at her when she was naked, and she just looks back, mystified. How
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long she can stay in her prelapsarian innocence I don't know; I know that
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she will eventually fall and join the rest of us, but it hasn't happened
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yet.
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Once in a while, she pees in her pants. Sometimes it's because she's
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laughing very hard, sometimes she's just playing so hard that she forgets
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it, and sometimes she's mad at someone and it's a revenge. Once when she
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was mad at me, her revenge was to go upstairs and break all my toothpicks.
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She doesn't close the bathroom door when on the toilet. She isn't yet
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ashamed to be seen doing what human beings do. As a matter of fact, not
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only is she not private about defecating, she's quite social, and often
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invites passer-by in for a chat.
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She has seen me and Jane and other grown-ups display some pretty intense
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emotions. She has seen us cry and scream. She has seen us angry and
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frightened. She looks on, curious, a bit awed, but she seems to accept it
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all as part of being human.
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She's always picking fights with me these days. I tell her to go wash her
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face, and she tells me she doesn't have to. "You're not my boss!" I tell
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her it's time for bed, and she says it isn't. I tell her it's cold outside
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and she should wear a sweater, and she tells me it's not cold and she can
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wear whatever she wants to. I think she's separating her ego from ours and
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feeling her power, which is great, but it drives me nuts and I often feel
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like strangling her.
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She gets so mad at me sometimes! She screams and hits me. She calls me a
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dummy. Her electric little rage. One part of me hates it. Another part is
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just so damn proud of her that all I can do while I'm getting punched is
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watch in admiration.
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So, what will you teach this creature in your schools, Superintendent?
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Will you teach her that every single part of her body, from her eye to her
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anus, is holy? Will you teach her that she - she herself, inside out - is
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from God and therefore perfect? Will you teach her to love herself? Will
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you teach her that whatever feeling she is feeling at any given moment is
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valid and okay? Will you teach her that she is better than no one and no
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one is better than her? Will you teach her not to judge anyone or argue
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with anyone? Will you teach her that television is empty, that newspapers
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and movies and stores and cars and cosmetics and clothes are narcotics,
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that money is guilt, that the American middle-class is desperate, that
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disease of the body is disease of the spirit, that 90 percent of the food
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in supermarkets is poison, that capitalism sucks? Will you teach her about
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suffering beautiful humanity? Will you teach her to every moment choose
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life? And what I mostly want to know, Superintendent, will you teach my
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daughter that she is God?
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I know you won't. I didn't go through twenty years of schooling for
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nothing. I know what goes on in those classrooms. Christ, I'm a teacher! I
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get them at the end of the line in college. I see what's been done to
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those kids. I see their hot, angry pimples. I see them slump and cower in
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their chairs. I see their boredom and their laziness, which I know is
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really rage. I see the horrible thing in their eyes, the overwhelming
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question they keep asking with their eyes and which I can never answer. I
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see!
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Listen. I will tell you two stories.
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One day I told my students (freshmen at a prominent east-coast university)
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to pull out a piece of paper. They all did. I told them to print their
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names in the upper right-hand corner. They all did. I told them to tile
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the paper "A Syllabus of Syllables," and then underline the title. They
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all did. I told them to write the following syllables next to the numbers:
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"ge, sha, la, urb, orb, go, vin, sko, sti, cer." They all did. I told them
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to form a word from each of the syllables. They asked me a few questions -
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they wanted to be sure exactly what it was I wanted from them - and then
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they all hunched over their papers and did it. I told them to fold the
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paper in half. Deborah asked which way. I said lengthwise. Then I told
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them to hand in their papers. They all did. I stood there with a handful of
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15 papers folded lengthwise. Everybody was looking at me.
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Not one of them asked me why we were doing this. Not one of them told me
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to go screw myself. Not one of them - not one - even looked at me strange.
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Why should they? Nothing strange had happened. this was school. School is
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where you give up your power, you do what you're told, and you don't ask
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questions. In school, we all learn not to care anymore, not even to care
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that we're being humiliated, because everybody keeps telling us that we're
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being educated.
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Another time, later in the semester, I walked into class purposely late.
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They were all seated, talking. I sat down and looked around. They stopped
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talking and looked at me. I looked back and said nothing. They kept
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looking at me. I kept saying nothing. It went on for about five minutes
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clock time, but it seemed like an eternity. Finally, Russell asked the
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class, "Why isn't anybody saying anything?" Nobody answered. Then Marilyn
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asked me, "Why aren't you saying anything?"
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"What do you want me to say?" I asked.
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"I don't know. Run the class, I guess."
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"It's your class, You run it."
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She looked at me as if I had just asked her to stand on her head and
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bounce out of the room. They all began to realize that something was
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happening here and everybody began talking. Different people were putting
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it in different words, but the message was for me to take power. I either
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said no or just said nothing and watched. One or two students tried to get
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things started by running the class as I would have run it.
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"No," said Miriam, "don't you see that's what he's trying to tell us? We
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can't do things his way!"
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They didn't know what to do. They were stuck. Then they started getting
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mad, first at each other, then at me.
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"Teach us something. It's your job," complained Terry.
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"I'll be glad to. What do you want to know?"
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"I don't know"
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"You don't know what you want to know?"
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"Yes."
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"No."
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Then I got mad and said sarcastic things. Then they got mad and started
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defending themselves and accused me of being unfair.
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Things went on like that all class. By the end of the hour, two had broken
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down in tears, five or six had just up and left, one had stormed out and
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slammed the door muttering nasty things, one just kept repeating, "I'm so
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confused, I'm just so confused, I don't know what I'm doing here."
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Oh yes, I know what the schools teach, Superintendent Grimmel. They don't
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teach anything. What schools do is socialize. The main function of our
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schools is to produce good Americans, small humble helpless people who
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look and think and dress and talk and hope alike, mechanical people
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programmed to tumble from school into ticky-tacky houses and fit into the
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machine. Some fit high, some low, but the purpose of the schools is to
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produce parts for the machine.
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America is the machine, we are the parts. Factories need workers,
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corporations need executives, offices need secretaries, and schools need
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superintendents. Everybody must fit. But the slots aren't very big, and
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the human spirit is huge, so you have to whittle people down pretty small
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to fit them in, and that takes a long time, so school takes many years.
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And nobody really wants to get whittled down like that, nobody really
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wants to be made small and afraid, nobody really wants to have the God
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pumped out of them, so let's make school compulsory! Let's kidnap the
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little gods and put them in yellow buses and transport them to schools.
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They have to come and get made puny by law.
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I was once talking to a high-school kid and asked him what year he was in.
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He said, "I only got two more years to serve." He wasn't trying to be
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funny. It was a slip of the tongue.
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I am sure you are not a bad person, Superintendent Grimmel. I bet many of
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your teachers are good, gentle, loving people. But because they are
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working for a system, they are the system, and they will teach my daughter
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the teachings of the system.
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I know that you will teach her.
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You will teach her first that she needs a teacher to teach her. That
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knowledge and power come from the outside. The message is that she doesn't
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know anything inside herself, she's an empty ignorant helpless vessel that
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must be filled. I can't begin to tell you how wrong that is.
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You will teach her that she is not a person but a role: a little girl,
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bright child, advanced reader, first-grader, sophomore, Phi Beta Kappan,
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graduate, Ph.D. She will look up to those in superior roles, and down at
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those in inferior roles, but she will not look straight at people, behind
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the roles, at the persona and the God in the person. In time, she will
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begin to identify with her role. She will forget who she really is. In
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every sense of the word, she will then be lost.
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You will teach her that she is weak and that authority is strong. In the
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name of practicality, you'll suck the fight out of her. I really hate it
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when Greta fights with me, but I hope she never stops.
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Above all , you will teach her fear. First, she will fear teachers and
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then all grown-ups. She will fear failure, which means that she will fear
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endeavor. She will grow to fear the feelings natural to a human being and
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a little girls- feelings of terror, rage, vulnerability, power, and love.
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She will grow numb to the best stuff inside her. She will be ripped and
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uprooted out of her own dark human soil, and like the rest of us she'll be
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left to rot in the dryness of her intellect.
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You will teach her that life is compromise and choices are limited. Some
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nice teacher will give her the choice to write a paper about her summer
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vacation or about her neighborhood, but I don't think that the teacher
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will give my daughter the choice to write whatever she wants, including
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nothing at all - and that's the choice that takes the bullshit out of the
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other choices.
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You will teach her that there are places and activities of her own little
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glorious body that are ugly and dirty. That will be a subtle teaching,
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although the first time that Great gets insecure in school and sticks her
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fingers in her vagina, the scene will probably not be subtle.
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I wonder what you'll teach her the first time she calls you a "piss-ass."
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She calls me a "piss-ass" all the time. I call her a "piss-ass" back,
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which makes her laugh. Will you, Superintendent Grimmel, laugh with Greta
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when she comes to your office and calls you a "piss-ass?"
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You will teach her competition. It won't take long for her to realize that
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her 'A' means nothing unless her friend Julie gets a 'B', better an 'F',
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so in some deep corner inside her Greta will be hoping failure for Julie.
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Hoping failure for your best friend (Rusty Swartz! Forgive me, I loved
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you!) is an evil thing, and schools are evil for doing that to people.
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Schools corrupt friendship. Where there is supposed to be equality, trust,
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and cooperation, you put hierarchy, fear, and competition. People secretly
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competing with each other never look each other square in the eye because
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their real loving selves are hiding under their scared competitive selves,
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and who wants anyone to see that in your eyes? Do you really think I will
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allow you to tamper with my daughter's clear gaze?
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You will teach her that the purpose of learning is a good grade and a
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teacher's approval. You will move the source of her own sense of
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achievement - her very pride, joy, and independence - outside herself into
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an authority. When little Johnny gets that 'A', he feels great, but if he
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gets a 'D', he is wretched with shame and guilt. You will make my daughter
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dependent on the outside world for her own opinion of herself. In the end,
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she'll be like you and me, like all of us who went through it, looking out
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of scared squirrel eyes always asking everybody, "Am I okay? Am I okay?"
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Not by accident but on purpose, at the very center of their purpose,
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schools make people feel not okay. Who else but people who felt not okay,
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people emptied out of all their hard proud stuff, would willingly fit into
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this social system? Schools rip the You out of you, and by the time you're
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done, you sit there burnt-out, gutted, soft as mush, ready to do what
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you're told. Then they call your name and you go up and get your diploma.
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You will teach her that at age five she should know her alphabet and at
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six she should know how to read, at nine she should know this, and at ten
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that. There is one clock in all your schools, and it tells time for
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everybody. I don't know who first suggested that the human spirit grows at
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the same rate in every human being, but whoever did should take a walk in
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the woods during spring and see if a maple buds the same week as an oak.
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Superintendent Grimmel, you're going to tell Greta that she should read at
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six, when maybe she won't want to read until she's ten. Maybe she has
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better things to do. When she wants to learn how to read, she will come to
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me and say, "Papa, help me learn how to read," and I will. It will take a
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month. We'll have a ball. And for the rest of her life, she will learn
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what she needs to know when she needs to know it. her learning will always
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be a voluntary inner response to an inner need. If she needs a book or a
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teacher or even a school, she'll find all of those. But it will always be
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her need, not your curriculum.
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You'll teach her all about time. The school day runs from 8 to 2:30. For
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50 minutes you sit in a room and ten a bell rings and for 5 minutes you
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walk through the halls and then a bell rings. Don't be late. Pink slip.
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Time's up. Tick-tock. But kids' time is timeless, they live in one vast
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moment, and it is a great sin to put them in time, and time in them. Oh, I
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know, it will happen to Greta eventually, and to some extent it already
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has. She too will forget that she floats in a sea of eternity, but please,
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not when she's five for heaven's sake.
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Somehow she'll learn that sex is bad and genitals giggly. Somewhere along
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the line she'll learn that you don't cry or shout in public, and you don't
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get mad at grown-ups, and you hold in burps and cover yawns and apologize
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for sneezes. She'll end up saying "Please" and "Thank you" when she
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doesn't mean it. She'll probably grow up being rational instead of
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intuitive, cool and judicious instead of hot and spontaneous. She'll talk
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softly, think small, and write like a corpse. Somehow the message will get
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to her that the purpose of life is work and the purpose of work is money,
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She will be somewhat of a sexist and somewhat of a racist and somewhat of
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a patriot. Probably she'll end up being a consumer, and she'll think that
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consuming will bring her happiness. And she'll get the message that you
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really can't do much to change things, that ya better like what ya get kid
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because you are powerless.
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Probably no one will ever actually tell her this crap, but there's an
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osmosis that goes on in your schools, and the medium is the message, so
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she'll get it. Oh boy, will she get it.
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God help her, she gets a lot of this stuff from me and Jane and her
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grandparents and playmates. I know that everything I have said schools
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will teach her she will learn anyway. It's called growing up in America.
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It's also called falling from grace, and it seems to happen to all of us.
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I know that Greta will not be spared, whether or not she goes to school.
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But with all the forces threatening the integrity of her soul, and with
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such a long hard battle ahead of her, she doesn't have to face the Goliath
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of your schools too.
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So, if she doesn't go to school, how will Greta learn, you may be asking
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yourself. But I am more concerned with, What will Greta learn? You see, I
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don't really care if Greta knows where Guatemala is, or who the President
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of Ethiopia is, or how to write a compound sentence, or what seven times
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seven is. While all the other little children are learning that stuff,
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Greta might be out in the garden with Jane learning how to grow pole
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beans. Or she might be in the woods with me learning how to cut down a
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tree for wood. If Greta never learns to distinguish a noun from a verb,
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she still might learn how to distinguish a black maple from a sugar maple
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and know which one to tap. While all those other little children are
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learning how to add and conjugate and type. Greta might be learning how to
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survive in a world that is falling apart around our ears. Given the state
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of the world today -the shortages, the pollution, the horror of the cities
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, the horror of our weapons - can you, Superintendent Grimmel, say with
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confidence what a person will have to know in order to make it in this
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world in twenty years? I am scared about what's happening in the world,
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and scared for my daughter. Things are much too serious for her to be
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wasting time in school.
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Not to mention all the time I want her to be playing, purely playing,
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instead of sitting in a set in a classroom learning.
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And while all those other little children are learning where Guatemala is
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and who is the President of Ethiopia, Greta, alone out in the woods, might
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be learning where she is and who is the Lord of the Universe. Maybe she'll
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never talk to a guidance counselor, but maybe she'll talk to an angel.
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I'll tell you what. If you start offering courses like Introduction to
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Wisdom, and Advanced Happiness, and Fundamentals of Ecstasy, I'll consider
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sending Greta to your schools.
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An old friend of mine met Greta for the first time this morning, and said,
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"You know, your daughter... there's something special about her... a light
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in her face. I don't know what it is.. just a light." I know what it is.
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It is the light of God which we are all born with. The light dims and
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|
flickers as we grow up, and in some of us it is all but out. Some of us,
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like me, lose it for a long long time, and then in some mirror we get a
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flash of it, and then lose it again, but we've seen it, there it was, our
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real self, our peace, God - and then we know that for the rest of our
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lives our job is to find that light again.
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"Ye are the Light of the world." We are. We really are.
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My daughter's face radiates light. Light spills from her as she strides.
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She dances and spins in light.
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She hasn't lost it yet. Not much of it anyway. I bathe in it. I am fierce
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in my protection of it, like any animal fighting for the life of its
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young. If I have said extreme things, that is why. I am sorry to be
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extreme. I think schools are extreme.
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Please excuse my daughter from school today.
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Sincerely,
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Robert Alter
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==============================================================================
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IBFT: No matter how hard you laugh with or at it, you'll NEVER get it.
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http://www.amherst.edu/~mcspinks/ibft/ibfthome.html
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email: mcspinks@unix.amherst.edu
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ftp://ftp.etext.org/pub/Zines/IBFT The Eleventh Hour (617)696-3146
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==============================================================================
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