24 Hours in Berkeley

Wake up in crummy hotel. Realize that the reason why this crummy hotel was expensive and the only one available was because it’s parent’s weekend as well as homecoming. Realize that this is the case because the cruddy breakfast with surprisingly good coffee is packed with parents. You’re as old as they are but your children are 2,800 miles away and six years from college.

Walk through the crisp air to the Cheese Board Collective. Get a large coffee and four awesome rolls. The best one is by far the “Chocolate Thing.” Walk into Berkeley’s campus and sit in Eucalyptus grove. Damn, these trees are big.

img_6150

Get call from Uber driver from yesterday who is kindly bringing keys to Berkeley. Scurry back down out of campus. Give dude $50 and lots of gratitude.

Walk back onto campus. Wander a bit and remember reading something about a favorite historian — Leon Litwack — and find that a collection of his books is in the undergraduate library. This is an amazing show. There are some first editions and it was as good a way of assessing the written history of African American life as you’ll likely find. They were also showing professor Litwack’s short, terrifying film of Bitter Fruit. I always liked reading about Professor Litwack because of his long and well-known commitment to teaching the survey.

This library, though, is something else. There’s a collection of Berkeley related documents from the National Park Service on display, too. And there’s a collection of comic books from all around the world. Best yet, there’s a frenzied book sale going on. I pick up a great paperback edition of Let Us All Praise Famous Men and a mint, hardcover edition of an OUP book on Mario Savio, which Berkeley must have bought millions of ’cause there were three at the sale.

How it goes terribly wrong when middle-aged people take selfies:
img_6155

As my briefcase was bursting with books already, I beat a hasty retreat. Sitting outside, I ate some more bread from the Cheese Board folks. If I were broke, I could have survived all day on these rolls.

Then I started walking. And walking. And walking. Made my way to the utterly brilliant Berkeley Botanical Garden. While I was disappointed that some couple had elected to get married — no Redwood Grove — it was really cool to look at the display of crops and then walk to the greenhouse (and up another hill!) to see the actual plants growing. I’d not seen a coffee tree or a cacao bean tree. (I will note that their chard was as consumed by leaf miners as mine is…)

Quinoa growing
img_61581

Despite the advice of the young man at the door, I continued walking up the hill (no sidewalk) to the Lawrence Science Building. This view… sigh. There’s a reason people live in Northern California.

img_6165

Here’s the giant DNA model that I want to build with my students:
img_6168

For some reason, I didn’t have cell phone service, so no uber. I couldn’t face walking down the way I came and it seemed clear from the fencing that if I couldn’t hike down, that I’d have a long walk up another hill. So I got on the Berkeley parking shuttle, which was taking folks down to the Berkeley-Utah game. Let’s be clear — there’s nothing in my experience that would prepare me for big time college football — but driving down with the super polite Berkeley alums was fun. Better yet, the bus driver showed me a back path so I could avoid walking into the stadium.

This path did put me on the road through the fraternity-sorority party zone. Scarily impressive. Thanks to the kind young women selling bottles of water who pointed me towards Bancroft Street. Got the kids shirts and winter hats, got the wife a cap too.

Hungry and always in search of the best Pad Thai, I picked the most crowded Thai place I could find and chowed down.

Stomach full, I wound towards the legendary Moe’s. Note to the people at the cleverly named “Mad Monk Center for Anachronistic Media”: why would I give you my laptop bag with pretty much everything important I own in it? Why wasn’t my offer to let you search it on the way out enough? Considering I’m the demographic you want — middle aged white dude with both cash and real credit cards — you might rethink this.

Anyway, Moe’s was everything it was supposed to be. There was first edition of Bound for Glory I coveted. A hardback of the first Foundation book. A battered first edition of 1984. (I paid less for one in better condition!)

Got three books. Joel Salatin’s book, Folks This Ain’t Normal, for $7. Another Wendell Berry collection of essays for $8. And paperback copy of Why Busing Failed, which I was wondering why they had three copies of in mint condition until I realized it was a Uof C press book. Bad reviewers — selling that shit. Note: they also had a section of $2-3 paperbacks that I’ve filled one window sill with — old, thin paperbacks.

These folks were awesome. I spent much of my time reading the stuff on the walls, the stories of the store, the ways in which it had kept going in thin times, the continuation of a family business. Knowing I only had a few minutes left and knowing I just wanted to sit somewhere quiet and cool, they sent me to The Drunken Boat (Le Bateau Ivre). Here I had the best milkshake I’ve ever had — the Moki, with what felt like espresso and real chocolate — and two awesome waiters. One ended up giving me a ride to the BART (thank you sir!) and the other had, wait for it, LIVED ON MY BLOCK of Hazel Avenue, and had more than likely danced with my kids at their Halloween party.

Long ride to the airport for the first Red Eye of my life. In the airport now an they’ve already announced that this is a “100% full flight.” Should be interesting.

My kids will never see Berkeley because there’s no way they would not want to go there. I guess we’ll have to move too.

W.E.B. DuBois Quote

“We must insist upon this to give our children the fairness of a start which will equip them with such an array of facts and such an attitude toward truth that they can have a real chance to judge what the world is and what its greater minds have thought it might be. —W.E.B. DuBois”

Darling-Hammond, Linda. The Flat World and Education: How America’s Commitment to Equity Will Determine Our Future. New York: Teachers College Press, 2010.

The final reading from our wedding, 2001

Behold, a sower went forth to sow;

And when he sowed, some seeds fell by the way side, and the fowls came and devoured them up:
Some fell upon stony places, where they had not much earth: and forthwith they sprung up, because they had no deepness of earth:
And when the sun was up, they were scorched; and because they had no root, they withered away.
And some fell among thorns; and the thorns sprung up, and choked them:
But other fell into good ground, and brought forth fruit, some an hundredfold, some sixtyfold, some thirtyfold.
Who hath ears to hear, let him hear.

(King James)

Behold, a sower went forth to sow.
And as he sowed, some fell by the way side, and the fowls came and devoured them up.
And some fell upon stony ground, where they had not much earth, and anon they sprung up, because they had no depth of earth.
And when the sun was up, they were parched, and for lack of rooting withered away.
And some fell among thorns, and the thorns sprung up, and choked them.
And some again fell in good ground, and brought forth fruit, one corn an hundredfold, some sixtyfold, and another thirtyfold.
He that hath ears to hear, let him hear.

(Geneva 1599)

“Once there was a man who went out to sow grain. As he scattered the seed in the field, some of it fell along the path, and the birds came and ate it up. Some of it fell on rocky ground, where there was little soil. The seeds soon sprouted, because the soil wasn’t deep. But when the sun came up, it burned the young plants; and because the roots had not grown deep enough, the plants soon dried up. Some of the seed fell among thorn bushes, which grew up and choked the plants. But some seeds fell in good soil, and the plants bore grain: some had one hundred grains, others sixty, and others thirty.”

“Listen, then, if you have ears!”

(Good News Version, the one I read in Reading, Mass, CCD class, 1970s)

Human beings doing something cool together

I was thinking this morning about my group and the weeks we’ve had together so far. You live long enough and you do enough different things and you realize how rare it is to be with a group that shares a common purpose and cares about each other. As such a group develops, it makes the hard work, the crappy but necessary work, that much easier.

I had a few classes like this in high school (thank you Jean St. Pierre) and a couple more in college and graduate school. More often, though, when I had these experiences it was a club, a so-called extracurricular activity, or a post-work activity.

Teaching, though, means that I have to find ways to foster deep and authentic intentions regarding the work. I know that the more purpose I felt — let’s make this team awesome, let’s play out as a band, let’s build this organization — the easier it was to grind through the hard parts.

And I have to make sure that the group coalesces in a way that they start to pick each other up by reminding them why we’re doing what we’re doing.

“Human beings doing something cool together” sums it up.

Where do we hear each other?

This article describes how one reporter has struggled with the ways in which Americans communicate with each other at this point. There were a number of killer insights but several stuck out:

In recent years, in my reporting, I’ve come to uncool conclusions. For one thing, I’ve begun to think that instilling public purpose into private communities is the hardest thing in the world.

I’ve increasingly found myself a supporter of messy public process: the legislation pushed through government slowly, in curtailed form; the interminable, fruitless-seeming town-hall meeting; many of the government’s lumbering, error-prone efforts at regulation. These processes are cumbersome, often wasteful, and inevitably infuriating. But at their best they have the virtue of occurring in a common arena, the place where all parts of a population meet. They force us, if we hope to get anything done, to translate our values and thoughts into language that communicates broadly. The more I observe, the warier I grow of privatized efficiency: in time, it indulges clannish thought. Let’s drive our language out of private circles, back toward the public sphere.

What I appreciate about this latter idea, particularly as a teacher, is that Heller is trying to move us back to the circles where you have to get something done. For example, if you want safe water, you’re going to have to meet with a lot of different stakeholders. Getting all of those individuals and institutions to agree on something let alone change their behaviors and policies is going to require a lengthy process, one that’s, in Heller’s words, cumbersome, often wasteful, and inevitably infuriating.Or you can retreat to a closed, private space, say an on-line community, where you can develop your own language and vision in essential isolation and then lament why nothing seems to change.

Eating the New York Times

We have no shortage of green/nitrogen waste. There are leaves for a portion of the year but I can’t count on them and I’m not a huge fan of the dust that’s on our street.

So I shred the daily paper and dump into into the compost. I was worried about any toxic components but here’s what the research/ google search revealed:

From Cornell:

Newspaper is safe to compost, but it breaks down quite slowly because of its high lignin content. (Lignin is a substance found in the woody cell walls of plants, and it is highly resistant to decomposition).

Most newspapers today use water or soy-based inks. Although these may contain small amounts of toxic compounds, the trace levels are not of significant toxicological concern.

Planet Natural, considering the same question.

I’ll continue to do this. I like the idea of digesting the news twice…