Posted in #Confessions, #Teaching, Aging, Contemplations

Critics        by Ginger Keller Gannaway

Recently Gary said something that made me bust out laughing.  I was leaving to observe a student teacher and said, “I’m worried that I wore this same skirt the last time I observed her class.”

He dismissed my fear with, “Don’t worry. No one will even notice what you’re wearing.”

T-shirt from Crockett High School (my favorite place to teach!)

“What!?” I said. “Teenage girls notice EVERYTHING their teachers wear, say, do, or do not do!”

They criticize pants that don’t fit well, shoes that are worn out, a dress older than their parents are, a necklace, earrings, makeup, or lack of makeup, an unusual pronunciation (even if it’s a word they don’t know), your voice, your posture, your haircut, your car, your lunch, your pet, your children, or even your momma.  Nothing is off-limits. To most teens, teachers give them too much homework but not enough praise. Also, we provide endless chances for them to perfect their criticism skills. 

I remember once wearing one navy sock and one black sock. So I deserved the, “Hey, Miss! Your socks don’t match.”  I also had to claim the, “Why you mixing a pearl earring with your fake diamond one?” And I turned hot sauce red when a usually quiet girl pointed to my left ankle and softly said, “The staple you used on your pants’ hem is about to fall off.” Guilty as charged.

But I didn’t like the observational skills of a fifteen-year-old who stood up in class and pointed to my white shirt’s left pocket and smiled. “Your mustard stain reminds me of my baby sister’s throw up!”

And nothing stings like the, “Hey, Miss! You oughta give whoever cut your hair a minus-one review on Yelp!”

Even the unintentional criticisms can punch your self-image in the face. “Miss! Guess what! You and my great-grandma have the same blue jean skirt.” During my 36 years of teaching, students have been both ruthless and helpful.

I’ve had kids point out lettuce between my teeth many times. The kind ones whisper the problem (“There’s something in your teeth”) while you’re picking up that day’s assignment. The uncouth ones make sure all thirty-four classmates hear them announce, “Hey, Miss, your spinach had a fight with your honeydew at lunch!” 

Some adjectives that were meant to grind down my confidence in my lesson plans have been: “Hey Miss, this book is lame…whack…stupid…sorry ass… boring… sucks… all kinds of wrong… too easy… too hard…awful…lousy…inferior…crummy…basic…cheesy…off…and crappy.”  

One time when my principal observed me teaching, a cute cheerleader passed judgement on my new dress by looking me up and down and slowing shaking her head. Then the fact that my lesson was clever, creative, and engaging meant nothing to me, and the dress I paid way too much for was in our Goodwill bag the next week.

After I turned fifty, the teens’ criticisms made me laugh more often than blush. So what if I got confused when using my room’s “smart board” or messed up streaming video on the doc-cam.

“You’re forgetting to unmute the sound, Miss,” or “Your hyperlink doesn’t open,” did not bother me.

“Hey, Eric, could you sort out my tech issues?” I’d say and all would be well.

And the quips about my crooked glasses, out-of-date clothes, or uncool taste in music did no harm. When someone noticed two inches of my half-slip showing, I could step behind a bookcase and roll up my slip’s waistband as I continued analyzing Shakespeare’s use of figurative language without missing a metaphor. 


I love the line from the Oak Ridge Boys’ song “Leaving Louisiana in the Broad Daylight” — “I gotta roll on between the ditches.” Turning older has made me tough and carefree, where the snarky criticisms not only slide off my back but evaporate into a lavender mist.

Posted in Contemplations, Gratitude, Nature

Routines by Ginger Keller Gannaway   

Routines fool me into believing all is right with my world. When I follow my morning ritual, the day has the promised sweetness of a crisp, polished apple or a nectarine begging me to enjoy its juiciness. I get up with fresh brewed coffee and read, pray, think, and write while I “sit ugly.” Next, I go on a two-mile walk by myself and catch the sun winking at me through trees both bald and full. This by-myself walk lets ideas bounce around my brain while my feet do heel/toe steps, and I observe the natural world coexisting with the city. Birds perch in branches and on electrical power lines. Squirrels race through crunchy fallen leaves and greasy discarded food wrappers. The grass grows confidently in lush wooded areas and between uneven sidewalk cracks. Dogs’ barks mix with cars’ revving engines. And sweet flower fragrances swirl around the aroma of onions and potatoes frying on a stove.

I get tricked into believing life is balanced.

Millie Biscuit

I carry pepper spray in my front pants pocket, and the thumb of my right hand rubs the gadget’s activation button at the same time I give familiar fellow walkers a head nod.

Wake. Pray. Sip. Think. Write. Walk alone. Observe. Think. Connect. Walk. Think some more.

I need my five to seven a.m. time to myself. And when Millie pants too loud or J.T. meows incessantly, I curse the interruptions. I want morning rituals to calm the fears that hide just below the surface of my even breaths and soulful stares outside my office window. My nasty thoughts, like zombies, push through the dirt of their graves. Their thin, bloodless hands come out first followed by rotting faces with hanging eyeballs and slack-jawed mouths. Uneven groans and weak cries accompany their struggle to enter the world of the living. Some horror flicks claim they want to eat our brains. Sounds right. They’re after my wise thoughts, my positive vibes, and my fragile faith. So to avoid the zombies, I head out the door and let nature clear my head.

I enjoy the predictable moments of my walk, and I give strangers complimentary nicknames. On the spooky street, I see “The Other Aunt Toni,” a tall slim woman in her eighties who lives alone and sweeps her front porch or takes in the garbage bin with her walker nearby. Her solid independence and short, stylish white hair remind me of my dad’s younger sister who just turned 93. Further down the street, I wave to “John Goodman’s Brother,” a large retired guy with a spunky dog. His smooth voice, long, full face, and cool demeanor (he was once a part of a local rock band) evoke the essence of the actor who graced both The Big Lebowski and the Treme series. Sometimes I spot “Minari Grandma” – an energetic Asian woman in a large front yard with a wild-looking garden that she tends with a determined, don’t-mess-with-me-attitude. The flowers, vegetables, and ferns all vie for her attention as she tends to the wildness wearing a floppy wide-brimmed hat and bringing to mind the untraditional grandma in the movie Minari.  Seeing the same houses, yards, cats and people each morning gives me comfort. Predictability clears my head of predatory thoughts.

Until something makes me raise both eyebrows. A for-real dead opossum next to an overwhelmed garbage bin. A slumped over person sleeping in his parked car. A loose dog giving me the eye. 

Then I’m sure the zombies are hiding around the corner of the next house. And my mind remembers that life’s surprises are not always good. And the whatifs get more convincing. What if that person in the car was not just asleep? Could he have overdosed? Should I go back and knock on the car window? Do I need to call 9-1-1?

But I keep walking and a large beige and orange window cat looks at me, and I realize the zombies are not in that yard. And I turn down a wider street with fewer cracked segments of sidewalk. I see Walking Lady coming my way, and I know we will smile, wave, and comment on the weather when we get closer to each other. Soon I’ll get back to my condo where Millie will be pacing and Gary is sipping his first cup of coffee and working a Sudoko. I’ll eat a banana and in twenty minutes Gary and I will take Millie for a long walk. We may take a route similar to my by-myself walk

Sam & June

We will share our day’s agendas and comment on the a hot news topic or mention the emotional and physical states of our three grown sons. And we’ll stay aware of Millie’s poops. More routines to follow. 

Grandma’s Recipe

And the balance I first felt with my first cup of coffee may not be as steady, but I do know I am very fortunate. I keep on believing the world is more like eating a just-right banana than stepping in dog shit. The zombies in my brain will stay below the earth for now because I have three wonderful sons living nearby. Each has someone he loves above all others. I have a stereo system from the 1970s with a turntable that only sometimes goes backwards. I’m making my grandma’s “Madame Queen Cornbread Dressing” today (and a shrimp and mushroom dressing for my youngest son) in preparation for tomorrow’s Thanksgiving. And my momma’s version of turkey and sausage gumbo will be made on Friday.

So Turkey Day’s routines will happen, and I feel mostly sure “all shall be well” and if things veer off course (like someone brings extra-powerful magic cookies) and the hosts become incapacitated for awhile, that will be a family story to tell one day. All will still be mostly ok. Wabi-Sabi, y’all!

Turkey Bob