Relationships
I’ve spent a lot of the past few days thinking and talking about relationships. All kinds of relationships – some friends I have passed time gossiping, I’ve chatted with various people about student relations, and even other blogs have talked about relationship-building.
One thing that strikes me is how much happens in the subtext, in the way we communicate. Two examples:
- I nearly always write the daily agenda on the board, and then I sit in front of the board. I still have students who come in and ask “what are we doing today?” I used to snap at them to read the board, until I figured out that they’re really saying, “hi. Notice me.” So now I do.
- A friend called me yesterday and left a voice mail that was basically, “I need to ask you something. Call me back at work or on my cell.” When I called back, he wanted me to pass along a message to someone else that she should call him because he needed to ask her a question. Okay, so first, why did he call me? (Answer: presumably he doesn’t have her cell number, though he does have the number of at least one other person he could have tried.) Second, why not just leave a message that said, “Can you ask Jane to call me?” Why specifically ask me to call back? It finally occurred to me (and I do kind of hope he doesn’t read this blog) that perhaps it was something like #1. “Call me, I want to talk to you.” Of course the reason that occurred to me is…
I was walking around the airport with a couple of hours to kill due to a delayed flight. I have plenty to entertain me (I’m sure my students would be thrilled if I graded some of their work that I downloaded!) but I really wanted to talk to someone. I ended up calling that same friend and he didn’t answer. I did leave a complete message. (“I didn’t see Jane, so I couldn’t pass on your message.”) but what I really wanted was to talk to him. I almost called various other friends just to have a conversation. (Instead I ruminated on relationships. Aren't you lucky?)
( other things )

