O’ Canada – The Wonders of Winter

I enjoy writing for the good people over at Chicken Soup for the Soul and I have had seven of my stories appear in seven books for them.

The most recent was in Christmas in Canada where my story “Artificial Happiness” tells of our one and only attempt to have a real tree for Christmas in our home.  You’ll understand when you read the story why we never attempted it again.

I also had another story of mine selected last year for Chicken Soup for the Soul’s book: O Canada The Wonders of Winter: 101 Stories about Bad Weather, Good Times, and Great Sports.

My story “Polar Plunge” tells of my family’s first experience with winter in our new home in 1994.  My family has braved winter here on our acreage now for over twenty years and although we have adapted to the climate, with it’s snow-eating Chinooks, and mind-numbing temperature plunges, sometimes occurring within twenty-four hours of one another causing those seasonal migraines I dread,… we have survived.  I can’t help but chortle to read how the good folks in the southern U.S. of A. handle the cold.  I laugh in haughty derision when they complain about a skiff of snow on the ground and temperatures just below zero.  Seriously, we don’t call that cold here in Canada.  In fact, temperatures of zero are considered heat waves here during the winter.

Rudyard Kipling penned this little limerick that sums up winters in Canada quite poignantly:

There was a small boy of Quebec
Who was buried in snow to his neck.
When they asked, “Are you friz?”
He replied, “Yes, I is —
But we don’t call this cold in Quebec!”

To my southern friends, go out and buy the Chicken Soup book to fully understand how we Canadians brave the winter here.   Not only will it make you appreciate the fact that you will only be subjected to “winter” for a couple more weeks but your plucky Groundhogs on Feb. 2nd will likely give you the good news of immediate Spring-like conditions.  Your northern neighbours on the other hand, will remain buried under snow and our furry prognosticators will likely continue to hibernate, frozen in the ground until at least April.

So to put it into perspective, here are some funnies about how we Canadians brave winter.

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Meanwhile-in-Canada

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Having Survived Mid-terms!

 

TeachingMid-term exams are done for another year and students and teachers have all survived…for the most part!  The student’s job is done, they have regurgitated all they know about subject content onto exam papers…now it’s marking, report cards and parent-teacher interviews for the teachers.  While our students are on the slopes, or going to the movies, or relaxing at home and taking the weekend off, we’re busy lesson-planning and preparing our classrooms for the new term.  So here’s some Funnies for my teaching colleagues.  Have a laugh, you deserve it!

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“Hold on to instruction, do not let it go; guard it well, for it is your life.”  Proverbs 4:13

 

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Mid-Term Mania

The school where I teach will be immersed in sweat and tears with students taking their mid-term exams.  Sometimes I wonder who isteacher more stressed out about exam week, the students or the teachers who write and administer the exams?

I was never a fan of exams.  I suffered grievously with test stress, an anxiety about taking tests that has stayed with me even into adulthood.  I STILL have a reoccurring nightmare about being late for a final in university and not being able to find the classroom and when I finally find it, there is no doorknob for me to get into the room.  It’s awful!

I sympathize with my students who suffer from this malady.  Unfortunately I passed that “fear of tests” gene onto my two girls, although I must say they seem to have outgrown it better than I ever did.

Now I’m on the other side of the desk, so to speak, and my fear is that upon marking my student’s exams, I will discover how little they listened to me over the past half year, or how poorly I taught the subject matter, or both!  It is stressful either way.  As a teacher, I want my students to succeed…that’s my goal.  I strive for excellence in my teaching because that is what the Lord expects of me.  Am I perfect?  Absolutely not!  But I do think it a personal failure on my part if a student has not reached his or her full potential in my classroom.  I’m always thinking how I could have done better to motivate my students or better teach for their understanding.  My students may not realize how much it grieves me when they do poorly.  It means either they are struggling with the content, or my teaching is at fault or they have problem with character.  I can do something about the first two, content and teaching, but it is entirely up to the student to work on their character.

It grieves me even more when a student does not try, doesn’t care, is lazy, or they’ve “checked out” of utilizing their school experience to its fullest.  It happens.  I have students who are driven to do their very best.  I have students who may not be exceptional students academically but TRY so hard to be the very best they can be.  That is a sign of character.  Then there are students who, for lack of better words, are “taking up space” in the classroom.  They are so full of God-given potential but they refuse to put in any effort; they never hand anything in and basically have “checked out”.  As my father was known to say, “God gave them brains, but they refuse to use them.”  Those students haunt me.  How can I motivate and encourage a student like that?

Certainly each student comes to school from different circumstances that affects their learning, but “character” rises above circumstances.  I think of Hope in my creative writing class who suffered brain trauma after a tragic set of complications followed a routine tonsillectomy.  Blind and confined for now to a wheel chair, she is probably one of my top students in writing.  Talk about rising above her circumstances!  I look to her example whenever I am feeling sorry for myself and think that my life is “hard”.

So, I am praying for each of my students this next week as they take their mid-terms.  May they all know that Mrs. Dove is thinking about them and praying that they will strive to do their very best!

 

 

 

 

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