As kids, we all knew about the pothole down the road that you had to avoid on your bicycle, or which neighbor's yard you'd never trespass in, for fear of a dog perhaps, or some grown-up's anger.
These are workarounds. This is knowing your environment, and keeping yourself from harm.
As kids, some of us knew grown-ups in our lives who had to be managed. Or avoided. Or placated. Or hidden from.
* I remember my fourth grade teacher, who used to hug all the pretty girls. I was maybe nine, and I envied Charlene (*not her real name), tiny and blonde, shy as a mouse, with Mr. M's arm around her. At the time, I didn't understand why she looked quietly miserable, when his hug looked so warm and affectionate.
* I remember my tenth grade English teacher (the third one we'd had that year) who struggled ineffectually to "manage" our class of high spirited and mischievous honors students.
His face is clear in my memory, though his name has faded. I had asked him to please control the class because I, at least, wanted to learn. He shrugged his shoulders and said helplessly, "But, Liz, what can I DO?"
* And I remember my dad. He started working from home when I was around 13, firmly planted in his comfy chair with his cigarettes, newspaper, and yellow legal pads. I remember him commanding me to fetch him yet another beer from the fridge's endless supply.
I was shocked and pleased in equal amounts to discover, some time last year, that someone had coined a phrase for these kinds of dysfunction. "The missing stair". Because some ideas are nearly impossible to understand until you have a name for them.
To deal with a Missing Stair in your life or environment means that some necessary thing is broken and everyone has just gotten used to, adapted around the brokenness. Used to it, enough that nobody talks about it anymore, and the collective assumption is "well, that's just how it always has been, we all just deal with it." Or maybe you've heard it phrased as "It's just part of the culture here," or as "boys will be boys."
*explosive sigh*
I call bullshit on that nonsense.
* My tenth grade teacher needed a mentor, or at minimum, direct instruction in how to manage teenagers in a classroom.
That skill is something that actually can be taught, something that can be learned and practiced. He should have been taught those skills, and he should have been provided with good examples to follow. His teacher training, and our school administration, should have seen to that, and failed to. (I am particularly incensed about this because it was something my own teacher training lacked as well, twenty years later: one of many things that convinces me this brokenness is systemic.)
* My fourth grade teacher, it turns out, was (eventually) reported to authorities and removed from teaching at my elementary school. I did not understand at the time, when the kids were gossiping on the playground, what it meant that Mr. M was no longer teaching at our school. Or why when I asked my parents about it, they made faces and changed the subject.
The silence around this subject is a kind of brokenness that could perhaps have mended by using the story, the true story, as an age-appropriate teachable moment on how to trust your gut instinct, how to be safer around adults, on appropriate or inappropriate touching, or on how to stand up for other people.
* And of course, there was my dad. The lessons I could learn from his life are manifold. But whatever it was that he needed, well. I don't know.
What I've learned from his example, I've had to unravel, unlearn, and relearn over years of ACoA meetings, journal writing, talk therapy; and my own year of total abstinence from alcohol.
Shame and silence NEVER solve these kinds of broken. The Missing Stair effect occurs in large communities and inside our own heads.
Problems like these fester and persist in the darkness and the silence.
Acknowledge the broken stairs. Point them out.
Please.
Talk about them. Research. Offer assistance, if you have it to give.
Because if one of us has a hammer, and another has nails, and someone else has some solid boards, and someone else actually knows how to fix a stair?
We will never know that the stair could actually be fixed, until someone says, "Hey, I have this thing that might help fix that missing stair..."
and I am so fucking tired of jumping over the broken places.
Hey y'all? I have this thing that might help fix that missing stair.
(listens for responses)
This has been my Week Two entry for
therealljidol, and the prompt was "The Missing Stair".
Beta-readings done by
chippychatty,
wrenb, and
violaconspiracy! Thanks, guys, you definitely made this better.
Please go read and enjoy my colleagues' entries here. To vote for my entry, find me at the bottom of the second poll, link is *here*.
Thank you for reading!
These are workarounds. This is knowing your environment, and keeping yourself from harm.
As kids, some of us knew grown-ups in our lives who had to be managed. Or avoided. Or placated. Or hidden from.
* I remember my fourth grade teacher, who used to hug all the pretty girls. I was maybe nine, and I envied Charlene (*not her real name), tiny and blonde, shy as a mouse, with Mr. M's arm around her. At the time, I didn't understand why she looked quietly miserable, when his hug looked so warm and affectionate.
* I remember my tenth grade English teacher (the third one we'd had that year) who struggled ineffectually to "manage" our class of high spirited and mischievous honors students.
His face is clear in my memory, though his name has faded. I had asked him to please control the class because I, at least, wanted to learn. He shrugged his shoulders and said helplessly, "But, Liz, what can I DO?"
* And I remember my dad. He started working from home when I was around 13, firmly planted in his comfy chair with his cigarettes, newspaper, and yellow legal pads. I remember him commanding me to fetch him yet another beer from the fridge's endless supply.
I was shocked and pleased in equal amounts to discover, some time last year, that someone had coined a phrase for these kinds of dysfunction. "The missing stair". Because some ideas are nearly impossible to understand until you have a name for them.
To deal with a Missing Stair in your life or environment means that some necessary thing is broken and everyone has just gotten used to, adapted around the brokenness. Used to it, enough that nobody talks about it anymore, and the collective assumption is "well, that's just how it always has been, we all just deal with it." Or maybe you've heard it phrased as "It's just part of the culture here," or as "boys will be boys."
*explosive sigh*
I call bullshit on that nonsense.
* My tenth grade teacher needed a mentor, or at minimum, direct instruction in how to manage teenagers in a classroom.
That skill is something that actually can be taught, something that can be learned and practiced. He should have been taught those skills, and he should have been provided with good examples to follow. His teacher training, and our school administration, should have seen to that, and failed to. (I am particularly incensed about this because it was something my own teacher training lacked as well, twenty years later: one of many things that convinces me this brokenness is systemic.)
* My fourth grade teacher, it turns out, was (eventually) reported to authorities and removed from teaching at my elementary school. I did not understand at the time, when the kids were gossiping on the playground, what it meant that Mr. M was no longer teaching at our school. Or why when I asked my parents about it, they made faces and changed the subject.
The silence around this subject is a kind of brokenness that could perhaps have mended by using the story, the true story, as an age-appropriate teachable moment on how to trust your gut instinct, how to be safer around adults, on appropriate or inappropriate touching, or on how to stand up for other people.
* And of course, there was my dad. The lessons I could learn from his life are manifold. But whatever it was that he needed, well. I don't know.
What I've learned from his example, I've had to unravel, unlearn, and relearn over years of ACoA meetings, journal writing, talk therapy; and my own year of total abstinence from alcohol.
Shame and silence NEVER solve these kinds of broken. The Missing Stair effect occurs in large communities and inside our own heads.
Problems like these fester and persist in the darkness and the silence.
Acknowledge the broken stairs. Point them out.
Please.
Talk about them. Research. Offer assistance, if you have it to give.
Because if one of us has a hammer, and another has nails, and someone else has some solid boards, and someone else actually knows how to fix a stair?
We will never know that the stair could actually be fixed, until someone says, "Hey, I have this thing that might help fix that missing stair..."
and I am so fucking tired of jumping over the broken places.
Hey y'all? I have this thing that might help fix that missing stair.
(listens for responses)
This has been my Week Two entry for
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-community.gif)
Beta-readings done by
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
Please go read and enjoy my colleagues' entries here. To vote for my entry, find me at the bottom of the second poll, link is *here*.
Thank you for reading!
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Thank you so much!
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"The lessons to be had there? Are legion. What he needed? I don't really know."
It might flow better re-worded: The lessons to be had there are legion. I don't really know what he needed.
I do really like your interpretation of the theme "The Missing Stair." It's a great analogy for those problems that we've just learned to step over rather than fixing. Nice work!
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*whew* off to post this to the entry page!
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<3!!
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If you ever want help exploring how to fix your broken stair, I've several techniques in my toolbox via self-help and therapy. Let me know.
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*Huggles a Temperance*
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Our cultural avoidance of pain (at all costs!) I think makes us weaker. Clear vision is needed to identify problems and solve them, and fear of feeling pain clouds our vision.
There's shit we gotta do.
Fear of blisters shouldn't keep us from exercising. Fear of the knife shouldn't keep us from surgery that fixes the problem. Lance the boil, clean it out.
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Nicely done.
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Once upon a time I used to say, "when I am Empress of the world, I will fix this!"
And then I thought about it some more, and realized that I didn't know what I would do.
Now I just have three plans: make all the schools and all the school districts smaller, fund every school equally. And explicitly teach nonviolent communication. No exceptions, and every year.
Seriously. This plan couldn't be worse than what's going on now.
Oh, oh. Make schoolteacher an apprenticeship program! Where master teachers properly collaborate and nobody has to listen to "experts" droning on at useless two hour in services.
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there's a reason why teachers burn out. We have to keep making our own fricking tools from scratch using rocks and string and paper.
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Most people are good people. Y'know? But those folks don't make the news. And the news winds up contributing to the culture, and... yeah.
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Here trying to fix the stairs in my life, ragging at the silence.
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Fortunately I like working on the smaller scale, so I grow food, lend money to friends, help people move, encourage friends to do things.
*shrug*
If everyone did what they could, whenever they could, on a micro level, I think we'd have a worldwide revolution.
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*huffs angrily*
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<lj user="therealljidol" title="LJ Idol"> Week 2 - Favourites. Poll deadline: 12 hours from now
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When I was about thirteen or fourteen (in the late eighties), a movie starring B- and C- list actors filmed in my hometown. It was the coolest thing. They were all pretty cool, but one of them was a lot cooler than the rest (he also happened to be a supporting actor in one of my favorite big movies at the time, as well as one that kind of helped define the eighties). He'd occasionally let a boy my age hang out alone in his trailer, and I was super-jealous.
Ten years ago he was convicted of a felony possession of child pornography and soliciting a minor to pose for porn. He is now a registered sex offender.
And I have to wonder-- what didn't he get caught doing? What did I miss out on in that trailer? How long had that been going on? Did anyone think to ask?
I am so skeeved out just thinking about it..
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I know, right?
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Yesterday, in the middle of an extreme and unexpected hailstorm, we had a child knock on our door after falling off his bike. We made sure he got home safely. But it was only then that it occurred to me that we live next door to a park, and should always walk over during any unusual situation to make sure the kids are all safe. It's twenty feet away, and I just hadn't thought it through. Everyone has something useful they can do, only a few feet away. You just have to look around.
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more later, must dash to an appointment...
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Glad if these words helped, you're welcome.
Seems like a lot of us are dealing with or have dealt with this subject...