Tuesday, July 14, 2009

O Me! O Life!

Walt Whitman laments existence and purpose in his poem "O me! O Life!," helplessly but hopefully searching a seemingly increasingly cold and "faithless" society for some sense of why we inhabit this sphere for a brief moment.  The conclusion he reaches is is beautiful and offers hope to all of us searching meaning.  His Answer? 

"That you are here—that life exists, and identity;
 
  That the powerful play goes on, and you will contribute a verse. "

As I have long loved this poem, I have often skipped to the end in an effort to discover what my verse will be and in doing so I missed the real keystone of the answer.  IDENTITY.  The verse you contribute is your identity, your character.  As we venture forth into an age hyper interconnectedness and accelerated culture the most important thing we as educators can do is build the character of our students.  This is the fundamental lesson.  All other lessons are built upon this reality.  This challenge is intensified by the fact that we can only teach students to have the highest levels of integrity if we ourselves have that same integrity.  This is the supreme challenge to an educator: To display the highest level of character that our students may learn from our actions as well as our words.  We know that the most effective method of teaching is modeling and we are constantly modeling even when we are not actively in front of a classroom involved in instruction.  I write these lines to encourage everyone who seeks to contribute a positive verse to the powerful play. Thank you for your effort to maintain high character and standards.  Your identity lights a candle. Thanks for being the change you wish to see instead of cursing the darkness.  With enough of us lighting candles, the future looks bright indeed.


As for the functionality of this blog, it is an obvious work in progress.  i plan to archive show pictures and hopefully videos here as well as providing useful links for instruction and travel.  Please feel free to link to me, ask questions, or engage me in conversation.  Thank you for your time.  -Jay

2 comments:

  1. I too am a Whitman fan. Your post is inspiring. Thanks for reminding me; sometimes my fuse gets a big wet and doesn't light so easily!

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  2. Very well said, Jay. As educators with hectic schedules, I'm afraid we sometimes forget that we may very well be the most positve role model some of our students encounter We truly are modeling even when not in front of the classroom. You are a blessing to each student you encounter. I look forward to collaborating as we venture into 21st century technology with our colleagues and our students.

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