My mother at the
intersection of Science and God
On June 5th I got a phone call from my Mom.
“Hi, this is Mom. I
hope you and your kids are watching the Transit of Venus.”
Me: “Um, no we’re
not.” At that moment, my husband and two
kids were doing work of cosmic importance:
assembling the new grill. But Mom
did not allow me time to tell her this, or anything else.
Mom: “It won’t happen
again until the year 2117, so you really ought to watch it. They are showing it on television. Venus looks like a black dot moving across
the sun. But you shouldn’t look directly
at the sun. Okay, goodbye.”
It is nigh impossible to say no to my Mom, because of her
Presence. She has been able to survive
and thrive teaching science to Baltimore inner-city middle school students. There are some people who just have The
Presence in the classroom, and she is one of them. Not only did she teach those difficult-to-reach
students, but she expected excellence from them at every turn. She is a great Mom and a great teacher.
She turned 80 years old last month. Although she “retired” long ago, she still
teaches, at the college level, showing new teachers how to include the teaching
of thinking skills in their lesson plans. Her main task in life now, though, is
trying to apply her expectation of excellence to the care my Dad receives. It turns out it is easier to teach urban
pre-teens than it is to change the mindset of the medical workers or to shift
the way nursing homes operate. It seems to take longer to get someone to come and shift his body to a more comfortable position
than it does for Venus to transit the sun.
So after my mother made her pronouncement and hung up on me,
I immediately accessed NASA’s live-stream of the Transit of Venus. Viewed from Earth, it seemed that Venus was
not in any hurry. I took a break from
the live-stream chit-chat to discover that John Philip Sousa wrote marching
band music in honor of the transit of Venus in 1882. I tried to get the kids interested, but the
promise of hamburgers on the new grill won out.
I mean, the transit of Venus is an important celestial event, but I
found that the first commercial space flight last month filled me with more
wonder and awe.
The next day, Mom reported that she told my Dad about the
transit of Venus, and watched some TV video of it with him. She wrote to us,
In our evening prayer, he thanked God
for all the wonderful things in the universe that we could see and learn
about. “Things that are so interesting,”
he said, “and some that are not interesting.”
Yes, our thoughts exactly. I was glad to have witnessed the transit of Venus, but also glad that I didn't have to watch every minute of it. And very glad that my Mom is still teaching me things.
* * * * *
Audio of Sousa’s Transit
of Venus March: Click here
Info on Sousa's march: Click here
2 comments:
I have been feeling very guilty. Here I teach about the planets, but I didn't watch the transit of Venus, even a recorded version. I just didn't see what there was to see really.
I'll just have to fake some enthusiasm if anyone asks me about it.
Your mom is so cool.
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