If you came here hoping for a Valentine's Day post, head over to my theology blog to read this post. Last night I made a quick grocery store trip and was flabbergasted by how many armloads of flowers were at every end cap. Valentine's Day has never been my favorite holiday, at least not how it's actually practiced.
If you came here hoping for an Olympics post, I have nothing for you. I am not watching the Olympics being broadcast now; winter sports have rarely held my attention. I've been more interested in summer Olympic games in the past, but in 2 years, will I watch? I have no idea. I remember being enthralled by the 1980 Winter Olympics, but that was because one of my best friends was breathless about it all. I remember following the progress of the U.S. hockey team in the 1980's, me and the rest of the world. In 1980, I was also fascinated by speed skating, but I've never been interested in figure skating--or in gymnastics, which seems an equivalent in the summer Olympics.
Yesterday I was thinking about how being an athlete is unlike being a writer. I watch the Olympics, and I have no illusions that I will ever be at that level, and worse--the window for that level of skill is tied to youth. With writing, I can continue to improve.
I thought about this off and on throughout the week, as I have walked from my office to my classrooms and observed clusters of students who are talking about their creative writing. I don't think these projects are for a class. I think they're just students who like to write and have found each other. I love the building where most humanities classes are taught. It was built 15 years ago, so it's a very different building than any other building where I've taught. There's more natural light, for one thing, and less decay. The common area has spaces for informal gathering/studying, spaces that look like a small living room, spaces that look like a kitchen table, and two tables of barstool height, with higher chairs. There's a charging station beside one of them, and plenty of plugs throughout the common space. There are some backless couches that look like waves outside of each classroom.
Some of the students hang out as they wait for classes to start, but other students hang out all day. As I overhear conversations, I feel inordinately happy. There's the creative writing discussions and the students helping each other in a variety of classes. There are students scrolling through their phones, and others staring at laptops, but more often than not, they're interacting.
As I walk back and forth, I sometimes feel wistful, sometimes nostalgic, sometimes sad about how long ago my own undergrad days have become. I can also be prone to the sadness of feeling like I haven't lived up to my potential. Yesterday I laughed at myself a bit--I can still keep working on writing projects, and I can keep doing it deep into old age, barring some kind of injury. In terms of athletic prowess, I'm not going to be skiing ever again; fear of breaking a bone is just too much of a deterrent.
Happily, I'm fine with that. I didn't like skiing when I did it in my younger years, so no great loss. Aging must be much more difficult if what brings one joy is not something one can do with an aging body.