Thursday, December 22, 2011

Poetry Slam Turned Open Mic Night

I wish I had taken pictures.

I didn't. But our Teen Poetry Slam morphed into an intergenerational open mic. I think it was for the best. The folks who joined us - several teenagers, and a few adults - seemed to feel a creative camaraderie that begged the question, "will this become a regular occurrence?"

I don't see why not.

I'll be writing a letter to my executive director tomorrow reporting on our success.I'll recommend that we cultivate a creative following, a bimonthly open mic event in collaboration with the city library that will attract new people, which will introduce our organization to even more of the city's population.

I'm thinking this is the way to go. Low cost, low key, and multiple layers of benefit.

Friday, December 16, 2011

Life is a Marathon

It has been intense since I returned for a second year of AmeriCorps Public Allies. My placement is experiencing some changes, namely my supervisor moved to Wisconsin and her job was spliced up and given to various employees, including myself. I now oversee an after-school program that is understaffed and over-budget. I am supposed to be giving art classes to our students while managing staff and doing payroll. However, I find between meetings and administrative work, I am rarely available to give the art instruction. I am also organizing parent nights, staff trainings, and finding activities and funding for our students. My capacity as a supervisor of staff is growing, and my brain is learning how to juggle a thousand different balls.

The job that I actually came on to do was to start a Peer Educator program. And I'm still doing it. I recently held a student focus group and am now blasting out the job description in hopes of interviewing candidates and commencing training in mid January. Peer Educators will receive 25 hours in training and then have the opportunity to coordinate two community projects related to my organization's mission - to reduce teen pregnancy and the spread of HIV and AIDS. They get a stipend dependent on their participation in outreach, and they will also have an arsenal of skills to get them into college and higher employment. I'm really excited about this program, but it is overshadowed by the colossus of the after-school program. Oye.

I also am coordinating our second teen event - our first was a city-wide talent show and art exhibit that drew in 60 contestants, 25 volunteers, and over 70 audience members. This time we're doing a Poetry Slam.

Did I mention that I am in charge of our social media and quarterly newsletter?

I'm still me, though. Recently painted a picture for this year's holiday card to send out, been running like crazy, starting to see muscles everywhere (I'm also lifting), and I lost ten pounds in a month and a half. I was eating really well for a while, clean, healthy wholesome, eating, but the holiday parties have me a strange schedule of chocolate binges. Been knitting and reading and hanging out with friends. Thinking of next year's garden, and I can't wait to build a coop and get chicks. My love and I finished the painting upstairs and moved our bedroom up. It's super cool - all the colors found in a peacock's tail feathers. I've met all my resolutions for 2011 (more on that later) and am making new ones for 2012. The pets are healthy and whole, and our lights are up on the house for the holidays. I'm sure soon there will be a Hanukkah dinner with Lover's parents, Christmas Day with my mother and sister, and Festivus for Lover and I.

Did I mention I was accepted into a Graduate Studies program? I will start earning a Masters in Science for Environmental Education in the summer of 2012. Pretty f-in awesome.

Also, Lover and I made our first homebrew - a stout, that turned out successfully delicious.

So, in a nutshell, life has been a marathon. I keep having to check my pace, my form, and take a sip of gatorade, but I'm moving forward all the while. Can't get better than that.