So, let's talk some more about faith, hope, and love in the classroom 
by reflecting about my recent experience outside the classroom.  Susie and I 
just returned from two weeks of family care-giving in Boston. As I settled in 
my cramped seat on theplane a warm wash came over me.  My eyes closed, I 
thought a lot, deeply, maybe even profoundly, about how each of us deal with 
pain, physical disability, fragility, mental deterioration, mental anguish, and 
the fear of being pitied and forgotten in some dependent care facility. In 
academia, our attitudes of privilege, self-expectations, and indeed our 
training,  has made us particularly vulnerable to the kind of detachment so 
many of us currently experience.  It's a similar question of how do we deal 
with the challenge of the cynical and sad perception that "they don't belong 
here" or "they're letting anyone in?"  How do we address the fear of job 
insecurity and a lack of campus-wide community?  The question is: be it 
colleague or student, do we have faith in, hope for, and love of people only 
when things go right, only because they're clever, physically beautiful, 
talented, knowledgable, accomplished GPA-wise?  Or, do we see beyond all that, 
and have faith in, hope for, and love people just because they're people.  
Without any laid down conditions, do we hear them knock; do we open the door; 
do we hospitably ask them in; do we see their beauty; do we acknowledge their 
sacredness; do we believe in their potential; do we embrace, support, and 
encourage them?    

        You know, one thing that struck me in Boston that is applicable in any 
classroom was that when you have faith in and hope for people, when you love 
them, you don't idolize them from afar; you recognize their beauty and 
sacredness.  That beauty and sacredness are incredibly powerful.  In the midst 
of ugly disdain and dismissal, they convert us into what I'll call a "spirit 
whisperer."  As nothing can, they feed our spirit, move us, stop us in our 
tracks, shake us out of tiresome familiarity and weary routine, take us to a 
different level of feeling and thinking, open our eyes and ears, force us to 
notice.  

        We're returning to Boston in five or six months, and have decided we 
will do that on a regular basis, sooner if need be.  We made this decision not 
out of a sense of obligation, not because we have to.  We'll be returning 
because we want to.  At first glance, it would seem we didn't do that much 
while we were there: chauffeured, shopped for food, pick up medicines, took 
clothes to the cleaners, cooked some meals, took walks, went to the movies, 
watched television, made some minor repairs, and did a host of other mundane 
things.  But, sometimes, a lot of times, "not that much,"  just being there for 
example, the little things matter as much as, if not sometime more, than the 
big stuff.   Being in a little place like the breakfast nook in the morning, 
out on the deck in the afternoon, or in the TV room at night sparkled with 
little lights of love.  That was brought home on the next to last day, when we 
told them that we would be returning at the end of October, their eyes and 
faces lit up with joy.  Being there told them that they are more than just 
being seen; they are appreciated, valued, loved.  How did Leo Buscaglia say it? 
 "Too often we underestimate the power of a touch, a smile, a kind word, a 
listening ear, an honest compliment, or the smallest act of caring, all of 
which have the potential to turn a life around."

        It reminded me that faith, hope, and love--anywhere, any time--is an 
exercise of respect, tender caring, kindly serving, consideration, empathy, 
compassion, support, and encouragement.  They're a pursuit of something far 
stronger than anything a discipline can offer:  meaning and service through 
human relationships.  They say, "You are sacred, you are sacred to me. I will 
not ignore you; I will not diminish you; I will not set you aside.  No,  I will 
honor you, be there with you, and will walk with you." They mean to see, not 
just look at one another; and, to see means unconditionally to appreciate and 
value someone as a worthy somebody.  They mean to listen, not just hear, to 
another; and, to listen means being attentive, caring, nurturing; it means 
being silent and not getting  the last word in.  They mean to touch someone in 
a way that is a wanted embracing hug of the spirit.  They all mean replacing 
the "me" of ego with the "you" of love.   They're always about "how can I make 
you feel worthy, valued, loved?"  They offer us a place from which to meet the 
challenges of life that resume, title, and position cannot.  They help us fight 
for our purpose, against self-diminsihing cynicism brought on by unreasonable 
expectations and unrealistic perceptions.

        And, maybe, in Boston,then, there is a lesson for all of us in the 
classrooms:  to have faith, hope, and love with every fiber of our being.  Love 
reality!  Have the courage and strength to rise to it, accept it, touch it, 
face it, embrace it.    Don't live in and ruminate about a host of wishful, 
self-serving, emotional self-satisfying, self-pitying, frustrating, and even 
angry could haves, should haves, and would haves.  Stop living in anguish and 
disappointment if reality isn't going the way you want.  It's when faith, hope, 
and love bubble up from deep within our heart and soul, when we tear ourselves 
loose from selfishness and bear the burdens of someone else, caring enough to 
share ourselves with that person, and serving her or him.  Inside or outside 
the classroom, we all should be distinguished by the faith, hope, and love we 
have.   They should burst forth with such enthusiasm that they could never be 
hidden. They are the philosophy of caring and serving; they are the religion of 
caring and serving; they are the neuroscience of caring and serving; they are 
the ethic and morality of caring and serving; they are the pedagogy of caring 
and serving.   

        So, as Viktor Frankl might say, we should not merely pursue faith, 
hope, and love; we should be a living sign, an embodiment, of them.   If we do, 
as I found in Boston--and in the classroom--we'll true meaning.  We'll notice 
rather than ignore; we'll lift up rather than push down, away, or aside; we'll 
nurture rather than weed out; and in so doing, we'll nurture and lift ourselves 
up.  Those are the moments that most define who we are.  And, those are the 
moments that bring us most inner peace and joy. 

Make it a good day

-Louis-


Louis Schmier                                   
http://www.therandomthoughts.edublogs.org       
203 E. Brookwood Pl                         http://www.therandomthoughts.com
Valdosta, Ga 31602 
(C)  229-630-0821                             /\   /\  /\                 /\    
 /\
                                                      /^\\/  \/   \   /\/\__   
/   \  /   \
                                                     /     \/   \_ \/ /   \/ 
/\/  /  \    /\  \
                                                   //\/\/ /\    \__/__/_/\_\/   
 \_/__\  \
                                             /\"If you want to climb 
mountains,\ /\
                                         _ /  \    don't practice on mole 
hills" - /   \_


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