Poor Old LuNobody believed Lucy, either.
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Name: Meredith


Interests: Teaching dance with VDM, working with teachers and schools to make books available to students, writing, reading, thinking. Hanging with my family and friends. You know, the norm. Saving the world. All that jazz.
Expertise: Children's Literature, Elementary Composition, Early Childhood Dance Instruction. Now doesn't that sound professional? And most of it's stuff I've just fallen into!


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Member Since: 12/10/2004

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Wednesday, September 27, 2006

"That's the Twentieth Century for you.  Automobiles!  Garages!  Chauffers-- chauffer's daughters!"  Hurrah for the chauffer's daughters, I say.

~Merry


Monday, September 25, 2006

Outside of church one mad little decorative tree has taken it into it's head to bloom riotously just as the weather turns cold and heads for the end of the year!  Isn't life delightfully surprising?

~Merry


Wednesday, September 06, 2006

The thing about swearing is that taking God's name in vain somehow makes you feel unworthy to call on it at any other time.  Know what I mean? 

~Merry


Wednesday, August 23, 2006

I saw my first dead butterfly of the year today. It was resting in the drying grass outside the dentist’s office. It was black and shimmery blue and a little bit orange, and one wing was crumbling away. You could tell right off it was dead because of the way the wind ruffled the wings a little. It always makes me a little sad to see dead butterflies– a little resigned, as though our efforts somehow had failed despite the valiance with which we daily live.

I don’t know why I feel that way. I’m hardly a defeatist person. On the contrary, I’m quite likely to ignore the failures and sins of society and bounce gaily onward, delighting in life while orphans are starving in Nigeria. Of the two of us, Mel is more the hero.

Anyway, the butterfly made me stop and think, because I’ve been writing a lot of childlike thoughts on butterflies lately because my little dance students are having a performance themed around butterflies in September. So my storywriting and choreogaphing and costume-designing have all been centered around butterflies for a while now. But I’ve stayed half-consciously away from the subject of butterfly-death as it’s hard for five-year-olds to deal with things like that when they are dressed in a butterfly costume. Hardly the best of taste.

The rest of my lack of taste becomes evident in the date of our performance: Monday, September Eleventh. Good gracious! But you know, the chapel is in high demand for weddings, and we have to compete with them; and 9/11 is really one of the few days of the year I suppose people consciously avoid scheduling weddings!!!

~Merry


Wednesday, August 16, 2006

I just wanted to let y’all know about an event called Read for the Record that is occurring on Thursday, August 24, 2006. Jumpstart, a literacy nonprofit, is sponsering the event, which is designed to get as many people to read the same book on the same day as possible, and set a world record– and promote awareness of literacy problems in the US and resources that are available to combat it!

The book selected for Read for the Record is The Little Engine that Could, by Watty Piper, recently reillustrated by the wonderfully talented Mr. Loren Long, who happens to be an aquaintance of mine. He’s the sweetest most earnest man you ever met and the book is wonderful– I’m sure you remember it from your own childhood and would love to share it with a child you know!

To sign up and be counted for the World Record, visit www.readfortherecord.com. If you live in the Cincinnati area, join us at Barnes and Noble in West Chester! Bring all of the children and friends you know, grab yourself a Frappacino and settle in for Storytime with the Little Blue Engine. We have crafts, we have snacks, we have the story and most of all we’d love to have YOU!

Wow, that was peppered with exclamation points. Mea Culpa.

~Merry



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