Looking up my past
I realized that my tenure as a member of an advisory board for Berkeley was perhaps too soon. I let myself ease out of the position after a year. I really didn’t want to be overly connected to safehouses anymore. As I was finishing my book, I became enamored of a new topic: Writing letters back to my young self about my situation in Fiji. My editor was crazy about it, but later, I learned she had told her partner and the next two books her partner wrote encouraged my plan, and my idea was made irrelevant. That’s how my editor paid me back.
I threw myself into more parental roles as a friend of the libraries and helping the School Board with art. As a result, they encouraged me to apply for the role as art teacher for Jessi’s kindergarten class. The next year, Emerson Elementary School made me the art teacher for the entire school. I was supposed to teach for two years, develop curriculum and products, and then let the teachers take over. It was hard work, but I loved it. I wrote a newsletter each week, developed a curriculum, and loved teaching. Unfortunately, I was unable to continue after the two years, because each spring I developed a bronchitis that forced me to take antibiotics, and after the second year, I could no longer teach, despite the principal’s wanting to pay me and even offer an assistant. I was tired, and too old to do 13 classes a week in art. So many little hands everywhere. I Turned towards junior college teaching and put my degrees towards college teaching. Amazingly, I got a call from Santa Rosa Community College to teach for them, and I began the next fall, teaching 2-3 courses a semester. The drive wasn’t that long in those days. Later, I switched to Berkeley City College, when the drive became more difficult.
I didn't know all those details - thank you!
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