I think I have the flu. I have done nothing today except lay in bed and sleep, an event which was broken by intermittent bouts of coughing and blowing my nose. I didn’t do any writing today. I’m going to give it a try.
Category: This and That

Could Have Guessed
This didn’t surprise me much.
You Are Impressionism |
![]() |
I really don’t like the way the code is rendered on these things…
Related posts:

Nietzche Family Circus
This is too funny.

I like the way P.J. is kind of like “WTF?” Enjoy more, found via Casting out Nines.
Tomorrow
Tomorrow is my birthday. I am going to be 35, which will put me in a new demographic group of undesirables known as 35-49…ish. It means advertisers will no longer be as interested in what I want. It means movies, music, and television are no longer going to be targeted toward me. I am resisting the urge to quote Monty Python and the Holy Grail — “I’m not dead yet!”
I have a daughter who is in seventh grade. I am dangerously close to becoming the person who shoos the kids off her lawn; I already complain about their music and their clothes. I probably have more gray hair than not. I have a few wrinkles trying to start.
My mom and dad sent me an online gift certificate to Barnes and Noble. I did very well, coming in just 12¢ over the certificate limit. I decided on the following purchases:
- The Golden Compass by Philip Pullman (mainly on Roger’s recommendation of the books)
- A Room of One’s Own by Virginia Woolf
- Me Talk Pretty One Day by David Sedaris
- Brokeback Mountain on widescreen DVD
Update: While browsing Barnes and Noble, I saw The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield prominently featured. I read some reviews and put it on my Wish List. It looks really good — and perfect for fall reading. Anyone want to online-book-club this one? Or maybe I should propose it to my student Book Club? Their first selection was — of all things — Lolita. It’s cute how they think they’re being bad by reading it.
On a more serious note, I want to thank all of you who came by and commented on my tribute to Eric Lehrfeld. Being a small part of 2,996 was one of the most amazing experiences I think I have had. I was extremely touched to be contacted by Eric’s sister, Elyse. I made some new friends and found some new blogs to read. But most of all, whenever I think of that horrible day from now on, I will always think of Eric and the family and friends who miss him.
Related posts:
Named After
I am not named after anyone. I think my mother knew a girl named Dana in high school and liked the name. Incidentally, the story behind Sarah’s middle name is the same. There are two main schools of thought on naming children after others:
- Children deserve their own identities separate from that of relatives and should have a different name from all other family members.
- Naming children after family members, friends, or other people one admires is a way of honoring that person and connecting one’s child to the past.
While I see the point of proponents of position one, I tend toward position two. I think it is interesting to look at naming patterns in families, and it can be one way to help make connections. For instance, the given name “Martin” is so popular in Steve’s family, that when I ran into some Huffs who used the name “Martin” in the area where his grandfather was born in my genealogy research, I was fairly certain there was a connection. As it turns out, the name Martin has been in his family for at least 200 years. The earliest ancestor of his that I can find was Martin Hough, who was born about 1805. His grandson was named Samuel Martin Hough (and he changed the spelling of the last name to “Huff”). Samuel Martin’s grandson was Will Martin Huff, and Will Martin’s son was Ben Martin Huff. Ben Martin’s son Jack named one of his sons Martin. I’m sure each generation used the name to honor the person who had the name in the preceding generation. In other words, I believe that Steve’s uncle Jack named his son in honor of his father, not realizing the name Martin stretched back across eight generations.
I don’t think I have any names in my family like that, but there are cases in which relatives have been named for ancestors. My uncle is named for his grandfather. My aunt’s middle name is my grandfather’s first name. There are other names in my family that have some meaning, but do not honor an ancestor. My sister, for instance, was named after a character in the movie Dr. Zhivago. My mother was named for a girl that my grandfather thought was pretty.
Then there are the comic examples. My father was named after a cousin of his mother’s, who told her that he’d buy her a box of candy if she named my dad after him. That one doesn’t beat my school colleague’s mother naming her and her brother after the new monkeys at the zoo, but it makes me giggle.
My children’s names all have significance in that they are named after people or things that are important to me. Sarah’s name comes from Fleetwood Mac’s song “Sara”; however, I like the spelling with the “h” better, so I used that one (even thought the song doesn’t). Maggie is named for her grandmother, although I will admit I really wanted to name her Stella after my great-great-grandmother. Steve didn’t want to, though, because I guess he used to know a girl named Stella whom he disliked. Her name seems to fit her, and I can’t imagine her being something besides Maggie now. Dylan is named for both the poet Dylan Thomas and my father, which I suppose means he is (after a fashion) named thusly because my grandmother’s cousin bribed her with a box of candy.
My maternal grandfather was named for a book character. My paternal grandfather’s given name was changed (along with his surname) when he was adopted. I found that odd, as he was about nine when it happened. As far as I know, neither one of my grandmothers was named for anyone, but one of my cousin’s middle names is the same as my maternal grandmother’s middle name.
It seems it was the fashion in times past to name the older children after relatives. After the supply of relatives one felt like honoring dwindled (and people had 12 or 13 children), new names entered the family. I think this is the case with my great-great-grandfather Amos. His older brothers and sisters were named for grandparents, aunts, and uncles. He’s the earliest Amos in his family. Of course, I have six other people with some variation of Amos (either first or middle) in my family tree after him.
Then again, names seem to go in and out of fashion. I wonder how odd it will be to have older women named Kaylee and Madison instead of Margaret or Betty. I think some people don’t consider the fact that a name sounds somewhat juvenile when they name their children. The child will grow up and have to deal with that name. I also don’t understand why some folks give their child the diminutive form of the name. For instance, naming a child Bobby instead of Robert. If you name him Robert, you can call him Bobby when he’s little. When he grows up, he can use the more adult-sounding Robert.
Personally, I’ve always kind of liked my name. When I was little, I felt singled out because I was the only Dana in school, but as I grew, I met more Danas. That was the only reason I didn’t care for my name when I was little.
Where’d you get your name from? What do you think of it?
Related posts:
That Feeling
I am going to attempt to describe something that is probably indescribable. Ever since I was a little girl, I have noticed a physical sensation in my throat. It feels kind of like a glow, like a little germ of happiness. It tickles a little. I get it for various reasons.
I first remember noticing when I was showing my friend Darcy my grandfather’s coin collection. I think then that I got it that time because I felt proud that the collection was so interesting. Might only have been interesting to me.
I have noticed as an adult that I most often get it when I am showing a student something that interests me and find they are interested, too. It sort of a “sharing” feeling, I guess.
I don’t just get it when I’m sharing something, and I don’t always get it each time I share something. I have noticed that I also get it when I feel proud, but not as often as I do when I’m sharing.
It’s the best feeling in the entire world. I don’t really know what it is, and I can’t manufacture the circumstances under which it happens, but when it does, I am usually able to sustain it as long as I like.
Anybody else know what I’m talking about? Anyone know what it is?
Related posts:

Girl Scouts
Next week, I’m going to an organizational meeting for Girl Scouts. I am going to try Maggie out in Daisies and see if she likes it. They didn’t have Daisies when I was in Girl Scouts. I started out in Brownies in second grade. My school in first grade didn’t have a troop, so I was in Campfire Girls (Blue Birds). When I was in second grade, I sold the most cookies in my troop. I earned a Super Seller badge. My troop leader ran off with the cookie money, but I flew up to Juniors and was placed in a new troop, so I guess I didn’t let this experience get me down. I earned so many badges as a Junior that I couldn’t fit them on my sash and had to use a vest. I still have it. I quit Girl Scouts in sixth grade because I had convinced myself that I would be a first class geek if I stayed in through middle school. I regret quitting and wish I had stayed in, now.
Sarah was in Daisies, and she seemed to enjoy it a lot. We went camping with her troop at a Girl Scout camp, and it was a lot of fun. We went fishing and Sarah caught a turtle. She missed out on Brownies, and when I asked her as a fifth grader if she wanted to try to get into Juniors, she told me “I’d rather eat dirt.” Apparently, she didn’t have fun at a Girl Scout camp her dad sent her to one summer. Oh well.
We’ll see how Maggie likes it. Come February (assuming Maggie likes it enough to stay in that long), let me know if you want cookies. It would be kind of cool to have two Super Seller badges in the family.
Related posts:
Degrassi
When I was in high school, I watched the show Degrassi Junior High whenever I was able to catch it on PBS. I was kind of embarrassed, because the show’s characters were younger than I was. The theme song was ten kinds of lame, too. But I guess one shouldn’t necessarily judge a show by its theme song. My favorite character was “Spike,” whose real name was Christine. One of the things I liked about the show was that it was realistic. The characters looked like real kids I knew, not beauty queens or movie stars. They were involved in realistic plots that I recognized from my own school. For instance, Spike got pregnant and had a baby as a teen. I knew girls in school that this happened to. Characters tried drugs and alcohol. It was a good show.
One day in class, I no longer remember how, one of my students mentioned the current incarnation of Degrassi. I knew there was one, because I don’t live in a hole, but I had not seen it. I mentioned to my students that I watched the 1980’s incarnation and mentioned Spike. My student excitedly told me that Spike’s daughter Emma was a character on the current Degrassi, and so was Spike. I decided I’d have to check it out when I got a chance, but my thinking was that I was too old to be watching stuff like this.
I got a chance to check out Degrassi this morning when I woke up at 4:00. I have been going to bed around 8:00 the last two nights, which is unlike me. It also means I have been waking up at about 4:00. Anyway, it’s pretty good, and to my way of thinking, a lot like the version I watched when I was in high school. One of the things I like is that the show is honest. It is about real kids, who look like real kids and have the problems real kids have. Maybe I’ll watch it more regularly.
Related posts:
Blogging Minutiae
We had a little bit of a reprieve from the heat today as it was cloudy and a bit rainy. I took Maggie to the doctor to have her hearing tested. I was surprised to learn they were open on Saturdays. Now we just have to have her teeth checked at the dentist, and she’ll be ready for school registration.
I couldn’t sleep last night. My sleeping schedule always gets messed up during the summer. I am, I suppose, naturally predisposed toward being a night person, but it doesn’t make me feel good about myself. It makes me feel lazy. Logically, I don’t know why it should, as I get the same stuff done on the night shift as I do through the school year (work aside, which can’t be helped as school is out). Maybe it is something in my old Southern farmer blood that insists one must be up with the chickens in order to be a productive member of society. I think it makes me feel kind of blue to be on this schedule. It is sort of a matter of my mind fighting a losing battle with my body.
In the mail today I received my two complimentary author’s copies of English Journal, July 2006 in which my article appears on p. 33. It’s very exciting for me to be published in what is possibly the most influential journal for English teachers. I have pullout quotes and a minibiography and everything!
I was thinking about my great-great grandmother, Stella Bowling Cunningham, again. I don’t know why I am so curious about her in particular among all of my ancestors. Maybe because she was a teacher. But I have had other teachers in the family who don’t pique my interest. I think it might be the journal. I have a photocopy of a journal she kept in 1894-1895. In it, she records mostly minutiae, such as what she purchased that day and how much it cost, who came to visit and what they did, and that sort of thing. Yet mingled in there are significant events, such as her wedding and the death of her grandmother. It’s incredible to be able to read it. I find the smallest detail fascinating. I have struggled with the “who cares” factor with this blog. It isn’t that it bothers me that I don’t have many readers. Some days, I just find myself saying why bother to post that? The fact is, this is my journal. The difference between mine and Stella’s is that I know people look at it, so I have this “audience” hurdle to get over that Stella didn’t. However, Stella could little have realized how special and important someone — perhaps her great-great granddaughter — would find her journal. So from here on in, I hope to post more often, but I can’t promise that it won’t be about what I bought and how much it cost or who came over and what they did.
Related posts:
Star Trek
My dad got me interested in Star Trek when I was a teenager. We used to watch the new episodes of Star Trek: TNG when it was still on. Later, when I went to college, I discovered other fans among the girls in my dorm, and we used to gather on Saturday nights, when new episodes aired, and watch together. I really enjoyed the show a great deal, but I confess I was never able to translate my admiration for Trek into its other franchises. I didn’t care for the orginal series, though I did like Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home and Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country. I initially tried to watch DS-9 and Voyager, but couldn’t get into them, even when some of my favorite characters from the other series became characters on those shows (Lt. Worf is one of my favorite characters). I also couldn’t get into Enterprise, but it seems like I’m not alone in that.
I discovered some time ago that Spike shows a three-hour block of TNG reruns in the afternoon. Recently, I found out that G4 shows the reruns for two hours in the evening, too. I suppose there is such a thing as too much Trek. However, whenever I find sites on the Internet, it never ceases to amaze me how developed and fully realized the Trek world is. I suppose one could argue it is the largest and most famous “fandom” currently in existence.
I spent way too long on Wikipedia last night, reading about Trek. It’s funny — the way articles are linked encourages you to flip from one to another to another. Before I knew it, I had become seriously embroiled. In the process, I discovered there is a Star Trek wiki called Memory Alpha. It’s really quite good and extremely comprehensive. It’s kind of nice to imagine a future in which humanity might be like those representatives from the Enterprise.