HEAR MY VOICE

Days of Awe, of Fear and Trembling, of the Jewish New Year (Rosh Hashanah) and Day of Atonement (Yom Kippur), are upon we of the Jewish faith. As I sat in synagogue Thursday, listening to the supplications of the soulful prayer, “Avenu Malkenu,” asking “hear our voice.”   I asked myself, “who should really hear my voice?”  As I got lost in that question, I thought of the words of that past student I had met on my walk while waiting for the train to pass and I thought of a couple of e-colleagues with whom I was talking.  And, two stories popped into my mind.  I had read them long ago in the Midrash.  I didn’t understand them until I had my epiphany in the early 1990s and they’ve been among my guiding tales.  The first story says that during creation, God had decided to instill His divinity into human beings.  The angels were outraged. How can something so pure, so precious, and so powerful be entrusted to an imperfect as human beings?  If they had the Divine image, they reasoned, they will think like God thinks, and feel what God feels; they will create as God creates, and they will grasp eternity and live forever, as God lives forever. “We cannot let this happen!” they exclaimed.   So they conspired, and the stole the Divine Image, and they decided to hide it., to hide it somewhere humankind would never find it. But where.  “Let us put it at the top of the highest mountain!” one angel suggested. “No,” responded a second angel.  They will one day climb the mountain and find it.”  “Well, then, let us put it at the bottom of the sea!” another offered. “No, a fourth angel countered, ” they will dive to those depths one day and will find it.”  “I know,” a fifth angel said.  “We’ll put in the most inhospitable of deserts.”  “No,” rejected the angels, “they will bring fruit to the barrenness, dwell there, and find it.”  Suggestion after suggestion was offer, but each was rejected because of man’s creativity, imagination, and ability would .  Then,  the cleverest of the angels stepped forward. “No, not at the top of the mountains, or at the bottom of the seas, or in the dry deserts, or hot jungles, or cold arctic.  I know of a place they will never go to look for it.  Let us place it in each of them, within their hearts, and within their souls. They’ll never think to search there; they’ll find it there; and so, they’ll never hear that sacred voice.  And so, teaches the Midrash, the angels hid the precious Divine Image within the heart and soul of humankind where so often for most people it lies hidden to this day.

It is said that these HIgh Holiday are called Days of Awe because we’re asked to do something, difficult, fearful, and frightening:  face our mortality and inevitable death.  But, having faced death and having faced it down by surviving cancer and a massive cerebral hemorrhage, I think we confront something far more challenging:  life.  Most of us, academics included, do not like to confront ourselves with a reflective and articulated “who am I,” especially our “afraids.”  They’re taken as chinks in our armor that would make us vulnerable.  So, many of us are afraid to fail, afraid to look foolish, afraid to stand out, afraid to stand up, afraid to lose, afraid of what others will think, afraid to try and to risk, afraid all this will undermine both our inflated sense of self and our self-centered academic and scholarly pursuits. We have convinced ourselves that: failure is not an option.  The “others” will not be empathetic, will not forgive mistakes, will not forget exposed limitations; the others will not appeciate your changing, challenging, attempts, experiments, adventures, and explorations; the others will not accept different priorities.  And, the “others” will make sure it will cost in terms of that promotion and that job-for-life guarantee called “tenure.”  And maybe, what is worse is that we fear losing faith in ourselves, in our own abilities, and our own worth.

So, in the classroom, for which so few of us were intensely trained, most of us won’t take chances; we subtly cower with “it won’t work” or “you can’t get to them all;”  we imprison ourselves with “I don’t have the time,” “I can’t,” “It’s not me,” “I don’t know how.”  At best we engage in “Little Jack Horner” tinkering at the edges in our quest for the quick and easy guarantee.  At worst, we refuse to even consider change, casting aside finding of latest research on learning with such defenses as “I’ve been in the classroom for years,” or “I know how to teach.”   We shirk responsibility with blames of “they’re ‘don’t belongs” and “they’re letting everyone in” and “students today….” and “the administration wants…”  We attack with a hurl of arrows tipped with poisons of “soft,” “fluffy,” “touchy-feely,” “new ‘agey,'”  We sit paralyzed, unable or unwilling to do the good that’s within our power because we have convinced ourselves that what we do in the classroom is really of lesser worth and is not in our interest to give all we have.  We find solace outside the classroom, in the lab or field or archive for which we were intensely trained.  In those places, we find the time and our reassuring “can’s.” We find self worth in our degrees, titles, grants, research, conference papers, and “peer reviewed” publications.
That brings me to the second story, which I will “modernize.”  The story tells of a questionnaire everyone had to fill out when they arrived at the gates of heaven.  Everyone thought the questionaire had to do with what God will think of you.  But, in really it is designed to reveal their our perspective on their lifetimes.  The questions asked what did they believe their life amounted to.  What was important?  What mattered?  What counted?  What was their purpose?  To what and whom did they devote themselves?  In what and whom do they invest themselves.  Everyone thought, as the story goes, these questions focused on “what did you do” when in truth they were concerned with the essential question of “who are you,”  What was their essences.  Of what were they made.
As an academic, in my study, in my den, over my breakfast table, by the koi pond, on my meditative walks, in my deepest thoughts, I can be the most moral of heroes. It’s easy to be a verbal moral hero by proclaiming “I care,” “I give,” and “I serve.”  Everyone of us, deep in our hearts, thinks of ourselves as good, sincere, well-meaning persons. The real question is what happens when the proverbial chips are down, when you’ve got to put your money where your mouth is, in the real world of the academic rat race, in the self-serving pursuit of degree and position and promotion and tenure, in the pursuit of grants and research and publication, in the pursuit of resume lengthening and renown.  What do we do to ourselves?  What do we allow this rat race do to us?  Do we compromise our integrity?  Does it deafen and blind us to those in the classroom.  Does it allow us to run the race at their expense?  How many do we allow to go unnoticed in order for us to be seen?  Do we display care, emit love, demonstrate support and encouragement, live caring?  Are we the unconditional embodiment of belief, faith, hope, and love?  Do we preserve them, protect them, defend them, nurture them in the service of ourselves and others?  Do keep them alive, warm, glowing, and growing?  Do we recognize and appreciate the miracles that are in our daily lives in general and in the classroom specifically?  Do we consciously renew them each day?  As I told an e-colleague, self-motivation and self-inspiration are like shaving:  you have to do it every day.
Then something else popped into my mind as a guide to the answer of my original question.   The psychologist, Victor Frankel, himself a survivor of Auschwitz, studied those who survived and those who did not. “The last, and greatest human freedom,” he wrote, “is the freedom to choose your attitude.”   So, as the “Avenu Malkenu” came to an end, I imperceptibly shook my head.  The answer to my question of “who should hear my voice” is none other than:  me.
Louis
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About Louis Schmier

LOUIS SCHMIER “Every student should have a person who wants to help him or her help himself or herself become the person he or she is capable of becoming, and I’ll be damned if I am ever going to let one human being fall through the cracks in my classes without a fight.” How about a snapshot of myself. But, what shall I tell you about me? Something personal? Something philosophical? Something pedagogical? Something scholarly? Nah, I'll dispense with that resume stuff. Since I believe everything we do starts from who we are inside, what we believe, what we perceive, and what we do is an extension of ourselves, how about if I first say some things about myself. Then, maybe, I can ease into other things. My name is Louis Schmier. The first name rhymes with phooey, the last with beer. I am a 76 year old - in body, but not in mind or spirit - born and bred New Yorker who came south in 1963. I met by angelic bride, Susie, on a reluctant blind date at Chapel Hill. We've been married now going on 51 years. We have two marvelous sons. One is a VP at Samsung in San Francisco. The other is an artist with food and is an executive chef at a restaurant in Nashville, Tn. And, they have given us three grandmunchkins upon whom we dote a bit. I power walk 7 miles every other early morning. That’s my essential meditative “Just to …” time. On the other days, I exercise with weights to keep my upper body in shape. I am an avid gardener. I love to cook on my wok. Loving to work with my hands as well as with my heart and mind, I built a three room master complex addition to the house. And, I am a “fixer-upper” who allows very few repairmen to step across the threshold. Oh, by the way, I received my A.B. from then Adelphi College, my M.A. from St. John's University, and my Ph.D. from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. I have been teaching at Valdosta State University in Georgia since 1967. Having retired reluctantly in December, 2012, I currently hold the rank of Professor of History, Emeritus. I prefer the title, “Teacher”. Twenty-five years ago, I had what I consider an “epiphany”. It changed my understanding of myself. I stopped professoring and gave up scholarly research and publication to devote all my time and energy to student. My teaching has taken on the character of a mission. It is a journey that has taken me from seeing only myself to a commitment to vision larger than myself and my self-interest. I now believe that being an educator means I am in the “people business”. I now believe that the most essential element in education is caring about people. Education without caring, without a real human connection, is as viable as a person with a brain but without a heart. So, when I am asked what I teach, I answer unhesitatingly, “I teach students”. I am now more concerned with the students’ learning than my teaching, more concerned with the students as human beings than with the subject. I am more concerned with reaching for students than reaching the height of professional reputation. I believe the heart of education is to educate the heart. The purpose of teaching is to instill in all students genuine, loving, lifelong eagerness to learn and foster a life of continual growth and development. It should encourage and assist students in developing the basic values needed for learning and living: self-discipline, self-confidence, self-worth, integrity, honesty, commitment, perseverance, responsibility, pursuit of excellence, emotional courage, creativity, imagination, humility, and compassion for others. In April, 1993, I began to share ME on the internet: my personal and professional rites of passage, my beliefs about the nature and purpose of an education, a commemoration of student learning and achievement, my successful and not so successful experiences, a proclamation of faith in students, and a celebration of teaching. These electronic sharings are called “Random Thoughts”. There are now over 1000 of them floating out there in cyberspace. The first 185, which chronicles the beginnings of my journey, have been published as collections in three volumes, RANDOM THOUGHTS: THE HUMANITY OF TEACHING, RANDOM THOUGHTS, II: TEACHING FROM THE HEART, RANDOM THOUGHTS, III: TEACHING WITH LOVE, and RANDOM THOUGHTS, IV: THE PASSION OF TEACHING. The chronicle of my continued journey is available in an Ebook on Amazon's Kindle in a volume I call FAITH, HOPE, LOVE: THE SPIRIT OF TEACHING. There a few more untitled volumes in the works..

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