Of all my teachers in public school, Mrs. Murrow, a gray-haired grandmotherly teacher, was my hands-down favorite. In the attractiveness department, she was the least memorable, but I remember her for her teaching enthusiasm, her blackboard drawings, and her whole-hearted embrace of a classroom of seven year olds. She checked all the boxes for excellence in teaching, but she made us feel seen and known. She knew us.
I recently found amimeographed hand-printed letter she'd written to our parents in which she mentioned every single one of us by name and noted something special about us.
She called me a day-dreamer, but not to worry about that--it just meant that one day I'd be a "writer."
Mrs. Murrow was the only teacher I recall having a sense of humor. When I bit my new ring and it got stuck on my finger, she just smiled and took me to the girls' bathroom and soaped it up--and it came right off!
Was she married? Did she have children, grandchildren? I have no idea. She didn't talk about herself, only about the subjects she was determined to instill in our minds.
In the seventh grade, Mrs. Dykes entertained us with stories, but I can't actually remember what she taught us. She'd walk up and down the rows of us, seemingly lost in her own thoughts, telling about her life and her opinions. But one thing she said that mystified me at the time stayed with me more than any sentence spoken by a teacher in my pre-college years: "I love words!"
She didn't elaborate, or if she did, I don't remember what she said. But I puzzled over that strange sentence. How could a person have affection for words?
Now that I've spent a lifetime loving words, I get it. From the enlarged font of first grade readers to the poetry and prose that makes me feel any kind of way besides bored, I've always loved words.
I've never been good at crossword puzzles but am obsessive and quite good at the New York Times' Spelling Bee, a game in which you make as many words as you can with a hive of seven letters.
I love the alliteration of mystical, magical, musical, maniacal, memory.
The tipping point between acquaintanceship and friendship is often discovering, through words, a shared sensibility.
I love words that poke into predictable discourse with humor or a gem of a phrase.
I save handwritten cards and letters virtually forever. In handwriting, we get next-best thing to hearing the voice of that person on that particular day he/she wrote them.
I love words that convey intimacy, vulnerability, kindness, intelligence, and rock-solid honesty.
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