Unease by proxy.
That’s what I call this weekend.
The holidays are almost over.
Today is Kings when Catalan kids will expect their second (or third)
tranche of presents, sweeping together the loot from Christmas Eve and
Christmas Day, the sweets from the procession of the Kings and parental
presents for the day itself. And Monday,
reality hits.
As a SRP, (BBLE) that is, Smug Retired Person, Baby Boomer Leading
Edge, I regard the end of the holidays and the reopening of the schools as the
start of the time when we can reclaim streets, shops, supermarkets and open
spaces as the noisy neophyte life forms are herded back into the rightful (if
all too brief) seclusion of secure institutions.
As a retired teacher,
however I cannot fail to feel that familiar frisson of dread that comes with
the looming opening of a new, long, school term. In Catalonia the new school terms also comes
with the deadly threat of Staff Meetings.
However awful you think your experience of meetings might have been, you
have not truly suffered until you have undergone the trail by frustration of a
Spanish staff meeting in a school.
I have been to thousands of meetings during my working life
and indeed before and after, and the range, complexity and variety of those
meetings and the different sorts of people who managed them and participated
has been exhilaratingly different. I was
just thinking about the range of ‘meetings’ that I have experienced and the
proportion of time that must have been spent on them. At every stage of my life committees and
meetings have been a constant. In school:
clubs, societies, sports, library, Prefects, magazine, orchestra, brass band,
charity, hobbies - all have demanded some sort of committee work. In university: clubs and societies again, but
this time with a more formal structure of committee work; student politics;
senate sub committees; subject work; trade union activity. Work: departmental meetings, faculty
meetings, union meetings at school, local, regional and national level,
educational meetings of all sorts, Heads of Department Meetings, Staff meetings
and on and on and on.
And throughout my long and generally soul destroying experience of
committee and meeting I have never, ever experienced meetings of such vicious
vacuity as those that I have experienced in Spain. Ever.
For me, the Patron Saint of Meetings is Girolamo Savonarola,
(1542-1498) the Italian Dominican friar and Renaissance Florence troublemaker. He was one of those historical characters
where there was much to admire (his hatred of clerical corruption, his
rejection of tyrannical government and the exploitation of the poor and his
championing of Republicanism) while, equally there was much to be disturbed
about (his ‘prophecies’, his iconoclasm, his extreme puritanism and
intolerance). However the element in his
life that both appeals and appals is the concept of The Bonfire of the
Vanities.
This bonfire was literal and
the flames were fed by the population, responding to Savonarola’s urging,
throwing luxuries into the conflagration to show their rejection of the
‘vanities’ of the world.
I am no great supporter of iconoclasm, but the idea of a Bonfire of
the Vanities is a powerful one.
Especially when you are sitting listening to people waffling on about
nothing in particular in a meeting that is taking up hours of your life.
I am reminded of a Robert Heinlein story in which the ultimate
authority in the known universe was a powerful female figure. She was respected throughout the galaxy etc.
and delegations came to her for advice that would be followed strictly. I remember one example of her advice being
that members of the delegation that came to see her be executed as the solution
to their problems!
How many times in my life have I imagined a Bonfire of the
Loquacious in various meetings that I have attended where selective burnings
would have concentrated the minds and shortened the meetings (and all future
meetings) considerably. As well as
giving real satisfaction at seeing the guilty burn.
As I’ve mentioned before, some colleagues were only able to survive
the more infuriating meetings by watching me as the supressed fury that I
radiated in the more boring sessions could (my colleagues hoped) suddenly burst
forth in a glorious display of justified ire that would make attendance
justified.
I never did ‘break’, but I came close on a number of occasions.
The truly and unbearably awful meetings in Spain were only made
tolerable by a stratagem that I devised for survival. I took my MacBook Air into the meetings with
me and wrote personal, unexpurgated and real minutes in which my true feelings
found full expression through my touch-typing.
There is nothing more satisfying while looking and listening to some
idiot waffle on while your eloquent fingers say exactly what you are thinking as
you stare at the guilty!
Each piece of idiocy was loving described by my tapping fingers and
each fragment of fatuousness was highlighted by venom infused description. This literary scorched earth assassination
made the meeting just about bearable, but there were dangers in such an
approach.
In one meeting, a member of the English Department was sitting next
to me and she began reading what I was typing and laughing. Each time something stupid was said she
looked over at the screen to read my assessment: in this way we both managed to
survive the meeting relatively unscathed.
The real moment of tension occurred at the end of the meeting when
the person who was chairing (I use the term because I can think of no other,
but what she did bore no relation to what I would understand even a marginally
competent chair might do) the meeting said that she had seen me making notes
and would it be possible for her to have a copy! I explained, with a straight face, that the
notes were personal and not for general consumption and were in English that
she didn’t speak. While I was convincing
and composed, my colleague was convulsed by what might have happened if she had
read (and understood) what I had written!
God knows, teaching is a demanding enough profession in the day-to-day
interaction of teacher and pupil, without making the whole thing so much worse
by having cruelly pointless meetings.
And we had one meeting on a Saturday morning! Though that criminal occasion was years ago,
I feel I cannot write about it, as the wounds are still too fresh to cope
with! Saturday morning! I can neither believe that it actually
happened, or that I actually attended!
The Horror! The Horror!
So, I feel for my colleagues.
Today is Saturday and the real stomach churning will not get into gear
(does that mixed metaphor work, I wonder?) until Sunday evening and the
realization, as the bedclothes are pulled up to the chin, that the morrow
brings work! In a school.
The nearest I will get to a school on Monday is the pool where I
take my daily swim. Two schools are next
to the centre and I have to admit that there is something deeply satisfying as
I sip my tea, to hear young voices in the distance and know that I will not be
teaching them and I will be paid for not doing so!
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If you would like to read drafts of my recent poems please go to smrnewpoems.blogspot.com
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If you would like to read drafts of my recent poems please go to smrnewpoems.blogspot.com