Sunday, June 19, 2016

Schism

Split. Rift. Division. Fracture. Fissure.

Sometimes it's time to break up.

I've realized that my Magic blogging has taken on a life of its own, and thus it needs a place of its own.

I've created a new home for it on my new blog A Judge's Journey, where I will still be chronicling my path through the Magic: the Gathering judge program.

This allows my judge friends to read about the game we love and spares them the details of my personal life. It also removes the over technical judge-speak from my personal blog.  My hope is that this move creates a better experience for my readers of both types.

I welcome your thoughts and comments, and as always  Thanks for reading!

Sunday, June 5, 2016

DDR and ZPD



You know that feeling when you make that jump? When you actually feel yourself get better at something? When something clicks in your head?

I did that tonight!

In our house we have an In the Groove arcade machine. It belongs to my brother-in-law who is overseas in the military. We play it sporadically, and lately we have been playing a lot. We have fun friends who come over and play with us and sometimes just my husband and I play for a workout. Tonight me, my husband, and a guest played for about 2.5 hours.

During that time, we each achieved new milestones.  The songs in the game have difficulty ratings ranging from 1 (easiest) to about 15(most difficult). For me, I passed my first 6. Our friend passed So Deep (a 9) with dramatically improved technique. My husband passed Determinator (a 12). I have been playing in the 3/4 range for years, and because my play was interrupted by pregnancies I never really advanced. Over the past few weeks I've been reaching for more. I've tried a few harder songs, but have just been unable to read them. Then tonight, it happened, I could just see it. My brain could make sense of things that yesterday it couldn't.

I'm not sure what changed exactly, but it did. Like riding a bike. Once you 'get it,' you never go back.  You may have days that are better than others, but you will never again go back to pre-getting it days.


The zone of proximal development, often abbreviated as ZPD, is the difference between what a learner can do without help and what he or she can do with help. It is a concept introduced, yet not fully developed, by Soviet psychologist Lev Vygotsky (1896–1934) during the last ten years of his life.

In my education courses in college, this effect was studied as Zone of Proximal Development or ZPD. When someone is in their ZPD they are at the point where they can learn the next step. If they are below their ZPD then they may be refining their technique or perfecting a talent, but they are not actively acquiring a new skill. If they are above their ZPD, they may learn bits and pieces, but they lack the scaffolding to truly understand and internalize the concept. This is not to say that there is not value in all three stages. However when you are trying to advance in a area of your life, you need to actively seek ZPD experiences.

In parenting, my ZPD is with my three-year-old.  My four-year-old and I think very much alike, so I feel like I understand her well and often play to her maturity and intellect to help her handle the stresses in her life. My baby's easy, happy disposition makes him a pure joy and he currently poses little challenge for me. My middle child's energetic personality and complete disregard for order and how things are 'supposed' to be confuses me. I don't understand how she thinks, but I am eager to understand her worldview. Luckily for me, she enjoys expounding on pretty much everything and has enough energy to put me in my place repeatedly. I feel like when I have success connecting with her, I am in my ZPD.

In my cooking, vegetables are my ZPD. I can grill just about any type of meat and I can produce a wide variety of pre-cooked side dishes. Breads and baking - well, I don't go there. But creating good tasting vegetables comprises my current endeavor . I enjoy purchasing a random vegetable (usually selected by my children) and then figuring out how to make it both nutritious and tasty.

In my Magic judging, my ZPD is currently floor judging at larger events.  Head Judging puts me in a little over my head, and floor judging a small event has become mundane. If I desire to advance, I will need to keep working with my mentors to find appropriate opportunities to develop my skills.

I could list examples all night because in every area of my life, I have a ZPD. And so do you! However some people actively seek out opportunities to improve, and others don't. Sometimes staying below that ZPD is safe and comfortable. Sometimes we get too ambitious and try to work about our ZPD which can lead to frustration and failure. Sometime we don't care about advancing a specific area or task, so the ZPD becomes irrelevant.

But tonight, I fought in my ZPD and won. I selected songs that challenged me, but that I could almost do.  After about 3 songs, I considered giving up.  I felt kinda tired, and my body suggested calling it a night. I almost did it, but I pushed through it. Sometimes that stubbornness manifests itself as determination and takes on a positive connotation.  I forced my legs to move when they wanted to rest and after about 2 hours they were doing things I never even imagined.

I'm so excited to have taken a giant leap tonight!  That feeling of success is what keeps a person coming back time after time (golfers, I'm talking to you!). So I'll leave you with the reminder that when frustration strikes, look for that 'next step' or ZPD and it will move you in the right direction even if you can't yet achieve your final goal!

Sunday, May 29, 2016

Writer's Block

In my much younger years, I first heard the term 'writer's block.' I assumed that a writer's block was an implement used for writing, like a quill pen or an inkwell. Perhaps archaic and definitely not used currently (at least by anyone I knew), but certainly necessary for writing. It must be a rectangular object that sits on a desk and serves some purpose in the writing process. Or, my imagination surmised, it could be a special seat used for writing - a block that you sit upon. I wondered if I would ever get one. Unfortunately I have not yet acquired a physical 'writer's block,' but I certainly have lots of the conceptual kind.

I don't actually have writer's block, because I am not a writer.  That's right. I'm not a famous person with published novels who gets paid to write.  I don't even aspire to be someone like that. Those people are highly intelligent, supremely motivated, and generally brilliant. I'm just a silly girl who enjoys writing as a hobby. It's not my job. It's nothing serious. It's just a way to maintain my sanity in this crazy, ever changing world. I write to process my thoughts. To examine each event that has occurred in my life, compare it to past experiences, and seek the meaning behind it. I only started this blog because my handwriting is too awful for a paper diary,  . . . and because I do too much editing.

So as I sit here contemplating the half-dozen half finished blog posts I'm stuck on, I can't have writer's block. I'm just still working on them.  And when I realized that my best posts tend to be about what's on my mind, I also realized that what I'm actually thinking about is writing.  I know that's getting a little 'meta' for some people, but hey, you guys have stuck with me this far on my writing journey.  So I thought I'd take a minute to share a bit of the process.

The Idea
Most of my blog posts are born as in idea in my crazy mind. I ruminate on it for a few hours or a few days and mull over ideas and angles.  Then finally, it hits me!  I see the perfect way to approach a subject, or find the perfect quote to introduce a topic, or stumble across the perfect example to illustrate a concept.

The Draft
Then I dash for my computer and frantically commit my musings to text. It usually comes out in a burst and my husband often asks what I'm so excited about as I attack my keyboard. I may also ignore food, kids, pets, or nuclear explosions caused by a toddler in my living room when I am writing the first draft. My single focus is to get the 'meat' of the post onto the screen.

The Edits
While I write I pay attention to spelling and some grammar, but mostly it's about content. I never publish anything the day I write it. I have to get away, sleep on it, and seek other eyes before I consider it finished. As I re-read my posts, I edit for flow and clarity. I rarely need to massively re-write, but I often find myself filling in additional details or removing superfluous ones. I consider my audience (parents, Magic judges, friends) for each post and try to keep it relevant. Once I am comfortable with it, I ask someone else (usually my husband) to read it before I publish it. Another person's perspective can be difficult to hear sometimes, but it adds a lot to the final product.

The Finishout
My final steps before publication are to make it look the way I want it to look. I add formatting such as bold or italics. I add links to relevant content. I insert pictures if the post needs them. I preview the post to ensure that things came out the way I intended them to.  I add the tags that create the searchable categories for each post. Then, finally, I hit the 'publish' button. There's always a feeling of completeness that accompanies that button. As a completionist, it's the best part. My final step is to head over to facebook and add a post introducing the blog post, since most of my readers enter my blog that way.  (I do hope to skip that step at some point in the future, but for now, I'll go with what works.)

So it's funny, writing about writing. I started out frustrated because my ideas wouldn't come, and now I've filled up this page with passion and a post that I'm excited to share with you.  So you see I didn't have writer's block at all; I was just writing about the wrong stuff.

Thursday, May 19, 2016

Apology Accepted

What are the most powerful words anyone has ever spoken to you?

Many years ago, I played a video game called World of Warcraft. I served as the leader of a group of 30-35 guys who played together in a pretty tight-knit group. In truth, I was the 'mom' figure to this bunch as well as the personnel manager.  I hand selected each member and handled all their concerns, complaints, and needs in terms of playing the game, as well as being a personal friend/confidant to many of them.  When it came to actual gameplay, I employed a Raid Leader (or dad figure) to bark the orders and get things done.  Our roles fit together nicely and while I wore the 'Guild Leader' tag, we led as a team.  All of our Guild Leader/Raid Leader discussions, disagreements, and flat out arguments privately never spilled over to the raid.  In front of the guys, we presented a unified front and stood behind one another's decisions. 

One of my Raid Leaders was a guy who went by the name Zygore.  He was a funny redhead from Kansas City who had served as Guild Leader in the past, but real life had taken him away for a time and then he returned as my Raid Leader. We worked together well, and we played 'good cop/bad cop' exceptionally. Most of the time we were on the same page seamlessly, but when we weren't . . .  well, there were fireworks. 

After one particularly bad explosion, I offered him an apology. Now that's pretty hard to do in the first place, swallow your pride and say "I'm sorry." Additionally, a true apology includes an admission of guilt, a request for forgiveness, and a promise that it won't happen again. I expected him to really let me have it at that point (and I would have deserved it), but instead he simply said, "Apology accepted."  Then he moved the conversation on to the next topic we needed to discuss. While the opportunity to bring up my mistake presented itself multiple times, he never did. NEVER. He never again brought up that issue. Never made me feel guilty. Never chided me about that mistake. Never reminded me not to do it again. It's as if it vanished. We both moved on with cool heads and clear hearts. I also never forgot that moment. Funny thing, I can't remember what I apologized for, but I will never forget the feeling of that forgiveness. 

Not too long later he made a mistake - a big one. He breached the integrity of the game in a way that was counter to our guild's values. And he did it in front of everyone and then laughed it off. I felt (understandably) furious. I debated kicking him out of the group. Later that night, I unloaded on him. (Not my finest moment.) He started to defend his unconscionable action, but then stopped, and apologized. He outlined a plan to make things right that included a public explanation and apology to the guild. A part of me wanted to nail him to the wall, but luckily I recognized the opportunity to offer forgiveness.  "Apology accepted." Accepting that apology did not change the plan to right the wrong or the consequence that came with his action. And he willingly accepted that consequence.  What it did do was allow us to move on without malice between us. I later marveled at the freedom I felt in not holding a grudge or being mad at him. 

It's been at least 6 years since that conversation, but those words still heal. When I struggled with forgiving my first husband for issues in our marriage, that same model of forgiveness and acceptance helped me recover and move on with my life. When things at work went insanely bad, I learned to let go and not hold grudges. 

This week, someone close to me hurt me. I'll not go into detail because the details aren't relevant.  He would never intentionally hurt me in any way.  He made a decision that I ultimately agreed with, but the result didn't turn out the way either of us had hoped. When I expressed my frustration over the situation, the temptation to blame him danced in my head.  I refrained. And later, he apologized. A simple, sincere apology.  "Apology accepted."  The relief washed over me.  I let go of my anger, my hurt, and my frustration.  Those words turned what could have be an angry fight into an opportunity for us to share our feelings and work through the situation together.  Skipping the blame and the pain freed us to spend our time healing the hurt rather than dwelling on it.  That painful experience has brought us closer together.

So I'd like to share a challenge with you, my readers. The next time someone apologizes to you, try accepting their apology. Not with questions. Not while demanding an explanation. Not if you are secretly planning to get them back for it later.  Really, truly, accept their apology and let yourself release the pain and the hurt. Instead focus on the steps to rectify the situation and move on from the incident together. I hope you'll find it as powerful as I have.

"Apology accepted."
The most powerful words

Wednesday, May 18, 2016

Migraine

Pain. Pain.

My head is in pain.

Stabbing right behind my right eye.

Run to the bathroom . . . again.  Sick.

Bloated, achey. Pain.

Curl up in bed. With an icepack on my face. Can't move. don't move. Moving hurts.

Relief starts to wash over me as I drift off to  . . .

Baby cries. Pain. Noise. Pain. Movement. Pain.

Husband gets baby.

Settle down again. Pull covers up. Pain.

Try to relax.

Not . . . going . . . to  . . . be  . . . sick.
Willpower.
Stay in bed.
Not going to be sick.
Pain.

Start to drift off.
Cat meows.
Cat won't shut up.
Husband quiets cat.

Pain.  Stabbing in my eye. Move icepack.

Finally escape to sleep.

Not a real sleep. Not a restful sleep.
A state of unconscious blackness. A deep, dark place. It swallows me whole and consumes me. Never want to leave.

Baby crying. Nap is over.

Sit up to get baby. Pain. Tears roll down my face.

Stand up. Wobble. Hold nightstand.

Toddle to bathroom. Stomach heaves.

Wash face.

Trudge upstairs to get baby.

His sweet face makes everything worthwhile.
Smile. Coo. Change diaper. Try to pretend I'm ok.
Tears stream. Baby doesn't know.

Take baby downstairs. Make bottle. Load car.

Thank husband.
(Without him I would never survive these days.)

Pain stabs my every move.

Drive to preschool. Pick up 4 kids. Smile at teachers. Make small talk. Load kids, and lunches, and backpacks.

Drive to loud, brightly lit, obnoxious hair salon. Wish for a spa. Remember promise to kids regarding hair salon. Drag self from car. Unload baby. Unload kids. More pain. More tears. Manage to keep it together to go inside.

Kids have a blast. I try to survive the experience. Wish for an out of body experience.

Finally leave.

Load kids. Load baby. Get in car and cry. Pain, nausea, exhaustion, overwhelmed.

Explain to 4 year old why I am crying. "Mommy doesn't feel good."  She suggests that we go to the doctor. Thank 4 year old for her concern.

Drive to botanic garden for preschool class.  Pain.

Spend an hour outside in brightly lit noisy place with large group of preschoolers. Try to make small talk with other moms. Feed baby bottle. Baby does not want to be put down. Thank nice garden club ladies for doing crafts with my kids. Receive live crickets to take home.

Pain. Take kids to restroom. Go in stall alone to be sick.

Recapture escaped cricket.

Make it to car. Pain. Collect crickets to hold until we get home.

Take niece and nephew home. Hang out with kids and brother-in-law while kids eat suckers I forgot I promised them.

Release crickets in garden.

Make it home. Husband is there with open arms. And dinner. Husband is the best.

Husband puts kids to bed.
Husband tells me to go to bed.
Husband washes bottles and cleans kitchen.

Husband is the best.

Wake up sick at 1am.

Husband gets fresh ice pack.

Cry myself back to sleep trying to escape the pain.
It won't leave.
Can't sleep.

Write blog post.

If you've never experienced a migraine, please understand that is has been miscategorized as a headache.  It is not an "ache in the head." It is an all consuming full body pain. It includes the feeling of being stabbed in the eye repeatedly. And the forehead. And the neck. And the aches of the flu. And bloating, gas, nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, and heartburn. It comes with a level of hormone/emotional disturbance that makes you cranky, and weepy, and irritable, and confused. The visual disturbances are scary. The level of exhaustion compares to what I assume you feel after running a marathon then taking a sedative - you can't snap out of it. And it sometimes lasts for days. The pain comes in waves, with periods so intense that moving is out of the question and periods that it might be just a headache, but it never really leaves. There is no relief until it runs its course.

If it weren't for the love and support of my family, I'd never get through these days. From my children's sweet compassion to the purring cat in my lap, almost everyone who knows me has been touched by my migraines.  I fear 'migraine days.' I never know what they will ruin.

My husband deserves better. He deserves a wife who can keep up with her chores. Who can take care of the kids. Who doesn't fall apart emotionally. Who isn't constantly being sick. He didn't sign up for this. He signed up for a wife who could hold her end of the bargain. Who could cover his weaknesses with her strength. Who could help make him a better man.

LOVE. He loves me. Even when my speech comes in bursts and pieces because the pain makes it too hard to think of the words. He's there for me. His strong arms wrap around me and he tells me that it will be ok. I apologize - he shushes me. He says that this is the 'for worse' part. I never knew what love meant until I had a husband and migraines. 

Life isn't always pretty, but being able to celebrate the good and the bad, and share all those moments with the ones you love is what's truly important in life. So let go of the 'perfect life' images and enjoy all of what life has to offer. You will find good in the bad and bad in the good, so celebrate it all - together with those who mean the most to you. 

Thursday, April 28, 2016

Mr Conditioner

Meet Mr Conditioner!

He's a super cool guy that visits my kids during bathtime.  He does silly things like dances on the showerhead, then falls off and gets wet. He talks in a deep voice with an odd accent. He enjoys making a "bloop" noise while dispensing conditioner into children's hands. He likes to play peek-a-boo from behind the shower curtain. He also inspects children's cleanliness before allowing them to do their hair. He is generally delightfully funny and makes bathtime more pleasant for all involved. His conception was a moment of parental boredom, and he now holds a prominent place in our nightly routine.

Last night my 4 year old asked, "Mommy, how does Mr Conditioner talk?"  I kinda laughed it off, so she continued, "Mommy, how does Mr Conditioner talk and move? Is it really you?"

I was floored. I have made no secret of what I am doing. My arm is clearly attached while he dances and does flips. She can see my face while I am talking in my 'My Conditioner voice.' I thought this was extremely obvious to all involved.

Furthermore, my 4 year old is a precocious child in many ways. She recently declared that she wanted to get her ears pierced. When I started in on my spiel, she cut me off with, "Mommy, I know that it will hurt for a minute, but I won't fuss, so can you please drive me to the ear piercing place?"  I could come up with no better response than to grab my car keys. She got her ears pierced (one at a time!) with no fussing and cleaned them twice a day for 6 weeks with no prompting. She also cleans her own room, enjoys cooking, and can read. This child can competently order a meal in a restaurant, pay with a credit card, and give our phone number for the rewards program. We have discussed birth, death, girls marrying other girls (she wanted to marry her widowed great-grandmother), life being unfair, and many other difficult topics. She's basically a really short adult most of the time.

So did she really not know that I am Mr Conditioner?  She looked disappointed when I told her that it was really me. 

This incident made me really think about the line between fantasy and reality, or perceived reality.  

If you know me, you know that we don't do Santa Claus, the Easter Bunny, the Tooth Fairy, or any other such people. When we see a costumed character, my kids know that it's a person in a costume for fun. And yes, they still think it's fun. We also don't do TV, so my kids have little experience with most characters. We do read a lot, so my kids have seen talking animals and such, but we discuss that it's all pretend.

I have read that kids have trouble understanding the difference between real and pretend.  I never understood that statement until last night.  

It makes me question why we live in a society that fills kids heads with nonsense about princesses, Santa Claus, and talking cars.  Why do we work to make our kids believe all this?  I have seen parents go to great lengths such as letters from the Tooth Fairy, or having 'Santa' on speed dial on their phone to call when their child misbehaves.   It seems that many parents use such things as a way to control their child.  Parents say it's for their child, or for fun, but really is calling 'Santa' because your kid was rude at dinner really any fun?  Maybe we need to redefine fun?

I've also seen way too many kids who are devastated when they realize that their parents have been lying to them the whole time.  It seems to me that that type of behavior destroys our parental credibility.  So you lied about the Easter Bunny huh?  Did you also lie about drugs being bad for you?

So while this conversation had definitely provoked some serious thought, Mr conditioner/mommy being silly will be back tonight for my kids' bath.  I'll just make sure that they know that Mommy has as much fun being Mr Conditioner as they have giving him high fives.

Tuesday, April 12, 2016

Passed

Since you already know the backstory (if not read Failed!), and I'm sure you guessed the result by the title of this post, I'll skip the announcement and cut right to the fun part.  The story of how it came about. The truth is, it was a group effort. I could not have passed that test without the support of a bunch of L2s, so here it is, a list of the most important things they said to me.

Jason Daniels: Our job is to make sure players play legally, not to make sure they play well.
As I contemplated preparing to be a Magic judge, I believed that I would first need to become an accomplished player.  I thought that I would need to be able to educate players on the proper plays in various situations and serve as a sort of 'coach' to new players. Since I was a new player myself, I had a long way to go towards that end. However, Jason explained that our role as judges is to ensure that players make legal choices and follow the rules. That makes the game fair and fun for everyone. Our job is not to help them actually play; their own skill will be needed for that. We serve as neutral arbitrators to help players with difficult situations and provide them a resource for resolving problems.
Thanks Jason for taking the time to chat with me at that GPT and open the door for me to become a judge.

David Carroll: I think it's fair to say I liked you from the start.
I played my first game of Legacy ever with a deck David let me borrow.  I also got my first penalty ever with a decklist David gave me.  Afterwards he taught me an important lesson: always verify your own decklist.  While he did apologize, he did not take responsibility. And he's right.  My deck and decklist are my responsibility, and I tried to take the lazy road and turn in the one he handed me sight unseen.  In every interaction with David, he has pushed me to be a little bit better.  Correcting my terminology in Slack, providing feedback on my cover letter, pointing out the 1 question I missed as room for improvement. David liked me enough to never let me settle for less than top tier.
Thanks David for holding me to the highest standards.

Jim Shuman: When are you taking your L1 test?
Jim walked up to me in the middle of a match at the Hunter Burton Memorial Magic Open and asked me that. I struggled to figure out how to play while having that conversation.  Ok, I struggled to play anyway, but trying to talk and play . . . almost impossible.  But when Jim walked away, my opponent looked at me in semi-awe and said, "You're a judge?"  I had wanted to judge that exact event, but couldn't because I failed my certification test. Playing in the event while my friends judged made that stand out to me even more. Jim helped me realize that while I'm not actually a certified judge yet, I am a member of the judge community and have the support of other judges.
Thanks Jim for giving me that boost of acceptance and encouragement when my frustration level was the highest.

Antonio Zanutto: You can't do math while running from a lion.
The night before my L1 test, coincidentally also the day I met Antonio, he was helping me study.  We stayed up late going over scenarios and I expressed my nervousness.  He explained that I would need to relax enough to think clearly while taking the test.  His poignant way of stating such a pragmatic fact really struck a chord with me and made me smile during the actual test.
Thanks Antonio for the last minute advice that made all the difference.

Josh McCurley: You ARE a judge. 
I don't think either Josh or I want to count the exact number of times he made that statement to me. After I failed my first L1 exam I fought the urge to give up.  Magic is a complicated game and maybe learning the rules was too much for me. I was also frustrated that my plans for judging upcoming events had been changed.  That I had learned some things wrong and needed to re-learn them.  That I'm a girl in a man's world of judging. That my husband was better than me - lots better.  Josh was there to talk me off that ledge-several times.  He offered me a listening ear, late night jokes, and answers to all of my million questions. No matter how upset I got, he was the level-headed one who reminded me that even at L0, I was a judge. He showed me a multitude of ways to get involved in the program and offered his name as a reference, and little by little, I stepped out of my box and into my new role.
Thanks Josh for all the good conversations and for never letting me lose sight of my goal.

Brian Leonard: I'm proud of you baby.
My husband, the L2. While it was a roller coaster of a ride, sometimes filled with frustration, jealousy, tears, or long study sessions, there is no one I would have rather been with than you.  You were the first person to support my goal, and you put up with me through the good times and the bad. You shared your knowledge while still allowing me to chart my own (albeit rocky) path. You never gave in to my fits of frustration, and you never let me win unless I was right.  The night I won my first rules debate against you was a turning point for me and since then you have let me build up a belief in myself.
Thanks baby for loving me, supporting me, and sharing this journey with me!


I'd also like to add a few quick "thank yous":
 . . . to Chris as Area 51 for letting me help with some FNMs.
 . . . to L2 Preston May, the guy who saw me fail and saw me pass, and encouraged me both times.
 . . . to Jessica Livingston, Mitchell Nitz, Trevor Nunez, Steve Wise, and all of the #trainingroom crew.