About Me:

Aloha! I'm Wendy Kennar. I'm the mother of a seven-year-old son and a wife living in Los Angeles. I was a public school teacher for twelve years until a chronic medical condition made it necessary to leave my teaching career.

I've always been described as "quiet" - really, I'm just biting my tongue. I've got lots to say, and lots of thoughts to share, I just prefer to write them. That's the purpose of this blog. Each Wednesday, I post a personal essay offering my observations and thoughts.

A few fun facts about me: I've wanted to be a writer since second grade, when my teacher, Mrs. Jones, made me a "book" with a yellow construction paper cover. I have never learned to whistle, have always preferred sunflowers to roses, and have spent my life living within the same zip code.

Through the years, my writing has been published in the Los Angeles Times, Christian Science Monitor, United Teacher, GreenPrints, L.A. Parent, DivineCaroline.com, RoleReboot.org, XOJane, and Brain, Child Magazine. Additionally, my personal essays have been included in several anthologies, including: The Barefoot Review, Beyond the Diaper Bag, Lessons From My Parents, Write for Light, Being a Grown-Up: A User's Manual for the Real World, Ka-Pow!, How Writing Can Get You Through Tough Times, Breath and Shadow, The Grey Wolfe Storybook, and Sisters Born, Sisters Found.
I am a regular contributor at MomsLA.com, and you can also find me at Goodreads.

Thanks for stopping by and reading my blog. Feel free to comment and share my blog with others!

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

The A to Z List of Memorable Events



       Life is full of memorable events, both big and small.  Here's an A to Z sampling of some of my most memorable events.
A Asking a boy to the prom.  I was the quiet, shy, smart girl in school.  No one asked me to the prom.  There was one boy, though, I was particularly friendly with.  We’d known each other since junior high, and we were competitive when it came to grades.  I called him and asked him if he’d like to go to the prom.  He declined; I don’t remember why.  

B Byline.  My first byline was in the Los Angeles Times.  It was a personal essay declaring my preference to renting as opposed to owning a home in Los Angeles.  It was a complete thrill to see my name in print.  A neighbor from down the hall slipped a note under our front door after she read my article.  I also received a phone call from a stranger who liked my essay, 
located my home number, and complimented my writing.

C Car purchase.  Our first new car was a 2003 Honda Civic (that I still drive).  I can tell you that we went after-work to sign the papers.  I can tell you I was wearing a blue sweater, the color of our new car.  I can tell you that the first place we drove our new car to was my parents’ house.

D First Date.  On our first date, Paul shared a book with me - Hermann Hesse’s Siddhartha.  The rest of our date was spent at Starbucks, talking and getting to know each other since we couldn’t decide on a movie to see.  We both agree it was the best cafe mocha we ever had.

E Engagement.  Valentine’s Day 1999.  I was picking up Paul for our weekly Saturday night date.  We knew we were going to get engaged, we just hadn’t decided when.  I decided.  I told him we should go into the silver jewelry store nearby and buy rings.  And we did.  We proposed to each other and became engaged that night.  

F First Kiss.  The first time my now-husband and I kissed was at the conclusion of one of our dates.  We sat in my mom’s Honda and Paul asked if he could kiss me good-night.  I laughed.  I wasn’t used to a guy asking.  (The 2 guys I had dated prior weren’t as gentlemanly).  It seemed so old-fashioned, so chivalrous.  

G Graduation.  I graduated from college in 2001.  The first in my family to achieve that milestone.  And it wasn’t at all what I had hoped it would be.  I was incredibly lonely during the ceremony.  I had made no exceptionally close friends during my college years - I was too busy studying and working and commuting on public buses.  I sat there, worried about my pregnant sister and her comfort on the folding chairs.  I was upset at my husband’s choice of shirt.  I remember wearing a long black skirt and black sandals underneath my cap and gown.  I remember going back to my parents’ for bagels and eating a “photo-cake” for dessert.  College was over; I was relieved, but yet at the same time, wanted a “do-over.”

H Honeymoon, Hawaii, Hana, Haleakala.  We were determined to see and do as much as possible for the five days we were in Maui.  I drove the road to Hana, round-trip, in one day.  We rose before dawn, and I drove us to the top of Haleakala to watch the sunrise.  We saw rainbows and whales, hula dancers and roasted pigs.  

I Inauguration.  I witnessed President Obama’s inauguration with my fourth grade class.  We said the pledge of allegiance, we watched, and we clapped.  The whole time I had to be teacher, maintaining some order and control.  On the floor with my students, I sat behind one particular student, kept him in a hug to keep him calm, and all the while wishing I could be holding my son.  (My husband was home watching with our son who was ten months old at the time.)

J Jury duty.  I dread receiving that summons in the mail.  Summer 2007, I get the summons, I call in, and I’m required to appear.  Then, I’m placed on a jury.  Newly pregnant, with plans to travel up the coast in five days, and placed on a jury.  My first day there, I ate lunch in the cafeteria downstairs.  Not a good choice.  My upset stomach threatened to explode within the courtroom.  While other jurors were still being selected, I had to ask special permission to use the restroom, citing my early pregnancy.  I don’t think it was “morning sickness” in the afternoon, but either way, both attorneys and judge had to confer to grant me a “potty break.”  

K Kindergarten.  It was my first teaching position.  I taught afternoon kindergarten to a class of 20, 14 boys and 6 girls.  Before the new school year started, I observed my two kindergarten colleagues, taking notes about their routines and their classrooms.  My students began to sound-out and read, we counted and cut, we painted our hands and feet, we traced our shadows, we sang about the months of the year, and learned the national anthem.

L Leaving the flower shop.  It was my first paycheck-paying job.  I worked and did my best to make my boss happy.  I was unprepared for the verbal abuse - being told that I wasn’t pretty enough to have a boyfriend.  One day, enough was enough.  I went home in tears and my parents reminded me I didn’t have to take that, didn’t have to work there.  I was too cowardly to handle it myself.  My dad called, spoke to my boss, and quit on my behalf.

M Moving.   As an adult, I’ve only lived in two homes.  Our current home is the home I’ve always wanted.  Multiple bathrooms, multiple bedrooms, a garden.  Our previous bathroom had a sliding shower door.  I detested that door.  I wanted a bathroom with a shower curtain.  And while still moving our belongings from our apartment to our new home, I immediately hung one of our shower curtains.  The house was a mess, our possessions were scattered, but, by golly, I now had a bathroom with a shower curtain.

N NPR.  NPR discovered one of my essays published in the Christian Science Monitor.  They liked it.  They wanted me to record it so it could be a part of their “All Things Considered” segment.  I drove down to the studio in Culver City, California, and read my essay into an “old-fashioned” silver microphone - the kind I envision Elvis Presley singing into.  My piece made its way to certain NPR stations, and the kind people there, sent me a CD of it.

O Oregon.  We traveled to Gold Beach, Oregon from Los Angeles on a Greyhound.  Approximately twenty-one hours spent on a bus to meet my future mother-in-law and her husband.  I left a major urban area to spend a few days in a town with a market that also had a video store in it, a restaurant that closed by 8 p.m., and a gas station.  Our big excursion was a trip to a Costco in another city.  I remember beautiful coastline, and I remember wheezing, sneezing, and coughing because of the dogs in the house.  

P Paris.  It was my dream vacation.  I remember standing on the second-level of the Eiffel Tower with tears in my eyes.  I remember having to scoot over and let others pass as we climbed the stairs within the Arc de Triomphe (I was certain there was an elevator.)  I remember not being able to purchase chocolates because the merchant didn’t accept our credit card, and we were out of Euros.  I remember walking into a McDonald’s just to see what it looked like in Paris.  I remember green billboards advertising the iPod Shuffle.  I remember eating dinner in an Italian restaurant on our first night in the City of Light.

Q Northridge Earthquake 1994.  For my generation, that was the “big one.”  I was a   senior in high school.  My sister and I were in our doorway, looking for reassurance from our parents who were in their doorway.  I remember thinking, “This is it.  This is the big one they talk about.  I can’t handle this.”  So I didn’t.  I fainted.  I’m terrified of earthquakes.  I don’t like feeling hopeless or powerless.  Tornados and hurricanes have warnings, fires we can try to put out, but with earthquakes all I can do is wait it out and hope.

R Ryan’s birth.  There has not been a more momentous event in my life than the birth of my son.  I can describe the striped Dr.Seuss-like socks I wore to keep my feet warm.  I can tell you that my son’s birth was relatively quiet.  I didn’t hear him cry right away and feared there was something wrong.  I can tell you that someone turned on the plasma tv during my pushing and a college basketball game played on mute while my body ached with a pain I had never known before I experienced an elation I had never known.

S School-age memories.  I always liked school, because I was good at it.  It was the social part of school I wasn’t always so good at.  So while I received my A’s with both pride and embarrassment, I have other memories of elementary school.  I remember throwing away my cream-cheese sandwiches for lunch; I didn’t want to hurt my mom’s feelings by telling her I didn’t like them anymore.  I remember my horror at being forced to wear a leotard for the winter holiday performance so that I could essentially look like a Smurf - blue leotard and blue tights dancing to the Nutcracker suite.  And I remember my absolute mortification at getting bird poop on my sky blue sweat pants during lunch.

T Traveling by bus.  Up until college, I was spoiled by a mom who took me to and from school.  During college, I commuted on public buses - up to six buses a day.  I remember eating onboard as I traveled from class to work.  I remember speaking with another “Wendy” who would leave CSUN to go to work in a travel agency.  I remember the first time I sat at the bus stop, waiting to come home.  I remember crying behind my black sunglasses, wondering how I was going to do this every day.  

U Ultrasound.  We didn’t know this one particular 
appointment would tell us we would soon be parents to a baby boy.  I had a suspicion I was carrying a girl.  We saw our baby, his hand up as if in a wave.  He moved, his legs moved, and the doctor joked, “You don’t have to be a doctor to know what that is.”  

V Las Vegas.  I’m thirty-six years old and have ventured to Las Vegas once, with no real desire to return.  I’m not a gambling person - I stuck to the nickel and dime machines.  A trip to Las Vegas eased my curiosity.  I saw beautiful fountains and buffets with an insane amount of food.  For me, Vegas was an opportunity to see the world.  I took the poor person’s mini-trip around the world because at that point, I had never ventured to Paris or Italy, New York or Egypt.

W Walkman.  That was the gift I received for my 10th birthday.  I was a big kid - I was in the double-digits!  And I could now listen to my music, privately.

X X-ray.  I was in the emergency room because of my swollen left calf.  For some reason, doctors ordered a chest x-ray.  We questioned the technician, we questioned the doctor, and was told the x-ray was fine.  My initial question of “Why are you x-raying my chest when the problem is in my leg?” was never answered. 

Y Yellow-and-black.  It was my “taxi” outfit.  Even as a young girl, I took pride in coordinating my outfits and accessories.  Yellow and black striped sweater.  Black bracelet, yellow and black necklace, yellow and black hair clips.  

Z Zoo field trip.  I may have been an elementary school student at the time, but certain events remain ingrained in my memory.  Living in an urban area, I don’t have a lot of interactions with wild animals.  So seeing an elephant pee and poop was definitely something my entire class remembered long after the yellow school bus returned us to our school.

4 comments:

  1. Great post as always! I love your A to Zs! The way you described childbirth was beautiful: that the horrible pain could give way to intense joy is lovely. I feel like I learned some more about you, which I love! (I think I always do when I read your blog each week!)
    Keep up the amazing work!

    ReplyDelete
  2. I am amazed at your writing and how interesting you make everything sound.I am so sorry you had to experience some of the horrible things you did.It makes me sick to see and hear how some people can treat others and not have it bother them.I always have said when one person treats another poorly it will come back to them at some point in their life.You are an AMAZING person and you deserve only the best life has to offer.Right now the main thing I pray for you is to be PAIN FREE.I love you and I am very proud of you.
    love,mommy

    ReplyDelete
  3. Once again I am amazed at your story content. The snap shots you provide of your life experiences are quite revealing. Your ability to publish your blog, with all the other issues in your life, is amazing. I look forward to reading your blog every week. Your Mother and I are proud of you. Thank you for Ryan.

    Love, Dad

    ReplyDelete
  4. Honey,
    Your A to Z stories are fantastic! I am so proud of your dedication to your writing craft. You are an amazing woman and amazing writer!
    I Love You!
    Paul

    ReplyDelete