The poetry of the Earth is never dead. ~ John Keats
Three Questions, March 22, 2025
You can find the background to The Three Questions in my recent post about it. I’ll be answering the questions each day for the next year and putting this experience into a book. Here we go!
What was the most beautiful thing I encountered today?
There is a flower in Asia, that when it’s petals get wet they become translucent, they are called the skeleton or glass flower.
What did I learn today?
The glass flower that I just described was the most interesting thing I learned today.
What made me happy today?
Watching the University of Tennessee Men’s team make it to the sweet 16 in the NCAA tournament.
Loveliest of lovely things are they on earth that soonest pass away. The rose that lives its little hour is prized beyond the sculptured flower. ~ William Cullen Bryant
Three Questions, March 21, 2025
You can find the background to The Three Questions in my recent post about it. I’ll be answering the questions each day for the next year and putting this experience into a book. Here we go!
What was the most beautiful thing I encountered today?
There was a single California poppy rising in the midst of a huge clump of blue flowers, absolutely gorgeous and unfortunately I didn’t have my phone to get a shot.
What did I learn today?
Today I learned all about the details of a heart catheterization procedure, which is important since I’ll be undergoing one a week from today.
What made me happy today?
Watching the Lady Vols play nearly flawless basketball in a winning effort in a NCAA tournament game.
No winter lasts forever; no spring skips its turn. ~ Hal Borland
Happy Spring and International Happiness Day!
Happy Spring Solstice and Happy International Happiness Day. And you would think, as the Minister of Happiness, today would have been a really happy day for me, and you would be right.
Today started out on a great note, I had the lowest normal range blood sugar reading I’ve ever had, a 109, which is 61 points lower than where it was a few weeks ago. This is good news and gives me some hope that my surgery won’t be delayed. So a really wonderful start to the day.
As I drove to work I decided on this lovely sunny day to do the one thing at work that always brings me joy. That’s right, I wen to the the child development center I oversee to play with the munchkins. And there, like in my personal life, being the wonderful uncle I am, I get them all riled up and then smile, wave and leave. Today I made a mistake, after all of the munchkins had gone to the shed to get balls, one of them decided to throw their ball to me. I made the rookie mistake of catching it, because then, they all wanted me to catch their ball. Being toddlers, they of course don’t understand the concept that I can’t catch all of their balls at once. So they of course were repeatedly pummeling me across my body and head with balls and cackling like crazy with joy. It was like a slow motion dodge ball nightmare and it was madly wonderful. They got a huge kick out of it and so did I.
Then I got an email notifying me of a royalty payment. Which means although I haven’t published a new book in eight years, at least one is still selling. Don’t worry, I’ll spent that $3.00 very carefully. In case you’re not aware, my books:
Then this afternoon I got to present two faculty at their tenure celebration. These are two really fantastic women, who are incredibly talented and wonderful teachers. Both are insanely student focused and having an incredible impact on students, their programs and the college. It was an absolute honor to speak on their merits at the celebration.
Finally, to celebrate spring I called my niece Rooney because it was absolutely time for my niece to learn the pickle song. So I called her up and belted out the chorus of Arlo Guthries’ Pickle Song and of course wish her a happy spring.
So it was a wonder celebration of Spring and the International Day of Happiness. So here are some lovely flower images to help you have a wonderful day my friends. ~ Rev Kane
The more one forgets himself – by giving himself to a cause to serve or another person to love – the more human he is. ~ Viktor E Frankl
Three Questions, March 20, 2025
You can find the background to The Three Questions in my recent post about it. I’ll be answering the questions each day for the next year and putting this experience into a book. Here we go!
What was the most beautiful thing I encountered today?
Today was a tenure celebration for two faculty I hired four years ago, two really amazing women who are phenomenal teachers who care deeply for students.
What did I learn today?
That the giant wood moth is the heaviest moth in the world, they grow up to a length of ten inches and weigh a whopping one ounce.
What made me happy today?
So much today, but I’ll go with the first one, I recorded the lowest blood glucose number I’ve ever had this morning, 109, way solidly in the normal range.
We are tied to the ocean. And when we go back to the sea, whether it is to sail or to watch – we are going back from whence we came. ~ John F Kennedy
Three Questions, March 19, 2025
You can find the background to The Three Questions in my recent post about it. I’ll be answering the questions each day for the next year and putting this experience into a book. Here we go!
What was the most beautiful thing I encountered today?
On my walk I go by a particular yard and there’s always something interesting to see. Today, the yard erupted in flowers and they wonderfully framed a Madonna statue they have.
What did I learn today?
I learned a very simple thing today, 98% of all transcontinental internet traffic goes by trans-Atlantic cable.
What made me happy today?
A simple thing, like it often is, just walking around campus on a sunny clear day looking out over the ocean and really being thankful to live in such a beautiful place.
Ah, but a man’s reach should exceed his grasp, Or what’s a heaven for? ~ Robert Browning
Three Questions, March 18, 2025
You can find the background to The Three Questions in my recent post about it. I’ll be answering the questions each day for the next year and putting this experience into a book. Here we go!
What was the most beautiful thing I encountered today?
I saw a video today, a time lapse video of a sunflower opening up. It was really amazing.
What did I learn today?
Today I learned that PEZ were created in the 1920’s as a kick the smoking habit device because it resembled a lighter, but that completely failed. So the company pivoted, added cartoon heads and boom, success.
What made me happy today?
Today our colleges held forums for the finalist in our president’s search. What made me happy was seeing a really talented candidate give an inspiring presentation about why she should be our next president. It was really inspiring.
Come Fairies, take me out of this dull world, for I would ride with you upon the wind and dance upon the mountains like a flame! ~ William Butler Yeats
Three Questions, March 17, 2025
You can find the background to The Three Questions in my recent post about it. I’ll be answering the questions each day for the next year and putting this experience into a book. Here we go!
What was the most beautiful thing I encountered today?
I saw a really amazing image of a weather phenomenon that I’ve never been fortunate enough to see in person but which fascinates and amazes me. The phenomenon are sprites, they look like giant clouds that have turned into ethereal jellyfish.
What did I learn today?
Today I read a really interesting article. Researchers claim that, under controlled conditions, they were able to take two people in a lucid dream state and have them pass a message, between dreams non-verbally. There’s a lot of skepticism, but if this is reproducible, it’s huge.
What made me happy today?
Honestly it was a simple thing, on a day where the weather was a bit off, I was really not excited to get up and go to work and my knees hurt, I made a lovely spicy dinner of chicken and broccoli, and afterwards had a small York Peppermint patty and it was magnificent. One of those small perfect taste moments where something absolutely hit the spot.
A life is not important except in the impact it has on other lives. ~ Jackie Robinson
Never underestimate your impact on others
We all live busy and complicated lives, and in our jobs we are often stressed and rushed, so we don’t always take the time we would like to work with or help people as much as we would like. For this reason, especially those of us who work in service industries like education, we often feel like maybe we haven’t had the impact that we would like. That can often lead us, because we don’t often get feedback from the people we assist, to thinking what we do just doesn’t matter that much. The thing is though, that we often don’t realize the impact that we do in fact have on people.
I was reminded of this during this last week when I surprisingly got a text message from someone I met at Mardi Gras in New Orleans last year. During Mardi Gras season in New Orleans, people think that the whole thing is the drunken frat party of Bourbon Street which is what makes the news. They think Mardi Gras is all about getting loaded and women lifting up their shirts to have beads thrown to them. And while that certainly is the scene on Bourbon Street in the French Quarter during Mardi Gras, it’s not what Mardi Gras is all about. A huge part of Mardi Gras, and my absolutely favorite part are the parades.
Mardi Gras parades are fantastic, bands, floats, dance groups and of course more beads and other throws tossed your way than you could ever imagine. What people really don’t understand is that on a Mardi Gras parade weekend there may be three to five parades a day. These parades can start at nine or ten in the morning and end at nine or ten at night. On the big Mardi Gras weekends, with various reasons for delays (accidents, weather, etc…) parades sometimes don’t end until midnight or one in the morning. And, NONE of the major parades go into the French Quarter or down Bourbon Street.
In the neighborhoods of New Orleans where the parades go through, it’s a family affair. Very few drunks, no women flashing anyone but lots of families and kids, lots of tourists and locals there for the whole day and often weekend to enjoy the parade. People bring chairs and coolers with food and drinks and it’s a very festive atmosphere. People often stake out the same areas for the parades over a weekend, so a particular corner or area on Charles Street ends up becoming a temporary community. And, if you find someone on their own, your little group will often adopt them, it’s a very friendly and welcoming environment. Last year, the group that had adopted me also adopted a young woman. We got to talking and at some point started talking about career and burnout and I told her about the way I’ve handled that in my career. By taking sabbaticals every few years, quitting and traveling for a year before working again. This week I got a text from her, apparently our discussion had an impact, she’d actually taken a sabbatical and was now looking to head to California for a job. So just that one conversation, during a Mardi Gras parade, had an impact on her life. Sure, she had to be in the right place in her life for that impact to happen, but that one conversation had an impact. You never know how a little kindness or advice can impact someone.
This happens a lot in education, those of us in education have all had the experience of having an old student coming back and thanking us about something we did that really helped them out or changed their lives, it’s what makes this business worth working in, even with all the madness. That doesn’t mean it’s all rainbows and roses, sometimes getting to that place is really hard and tonight I want to tell you about a student I had at the University of Tennessee (UTK).
The student I want to talk about was a young African-American woman in my biology class at UTK. She was a terrible student. She was late to class, didn’t pay attention, late with assignments and failed the tests with grades in the 40’s and 50’s. Something I always tell people, is that no one is ever the bad guy in their own story and that was the case in this instance. She decided to file a complaint with the college claiming that I was discriminating against her because she was black and a Christian. She claimed I was harshly grading and holding her to unrealistic expectations because she was black and because as a Christian she didn’t believe in evolution, which was a key topic in the class.
The claims of course had no merit. I had literally volunteered to teach this class in the McNair Student Program, a program that worked to help support African-American students be successful. And, almost every one of my students were Christians, many who didn’t believe in evolution and some who were quite hostile to the concept. So, if I was failing students for that, there would have been a large number of failing grades in my class which was not the case. So the student took their complaint to the lab teaching coordinator, a wonderful woman who came to me and asked if I’d be willing to let her review all of the students work. I happily agreed.
After reviewing everything, and realizing I had in fact graded the student fairly easily despite their failing grade, she met with the student. After relaying the lack of merit to the complaint the student wanted to go to the Biology department chair and the coordinator talked her out of it because he was an old school hard core type and would actually be upset at how easily the student had been graded. So the investigation yielded nothing, the student failed and that was the end of it, or so I thought.
Fast forward two years, I was serving as the Interim Assistant Director for Academic Advising while working on my Phd research. So one night in the winter, I worked late and was leaving the office after dark in the old, brick, dark building we were located. As I exited the office I heard my name called, it was the student. I was terrified, it immediately hit me that I was alone with her, in a dark hallway and she could claim anything happened and I had no witnesses to prove otherwise. So I said hello and made a beeline for the stairwell, my thought was it was well-lit and full of windows and increased my odds of having someone else in the space. I was convinced this was some sort of ambush to set me up for any of a number of claims. She sensed exactly what I was doing and as I rocketed by her she grabbed my arm and said, “stop Mr. Kane, I want to talk.” I was convinced I was totally screwed. And that’s when she said I want to thank you.
I stood there incredulous, sure this was some sort of trick. She went on to thank me for being the first person to ever call her out on her bullshit, for standing my ground and holding her accountable. She said it had been a watershed moment for her. Since that time she’d become a better student and a better mother and in fact was working at the university as a research assistant in the survey research institute. I said your welcome, that I was happy she was doing well and slipped away, still honestly convinced it was some sort of trap.
Of course, the universe loves to mess with me and part of my research included doing a public survey in Knox County related to people’s values about forests. As such I was working with the university’s survey research institute, and they assigned me an assistant, it was the student. It would turn out she had been sincere, she was truly grateful and felt bad for the way she had treated me, she even turned out to be a pretty good assistant.
We often don’t get these 360 moments in education, usually you just go through the hard parts and never know if standing by our values, and standing our ground and doing what’s right really paid off. So I hope what you’ll take from tonight’s post is this, stand your ground, stand for your values and do what’s right. It may be hard in the moment, it may feel like it would be better to just roll over and get along, but in the long run you’ll be doing people a disservice if you do. So be the good person, take the high road and not just you, but the people you encounter will have happier days my friends. ~ Rev Kane
We live in a society exquisitely dependent on science and technology, in which hardly anyone knows anything about science and technology. ~ Carl Sagan
Three Questions, March 16, 2025
You can find the background to The Three Questions in my recent post about it. I’ll be answering the questions each day for the next year and putting this experience into a book. Here we go!
What was the most beautiful thing I encountered today?
I went down a rabbit hole watching weather videos today and some of the videos of the sky during tornadoes were absolutely amazing.
What did I learn today?
Today I saw a graphic about the distance from Earth to the moon, Mars and the distance to the outer reaches of the galaxy, it’s amazing how big it all is. There are 12 light minutes to Mars, 4.2 light years to Proxima Centauri and 26,000 light years to the center of the Milky Way.
What made me happy today?
The weather has been really rainy lately and today was supposed to be another rainy day. But instead it was just windy and cold, what made me happy was the ability to walk outside instead of having to go to the gym.
You can find the background to The Three Questions in my recent post about it. I’ll be answering the questions each day for the next year and putting this experience into a book. Here we go!
What was the most beautiful thing I encountered today?
On my walk today the flowers were amazing, but the most beautiful thing I encountered was a rose bush that was overpoweringly fragrant, was really wonderful.
What did I learn today?
Read today about a physics theory that suggests that our galaxy might actually exist within a black hole.
What made me happy today?
Continued good blood sugar numbers, beautiful flowers and a lovely dinner.