The temperature in Monson hovers at zero this morning, and it won't get a lot warmer than that today. The town, which is so cheerful and "stop here!" in the summertime, now hunkers under a blanket of dingy snow. It looks like the set of a sad film about aging on-the-lam bank robbers holed up in a village at the end of the world.
But my apartment is warm, and last night I got into bed at 7 and stayed there till 5:30 this morning. I don't often sleep so hard when I'm away from home, but my body was apparently in need.
Today I'll be beginning the first of three sessions on revision. This always feels like a giant shift, after months of focus on pulling new work out of thin air. But the kids are ready. They love to write; it's incredible--heartrending, really--how much they love it. And revision, at this stage, is really just a chance to look hard at what they've already made and then re-imagine it as something else. We've played lots of "reimagine this as . . . " games all year (my big teaching discovery with this cohort has been the power of comedy in teaching craft skills), so I think the writers will slide easily into a more serious concentration on their work. At least that is my hope, and maybe the experiment will work, or maybe it won't, but something will happen to help me figure out what's next.