The Uncalled For, Yet Entirely Necessary, Snow Day


I haven't been the most disciplined human recently. And when I say recently, I refer to the past three years. Take this exact moment, for example. I'm lying on my kitchen floor, angling my body so I'm lined up in the slant of sunshine that's streaming through my sliding glass door. I'm like a cat. I've claimed the warmest, brightest spot, even if the kitchen floor itself is hard.

Sunshine in Pennsylvania during the month of January is worth lying on a floor for. Even a somewhat dirty, gritty floor.

Now, about not being the most disciplined person: I'd explain the past three years as a whole, but it would be easier to explain this past Tuesday specifically. The 72 students in my 3 college classes turned in assignments on Monday evening. I earmarked Tuesday for grading: two hours for each class, six hours total.

As I settled into bed Monday night, I told myself, "You can do this. You can get all the grading done tomorrow."

Narrator: But she could not do this.

Because something happened on Tuesday. I went to the gym in the morning, which was a nod to productivity and health, even if I immediately undid those benefits by going to the McDonald's drive-through on the way home and ordering a large Dr Pepper. (Light ice. Always light ice.)

When I got home, I collected trash from all the trash cans and rolled the bins to the curb. Then, after folding the wrinkled load of laundry that had been forgotten in the dryer, and transferring the wet load of laundry that had been forgotten in the washer (giving each piece of clothing a healthy shake to unclump it from the hardened mass of damp clothes), I started a new load of laundry.

I remembered that I wanted to make a crock pot meal for dinner. I seasoned and prepared chicken thighs, storing the remaining pieces from the grocery bulk pack into freezer bags and labeling them for another meal. (I knew Future Robin would thank me for this foresight.) With chicken now cooking in the crock pot, I double-checked the refrigerator and pantry to make sure I had all the necessary remaining groceries for the week's remaining meals. While I was there, I organized the pantry. I changed the laundry when I heard the dryer stop. I cleaned the litter box and carried the bag to the trash bins outside before the garbage truck arrived.

I responded to student emails as I ate an early lunch, with the niggle forming in my mind: Robin, you have actual work to do. You know, like, your job. Those 72 assignments waiting for your detailed, articulate feedback, remember?

I suppressed that voice and vacuumed the whole house instead, upstairs and downstairs. Then I finished the novel I had started that weekend. (Just to clarify: reading it, not writing one.)

Somehow, it was two o'clock. The house was vacuumed. Four loads of laundry had been folded. The pantry was ordered and the chicken already smelled terrific. Apparently, there are no limits to what I can accomplish when I'm supposed to be accomplishing something else.

It was time to bite the bullet, so (obviously) I solved the day's Wordle and then finally hunkered down to grade. The afternoon hours unfurled. At some point, one kid came home from school. I greeted her, kept grading, then picked up another kid up from basketball practice an hour later. I made a quick salad and rice to serve with the chicken. We cleaned up the dishes. I returned to my grading, now plowing through the second class' work.

At that point, I remembered I had a hair cut schedule for that evening, which had seemed odd -- yet otherwise benign -- at the moment of scheduling the prior week.

Salon receptionist: Can you do 7:45 Tuesday?
Me: At night?
Salon receptionist: Yes.
Me (thinking):  I don't leave the house beyond 7 anymore. What kind of tomfoolery is this?
Salon receptionist:
Me: That sounds fine.

Clearly, Past Robin had not factored Present Robin needing Tuesday night to be free for grading purposes when scheduling this appointment.

When I got home -- looking mighty fine with my new haircut, I might add -- I dragged the trashcans from the curb to the side of the house, breathing in the sharp, crisp January air that felt thick with the potential for a snowfall. The kitchen still smelled like chicken and rice when I stepped inside. I approached my computer to open the third batch of assignments, checking the clock and calculating that I could finish by 11 PM, maybe sooner, probably later, depending on how well I could concentrate, knowing that concentration hadn't particularly been my strong suit this day.

That's when I saw the breaking news: the local schools would be canceled the next day for pending inclement weather. My kids cheered. A substantial storm was coming. And -- surprise, surprise -- the university then announced cancellation of on-campus activities, which meant there would be no classes the next morning for me.

Turns out, we got a blanket of snow on Wednesday, but we weren't pummeled as the weather forecasters had predicted. Had the district and university administration not pulled the trigger Tuesday night in precaution, we likely could have (should have) still gone to school and campus.

Did I dwell on this? No.

Nor do I try to dwell on why I seem unable to buckle down and sustain hours of active thinking as well as I used to. Am I overly stressed? Is it just the January blahs? Am I simply older and more tired? Am I clinging to any residual survival-mode bad work habits that I formed during Covid?

I don't know.

But I do know that, upon hearing the news of the cancellation, I emailed my students to outline our changed plans for the week, shut my laptop, and went to bed. As I settled to sleep, I told myself: "You can do this. You can get the remaining two hours of grading done tomorrow morning."

Narrator: Thankfully, this time, she could. And she did. But, on her uncalled for, yet entirely necessary snow day, she also started a new novel. (Reading, not writing one. Remember, she's not the most disciplined human these days.)

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