I wrote this on 1/28/01
I remember Mom making up her face in the kitchen on cold winter mornings. The wooden table top was streaked where the white paint had been repeatedly scratched off, as with a comb. I can feel the cold blackness of the cast iron table legs as I wrapped my child toes around them absentmindedly, while talking to her.
The ritual was always the same. I can smell the sweet liquidy Borghese foundation. I see her pencilling in eyebrows where once she plucked too vigorously and they never grew back. The high arching brown line always seemed to read surprise on my mother's smooth face.
Some years there was eyeliner, some years colored shadows for her round, somewhat protruding, lids. The liner took great skill to apply, like a sumi-e master painting careful branches onto a cherry blossom tree.
First a little water was applied to the black cake. A well had formed from repeated rubbings and the water now filled this, with grey cloudiness swirling over its surface. When swept with the thin sable-hair liner brush, it grew a rich black, darker and darker until my mother deemed it ready to use. I think she blotted the brush slightly onto paper towel before arching her brow even higher in order to stretch the lid and paint a fine line across it, just above the lash line.
Such a steady hand she had in my younger years. Later not so and I felt embarrassed for her, knowing that she would go out and the uneven lines would betray her to strangers; telling of her increasing infirmities without her permission.
Strangers would not know the elegant stately woman she had been, whose attention to detail and obsession for perfection I had absorbed by watching her morning ritual. They would only see an elderly lady with an unsteady hand, who might have been careless in her details all her life. They would miss the very essence of my mother: that God and survival lie in one's attention to the details of everyday living.
Saturday, April 9, 2011
Friday, April 1, 2011
UCCS Human Physiology job description 2011
We need to hire someone for this Fall semester, so if you're interested--or you know someone who might be--PLEASE PASS THIS INFO ALONG!
It's hard to get this kind of upper level university teaching experience on your CV, so please consider it!
It's not "official" but there is a significant chance this will turn into a fulltime permanent position for human physiology and anatomy.
Also Colorado Springs is inexpensive and one of the most beautiful places to live in the US!
Human Physiology Lecturer
The University of Colorado Colorado Springs seeks a Lecturer to be the instructor of record for BIOL 4360 Human Physiology during the fall 2011 semester. This course is a 4 credit hour lecture class designed for biology majors interested in medicine, physical therapy, dentistry and pharmacy. The course covers organ system physiology at the advanced undergraduate level. Enrollment runs between 40 and 60 students. Class typically meets three times per week (75 minutes each), but may be scheduled in a longer block to accommodate a commuter (e.g. one 3.5 hour class per week). Compensation will be $3,132. Preference will be given to applicants who hold doctoral degrees in physiology, or closely related disciplines, and have prior teaching experience in human physiology.
Interested individuals should send a CV to Andrew Subudhi, Assistant Professor, UCCS Dept of Biology at asubudhi [at] uccs(dot)edu
It's hard to get this kind of upper level university teaching experience on your CV, so please consider it!
It's not "official" but there is a significant chance this will turn into a fulltime permanent position for human physiology and anatomy.
Also Colorado Springs is inexpensive and one of the most beautiful places to live in the US!
Human Physiology Lecturer
The University of Colorado Colorado Springs seeks a Lecturer to be the instructor of record for BIOL 4360 Human Physiology during the fall 2011 semester. This course is a 4 credit hour lecture class designed for biology majors interested in medicine, physical therapy, dentistry and pharmacy. The course covers organ system physiology at the advanced undergraduate level. Enrollment runs between 40 and 60 students. Class typically meets three times per week (75 minutes each), but may be scheduled in a longer block to accommodate a commuter (e.g. one 3.5 hour class per week). Compensation will be $3,132. Preference will be given to applicants who hold doctoral degrees in physiology, or closely related disciplines, and have prior teaching experience in human physiology.
Interested individuals should send a CV to Andrew Subudhi, Assistant Professor, UCCS Dept of Biology at asubudhi [at] uccs(dot)edu
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