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Archive for the ‘October 2023’ Category

Dear Lyla,

Every year the faculty and staff in our department engage in professional development with our student organization leaders. This year we are focusing on happiness and cultivating hope and resilience in a busy world that has many demands on our time.  We are reading a book called “Happier No Matter What” by Tal Ben-Shahar. In this book the author discusses various types of well-being; spiritual, physical, intellectual, and emotional. As we work through the chapters in the book I find that sometimes those types of self-care are interrelated. Just the other day I was reflecting on how I navigate those steps myself right along with the students. I was struck by how my physical, intellectual, and spiritual well-being all coalesce on my early morning walks through our little town of Waverly.

Often I have remarked to friends and family members about how much I love living here. When I walk down the trail I marvel at how the trees create a canopy and one travels through a tunnel of green foliage set against the deep browns of the trunks, dotted with spots of color as birds dance from branch to branch.  It feels as if I am walking in a living storybook. I’ve always felt connected to nature, but I am specifically drawn to the woods and the river. The Waverly rail trail does not disappoint, when I walk or cycle down the trail, it truly is peaceful. There are so many little critters to see if you keep your eyes sharp. I have seen beavers, foxes, lots of deer, wild turkeys (they are the most ridiculous creatures to watch), squirrels, chipmunks, birds, and raccoons. Sometimes juvenile raccoons are a little aggressive and who knew that baby raccoons bark like dogs? I found that out the hard way a couple years ago when I was riding my bike.  It does not matter how many times I venture out on the trail; it is a new experience every time.  The trails around Waverly are calming and I have come to realize that I rely on my walks and my bike rides to center myself physically, emotionally, and spiritually. I do a lot of contemplating and soul searching during those long bike rides down the trail.

As you know, I walk every morning before the sun comes up. I do my little two-mile loop through the park, and it is a really great way to get myself ready for the day. There is so much to see before the sun comes up or when it’s just starting to peek over the tree line.  I always chuckle when I walk by the Nestle plant where there is a big sign of the Nestle Quik Bunny and, ironically, there are always little rabbits darting in and out of the fence by the Nestle plant (and the smell when they are making chocolate is delightful). One of my favorite views is when I walk across the wooden bridge when the river is still and you see all the lights from the church, civic center and park mirrored in the water, it is absolutely beautiful.  Of course, I have my favorite tree in the park, I think everybody should have a favorite tree. Part of my morning ritual is to take in the sights, sounds and smells of everything around me so that I can clear my mind and find a moment of grace.  

Often I solve my biggest conundrums on those walks. If I have something that is troubling me it provides time to focus and gain some perspective. For the last couple of years, I have taken a picture almost every morning on my walk.  Sometimes the photo is of the lights reflecting off the river, or a picture of the beautiful displays that are in the flowerpots that line Bremer Avenue, or my favorite tree and sometimes it is a gorgeous silhouette of the church through the trees right before you arrive at wooden bridge. I try to capture the breathtaking velvet colors of the pinks, oranges, purples, and blues that line the sky as the sun is rising just below the tree line in the eastern part of town, though photos can never really do it justice.  When I take these pictures, I post them to my Facebook account with the caption “Good Morning Waverly!” I have had people tell me that they look forward to those pictures and I am glad that they find Waverly as beautiful as I do. However, the reason I post my morning mantra is that it serves as an act of gratitude and an acknowledgement of how privileged I am to live in a community where the residents care for each other, preserve the natural beauty of the land, and embrace the symbiosis of the two. I think we are fortunate to live in such a space that not only allows us to grow and thrive in our personal pursuits and passions but provides room for peace and a sense of belonging.

I know that you enjoy your evening strolls just as much as I rejoice in my early morning treks through the streets of our picturesque little town, and I am so glad that you have the same connection to the wonders of the outdoors as I do. We are truly blessed.

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Dear Lyla,

The tradition of homecoming dates back over 100 years with the NCAA crediting the University of Missouri (my PhD alma mater) as the first official homecoming in 1911. At the time, the intent was to make sure that a big rival football game against the KU Jayhawks (still rivals to this day) was well attended. It was so successful a tradition was born. It is now part of the cultural fabric of American schools in the fall months. While most homecoming celebrations still center around a football game, the weeklong festivities focus on the institution as the common thread that ties alums together. Connections that are intergenerational, interdisciplinary, and international are forged and reinforced in an intense weekend of comradery and gaiety.

Wartburg’s homecoming is this weekend. The trees are decked with ribbons of black and orange, the fountain is flowing freely, windows are painted with messages of welcome to those who came before and, even though it is gloomy and rainy outside, the halls are buzzing with the excitement that only homecoming can generate. Shortly after lunchtime today I fully expect to see former students drop in to say hello; this will continue throughout the weekend, and it is my favorite thing about homecoming.

While you are my most important legacy, and I am so grateful that I have the title of mom as well as professor, education is my second calling right behind motherhood. You have been around the halls of Wartburg long enough to know that you have many student “siblings.”  I very much look forward to their return and hearing about what has been going on in their lives. I rejoice at their family and career milestones and give them a shoulder to cry on when life is sometimes cruel. I think that sometimes the lessons I teach about relationships and building community may be the most important one can learn. Human nature is so complex, so intricate, and its understanding so elusive that we are all lifelong students of the human condition. One day you will, I hope, be a student at Wartburg and your relationship with the campus will utterly change and I am thrilled at the prospect of watching that from a front row seat. I will observe how you will commune with the squirrels, lose your voice at Kastle Kapers, have so much orange and black in your wardrobe that you could open a Spirit Halloween franchise, and sing the loyalty song from memory as you sway with your friends to the rhythm of the melody. All these things that I wish for you are the same that I hope have stayed with those we will welcome home this week and, that Wartburg, as the song says, is the college of their brightest days.

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Dear Lyla,

As you know I am on my sabbatical this year with reduced class load and I’m trying to reignite some of the creativity and excitement that I had as a student and young academic. On my walk this morning I was thinking about the projects that I have embarked on this year. On the surface the projects that I have chosen are very different than the type of work I did in graduate school, or even the first seven years after my PhD program. During my graduate studies I focused on political communication, specifically comparative political advertising, and I really enjoyed that work. However, none of my sabbatical projects focus on that area of specialty. I’ve chosen to go in a different direction; my podcast with Kate and her experiences as an Iranian hostage, creating a film with some of my colleagues that focuses on the narrative of redemption, and my work on the leadership and branding workbook that I hope to do with Dr. Moore.

While these projects may seem disjointed as if they don’t have a common theme, at the end of the day they are all about storytelling. I think that is what drew me to the discipline to begin with. Communication is about telling the story of the human condition in all its various forms and mediums and that is what excites me about the discipline. Whether I am examining how a candidate creates their brand and persona to persuade voters to elect them to office, or the theater of comparative advertising between two diametrically opposed political figures, or the story of redemption shown through a visual medium, or a retrospective podcast told from a specific socio-political context to illustrate a journey of faith and reconciliation, it all boils down to telling a compelling story.

The best stories, I think, are the ones that find some universal connection between the creator and their audience.  I find it fascinating that people from very different walks of life can find community and shared emotion through storytelling. If you think about it, every major moment in our life centers around a narrative arc. The most important and pivotal life moments and news that we receive often come in the form of a conversation embedded in a descriptive context. That is what is so exciting to me about doing my projects this year!

Maybe no one will listen to the podcast, perhaps no one will ever see the short film that I make with my colleagues, and it is possible that the leadership and branding work I do may not resonate with anyone outside of the halls of Wartburg College. The point is, I am telling a story, and I am putting myself out there; and that is simultaneously the most exciting part of this creative journey as well as the most terrifying. Through this process I have already stumbled and made mistakes, but I learned from them. Those learning moments are a part of my personal story. I will always be a student of the human condition, I will always be a lifelong learner, and that comes with the risk of failure as well as the hope for success. One thing I know I have learned so far, for sure, is that there are quite a few stories left for me to tell.

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