The view from inside my Scranton office. |
Today I've spent five straight hours sitting in a coffee shop off of the Scranton town square, plugging away at this and that on my laptop. In that time, I've had various meetings with people, both planned and unplanned, in person and over the internet. I've occasionally engaged in some of my usual time-wasting computer activities - a little Facebook, a bit of tearing through Google Reader items - but by-and-large I have been at work. My work, not anybody else's, and that's delightful. I think my rear end is going to give up and walk out soon, with or without me, but there'll be plenty of time for movement and making up for that tonight when I return to the reason I'm here in the first place: to once again teach commedia dell'arte to and stage a scenario with the good theatre students of Marywood University.
I've been here since Monday, and in that time have been preoccupied with adjusting my body clock to our teaching schedule. The students have classes until the evening, so our "extra-curricular" mandatory activity takes place between the hours of 8:30 and 11:00 at night. Poor Heather has to be up early in the morning as well, to work her day job and attend her newly acquired graduate studies, but I have the luxury of simply sleeping until 10:00 am. And frankly, if I did not, this bird would not fly. I am not a night person. Even with my adjusted sleep schedule it's a trial. I make bad decisions past about 9:00 pm, and under normal circumstances they're confined to junk food and succumbing to my onychophagia, but this week these poor decisions extend to dramaturgy and personal safety. Fortunately for me, la commedia dell'arte tends to thrive on regrettable choices.
There's something really lovely about the people I work with here in Northeastern Pennsylvania (or "NEPA," a nice analogue to my accustomed "NoVa"). It's as though everyone understands that what we're doing is what we're doing, and not that thing we're doing now that will hopefully result in something later that will contribute to that big break or that huge pay-off down the road. Plus there are no subways. But I digress. All I'm trying to say is that focusing on work is a lovely, lovely thing that I very badly needed, in spite of all the work I've gotten to do in NYC lately. I'm exercised and inspired and healthy, and generally happy in a way that can be easy to forget as I stride my way down the Avenue of the Americas to this, that or the other.
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