6 minute read

Opinion: Mysterious Lights in the Sky

Micah and Lily Chan aim to log 1,000 books.

1,000 BOOKS, Continued from page 1

“They both love reading,” says Stephanie. “The program was motivational to me.”

Hosted by the Globe Public Library and funded by the Friends of the Globe Public Library, the program encourages parents and guardians to keep a record of any book that is read to their child. Some use a free app called READsquared. It’s okay to read the same book many times, which most kids love.

“Read, read,” says Micah, bringing a book to his mother.

He likes The Very Hungry Caterpillar and Where’s Spot? Almost any book with a flap to lift up. Lily likes the Berenstain Bears and Splat the Cat. She recently tried a chapter book.

“We read to them both as babies,” says Stephanie. “We always read before napping and bedtime. Sometimes Grandma reads over Facetime.”

Experts agree that reading to children should begin as young as possible.

“Zero to 5 is the most crucial time in your child’s life,” says Sylvia Ducharme, a Quality First preschool and daycare provider. “Their little brain is going to learn more than any other time in their life. Google it.”

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“The staff here is wonderful,” says Stephanie Chan. “When I was teaching, they were super helpful.”

Stephanie and her husband Kenneth Chan moved to Globe 8 years ago. She works part time as an optometrist at Barnet Dulaney Perkins Eye Center in Globe. Before Micah was born she taught at the Schoolhouse Cooperative in Ice House canyon.

The Chan family comes to the library often. They take advantage of “Grab and Go” kits and attend Storytime with Robin on Mondays at 10:30 am.

“Research has shown that children who are read to regularly in preschool become better readers,” says Robin Wurst, a retired preschool education specialist and library volunteer, “and being good readers is critical to learning in all areas.”

Sylvia Ducharme emphasizes the importance of social skills as essential readiness for Kindergarten. In all areas, she says, parent involvement is key. “It’s great that parents are helping kids be literate,” she says. “They also need to learn self-help and socialization for all-around success in school.”

Lily Chan is in her third year at Sylvia Ducharme’s preschool. She is starting to read on her own. She can count to 100. And while putting together a puzzle with her peers at Sylvia Ducharme’s preschool, she is learning that a heart is more than a shape. It’s a muscle.

“If you instill the love of learning in them now, it will last,” says Sylvia Ducharme. “Early readers, early learners will always be readers and learners.”

OPINION Mysterious Lights in the Sky

BY PATRICIA SANDERS

A couple of months ago, I got to see one of the Starlink satellite trains entering orbit. Starlink is Elon Musk’s system of satellites that’s supposed to provide Internet access all over the world. SpaceX has been launching rockets full of satellites for the past three years. Each rocket carries 60 satellites. They’re all connected via a single long cable, and they stay connected as they exit the rocket, furling out into a perfectly straight line along the cable – that’s a satellite train. Then the individual satellites separate and move to their specific places in the sky.

I saw the train last fall when I walked outside one night by chance. I looked up in the sky and saw what I thought was a line of stars – dozens of them all in a row. That’s how my mind registered it at first, as stars. Then I realized they couldn’t be stars, and my mind tried another idea. There’s a cable that runs across my yard between the utility pole and my house, and I thought, maybe it was raindrops hanging on this cable, catching the light. But the line of lights was in the wrong place for that to be true. Besides, it hadn’t been raining. And besides, also, the row of lights was moving.

At that moment, I thought, I have no idea what this is. But it was mysterious and beautiful. Also, the way it was moving, it was about to disappear behind the roof of the house. So I just stood and watched it, reveling in the sense of wonder and mystery. I hardly breathed.

As soon as the lights disappeared behind the roof, I ran inside to Google “row of lights in the sky” and found out what they were.

What I remember most about that moment was the beauty of those lights and they way they moved gracefully across the sky. I remember feeling the surprise, and how lucky it was that I had walked outside at the precise moment when I could see them. And I remember the way my mind automatically tried to make sense of them, trying one idea after another until it finally gave up.

I think it was the first time in my life I’ve been able to watch my mind in action, in real time, and see how driven it is to make sense of things – to find logical reasons and explanations.

It’s what we do, as humans. We’re homo sapiens – meaning knowing. Humans are the creature that can think, question, reason, find answers, make sense of things. Not only can we do all that, but we can hardly help doing it. It’s automatic. It’s what we are.

Humans love coming up with answers. Even if they’re the wrong ones.

It reminds me of a story Peter Bigfoot, out at Reevis Mountain School, tells. Years ago, the story goes, he and a bunch of other people were camping at Circlestone, in the Supes. In the middle of the night, someone woke up and saw the sky on fire. That person woke everyone else up, and they all stood around in the dark watching waves of light all along the horizon.

Peter remembers them all agreeing, “They’ve gone and done it” – started World War Three. They thought they’d be hiking back to civilization and find it in ruins.

In reality, the lights they saw were the aurora borealis – the Northern Lights. It was an amazing, unusual thing to see the aurora borealis from Arizona, but that’s what it was. But instead of being awed and amazed, they were terrifying themselves with thoughts of the end of the world. Because that happened to be the first way their brains found to make sense of the lights.

It’s a tough balancing act, being human. We have this brain that wants to find answers, see patterns, arrive at conclusions.

But we live in a universe that isn’t so easy to pin down. It’s compex, mysterious, full of wonder and surprise.

What we first think is a star turns out to be a mere piece of machinery (although an impressive one). What we think is the end of the world turns out to be just a light show – a gorgeous, amazing one. God gave us eyes to see and brains to know. But He didn’t make us infallible. We can be wrong, and we often are. A little humility – suspending judgment until we get the full picture – can go a long way. Pausing before you believe the first thing your mind tells you gives you time to gather more information and ponder a little. After all, you don’t know whether the light at the end of the tunnel is the exit – or a train heading for you – when you first see it. Makes sense to wait a little before you run like heck in the opposite direction. But not too long.

ONE CHEF – TWO GREAT CONCEPTS ONE CHEF – TWO GREAT CONCEPTS ONE HAPPY FAMILY ONE HAPPY FAMILY