School Librarian in Action
Thursday, February 12, 2026
Wednesday, February 11, 2026
Reading for Care: The Plant on the Window Speaks
Inspired by the Memoir Writing Workshop by Women Writing last Saturday, February 7, we begin Reading for Care: How Literature Holds Us, a new blog series that centers on attention and awareness to the beauty of words and how it holds space for readers like us. All you need is a pen and a paper (or a notebook) and 10-20 minutes time allotment for journaling.
The instructions are simple: Read the poem for the week. Sit with it. Write responses in your journal.
Note:
This is a reading and journaling space, not therapy. Please feel free to pause or step away whenever you need to.
Here we go!
Arrival: Notice this photo and stay in the moment of noticing. Breathe. Inhale. Exhale. Do this 3-5 times.
Encounter the poem, The Little Plant in the Window Speaks by Annette Wynne.
The Little Plant on the Window Speaks
If you had let me stay all winter long outside,
Long, long ago, I should have died.
And so I'll live for you and keep
A little summer while the others sleep—
A little summer on your window-sill—
I'll be your growing garden spot until
The rough winds go away,
And great big gardens call you out to play.
When Literature Holds: Journal prompts
1. What did you notice, visually, in sound, or in feeling, as you read?
2. Which line felt steady or comforting? Write it in your journal.
3. What image from the poem stayed with you? Did it bring a memory,
a place, or a person to mind?
Extending the experience (only if you wish or if the spirit is nudging
towards generosity), you can:
1. Share a similar photo on your socmed account.
2. Do something artistic or creative.
3. Read more poetry: The Human Touch, Weighing the World
Thank you for dropping by. May you find shelter in what you notice.
Tuesday, February 10, 2026
Recommended Reads: Continuing the Healing Work of Reading
I'm sharing the texts I used in the workshop on the Memoir with and by Women Writing.
Reading to Settle and Stay with Fragility
• Berry, Wendell. The Peace of Wild Things. Poem. From
Collected Poems of Wendell Berry. Counterpoint, 2012.
• Kalanithi, Paul. When Breath Becomes Air. Memoir.
Random House, 2016.
• Didion, Joan. The Year of Magical Thinking. Memoir.
Alfred A. Knopf, 2005.
Reading for Recognition (Mirrors)
• Howe, Marie. What the Living Do. Poem. From What the
Living Do. W.W. Norton, 1998.
• Baticulon, Ronnie. Some Days You Can’t Save Them All.
Memoir. Anvil Publishing, 2018.
• Smith, Maggie. Good Bones. Poem. First published 2016.
Reading for Perspective (Windows)
• Hopkins, Gerard Manley. Pied Beauty. Poem. First
published 1918.
• Alejo, Bert. Tagpi-tagping Kariktan. Filipino
translation of Pied Beauty.
• Evasco, Marjorie (ed.). Viral Signs. Poetry anthology.
University of the Philippines Press, 2017.
Reading that Opens Possibility (Doors)
• Adams, Sarah. Be Cool to the Pizza Dude. Essay. From
Letters from a Father.
• Gay, Ross. The Book of Delights. Essay collection.
Algonquin Books, 2019.
• Didion, Joan. Keeping a Notebook. Essay. First
published 1968.
Monday, February 9, 2026
Bangtan Hermana Notes: The Kinship in BTS’s Narrative of Return
When news of BTS walking the King’s Path broke across social media, many of us instinctively affixed “of the King” to the word return. As an author of folklore retellings and someone who has studied folk art, I think this calls for unpacking. BTS’s album title is Arirang, positioned as a folk song, a song of the people. An intangible art.
Millions of us will never meet, yet we recognize ourselves in the same song, at the same time, across distance and difference. That shared act of listening, repeating, and remembering is what turns sound into belonging. When BTS sings Arirang, they are not simply addressing a market; they are calling a kin group into being again. A people imagined into relation through voice, timing, and care. This is not fandom as hierarchy nor a parasocial relationship. It is community as chorus.



