This year I was invited to attend the AP reading in
Cincinnati, Ohio. More than 1,000
Spanish teachers from around the country and I converged on downtown Cincinnati
for one week to grade Spanish AP tests.
It was a lot of work!
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Downtown Cincinnati from the Kentucky side of the Ohio River |
I realized very quickly
that the AP reading is basically like summer camp. This was my first year, but many of the
people who attended have been coming for years and they have very good friends
who they only see once a year at the reading.
I saw loads of people excitedly hug each other and say, "It's so
good to see! How are your kids? What have you been up to for the last
year?" It was fun to watch, but since
this was my first year I had no such friends. And I may have eaten lunch by myself twice before I made friends.
We were organized into table groups of nine people. My group consisted of me and a bunch of
Hispanic women. I felt really young all
week (which was a nice change of pace because I usually feel the opposite)
because most of the AP readers were so much older. One woman at my table is about to have her
first great-grandson. She's in her sixties
and I tried to do the math to figure out how old everyone from each generation
would have to be in order to have a great-grandson at 65, but the math got too
cumbersome for my brain and I'm sure the answer would have disappointed
me. Most of the women at my table were in their forties or fifties, but the lady who sat directly across
from me was in her late twenties. She usually
wore low cut shirts and had a large piercing right above her
cleavage that looked like sparkling diamond. The shininess of the piercing
subconsciously drew my eyes to her chest area every time I looked up. Not only did I not want to be looking at her chest, but I for sure didn't want to be caught looking at her chest. I didn't care for that piercing.
A few days in my roommate Josh ran into an AP friend that he
had met at a previous AP reading. After
the usually hugs and "Oh my gosh!
How are your kids?" I was introduced to Meghann. She asked me my name and I unoriginally said,
"I'm Ben Schilaty." She said,
"How do you spell your last name."
I told her and she said, "Shut up!
Did you write your master's thesis on such-and-such a topic?" I did.
She then said, "I printed out your thesis before I came and I'm
going to read it while I'm here." I
was stunned. It was such an unexpected
honor to meet one of the 12 people who has heard of my thesis. It's a very exclusive group. Meghann and I then became friends and I'm
sure we'll excitedly hug each other if we're both at the AP reading next
year.
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St. Peter in Chains Cathedral |
While I had a lot of great experiences during my week in Cincinnati,
Sunday was by far the best day. We
worked from 8:00 to 5:00 so I wasn't able to go to church which really bummed
me out. I decided that since I couldn't
go to LDS services that I should at least go to some church so I went to
Catholic mass that afternoon. It was an
uplifting experience I was glad I went.
I especially enjoyed singing hymns that were new to me and experiencing
a way of worship that was foreign to me.
Also, when the priest was talking it struck me that both he and I have
chosen to be single for religious reasons.
That realization made me feel connected to him in a small way.
After going to mass I met up with 18 other LDS folks who
were also at the AP reading. Every year
they get together on Sunday for a short devotional and testimony meeting. I only knew one person in the room from
before and everyone else was basically a stranger. However, I felt an instant connection with
those people and sitting in a circle with them in a small room in a convention center
in Cincinnati felt like being home. As
we sang a hymn I was familiar with and said a prayer I felt the Spirit in a
remarkable way. None of us was there
under any pretences or because of any kind of social pressure, we just wanted
to worship together and share or thoughts and feelings about the Savior. It was the best religious meeting I've been
to in months.
I shared my testimony and in it I mentioned being gay. After the meeting as we were putting the
chairs away (it wouldn't be a Mormon meeting if we didn't put chairs away
after) two guys approached me with some questions.
One of them has a son who identifies as gay and the other is a newly
called bishop. They were very interested
in my perspectives as a gay active latter-day saint and we talked for over an
hour. That night I felt so grateful for this small group of latter-day saints who meets together every year at the AP because I was uplifted and inspired by the things that were shared. When I
got back to my hotel room that night everything felt right with the world.
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I loved the architecture in Cincinnati |
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And how their buildings look like Pringles cans |
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One day it rained and I got very wet |
Just a couple years too late. When we were in Lexington, Cincinnati was only an hour and a half away. It sounds like you had a lot of fun.
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