The Moth - The Moth Podcast: A Story Laboratory
Episode Date: September 13, 2024In this episode, we're featuring two stories from young people that were developed as part of The Moth Story Lab. If you're interested in participating, or know of a young person who might be..., just go to themoth.org/education for more information.Host: Ana SternStorytellers: Aravah Chaiken learns a lesson about math and life.Iris Hernandez takes a trip to Puerto Rico.The Moth Story Lab is a free workshop program for high-school students grades 10-12. If you’re in NYC it’s in person, and if you’re anywhere else in the country, it’s a virtual workshop. For 8 weeks, participants develop, practice, and share their personal narratives, with coaching, games, and a final telling that can be open to friends and family.Go to themoth.org/education for more information.. The deadline to signup is September 22nd.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This autumn, fall for Moth Stories as we travel across the globe for our main stages.
We're excited to announce our fall lineup of storytelling shows from New York City to Iowa City,
London, Nairobi, and so many more. The Moth will be performing in a city near you,
featuring a curation of true stories. The Moth main stage shows feature five tellers who share
beautiful, unbelievable, hilarious, and often powerful true stories on a common theme.
Each one told reveals something new about our shared connection. To buy your tickets or find
out more about our calendar, visit themoth.org. We hope to see you soon.
Welcome to the Moth Podcast. I'm Anna Stern, your host for this episode. As the senior manager of
the Moth's education program, one of the best parts of my job is hearing the
stories of the young people we work with. Some kids come in with a million stories
to tell and others find their story throughout the course of our workshop.
But however they come to the Moth, they can all end up in front of a mic hearing
the applause that thunders from the crowd once they finish telling their tale. The Moss education program creates spaces
where young people can listen, celebrate each other's voices, and tell their own
stories. Through crafting and sharing true personal narratives, participants
gain a deeper understanding of themselves, their peers, their community,
and the world around them. In this episode, we'll be featuring two stories
that come from the Moss Story Lab. If you're a high school or college student
from anywhere in the country looking to tell your own story or know a kid who
might be into that opportunity, stay tuned. We'll have more information on how
to get involved later in the episode. First up, we've got Aarva Chaykin. She
told this at an education grand slam in New York City, where the theme of the night
was Out of the Blue.
Here's Aarva, live at the mall.
I was entering high school at a progressive religious school, and it was considered progressive
because they were mixed gender classes. I walked in on my
first day with a brand new dress that went below my knees and a boatload of
optimism. I was really excited for this school because this was the only Jewish
school in the tri-state area that offered BC calculus and I decided
because I knew someone who did it that that I was going to take BC Calculus
my sophomore year.
And in preparation, I took Algebra 2 the summer before high school.
I looked at my schedule that first day, and I saw that third period on Monday was Algebra
2.
The school didn't know me.
I didn't know them.
I'm sure it would all be okay, and by Tuesday Tuesday morning I'd be in a pre-calculus class.
After class I went up to my teacher and showed him my transcript.
He looked at me and he said, it's my first day too. I don't know what I'm doing.
You're going to have to go talk to the head of the math department.
In order to find the head of the math department, I had to find the math department, which was
also known as the bunker.
Located in the basement of my school, it had no windows, no natural light, just flickering
halogen lights that cast everyone in a sickly pallor.
The head of the math department looked at my grade in Algebra 2
and then he looked at me and he told me,
we'll see after your first test.
That's a little unreasonable but not totally unreasonable.
I got an 102 on my first test.
Wonderful.
He looked at my 102 and then he looked at me and he
said, was he after your second test? That was 102 not enough? I didn't do as well on
my second test. I got a 98. He looked at my 98 and then he looked at me and he said,
it's too late in the school year,
you can't take PreCalculus this year.
I'm sorry.
I thought this was ridiculous
and my mother thought this was ridiculous so by the end
of that day I was signed
up for an online PreCalculus class outside of school.
I should mention at this point that when someone else asked
the head of the math department why I couldn't take BC
calculus my sophomore year and pre-calculus my freshman year,
he explained that they didn't have enough resources for me.
They did have four boys though taking advanced math at the
time, so I guess four is just the maximum.
At the end of my freshman year of high school,
I returned to the bunker with my pre-calculus grade.
He looked at my pre-calculus grade,
and then he looked at me.
And then he looked at the A plus again, and he looked at me,
and he said, you know, we have this program
where you can take pre-calculus over the summer.
I pointed to my grade, and I told him,
I've already taken this class.
And he said no our
Precalculus is different
After spending that summer taking Precalculus I can testify that the unit circle is still the unit circle no matter where you learning
I was allowed to take BC calculus my sophomore year And for the first time in my high school math career,
I really felt like I was flying.
I was learning integrals.
I was learning derivatives.
I learned something called the Taylor Series,
which is really cool.
It's when you have a function and then you use derivatives
to approximate that function in a series.
And as you add them up and you add more terms to the series,
the closer and closer it approximates the function
and it's just beautiful to watch. It's also how calculators do math.
And so it really broke my heart a little when an older boy who had taken BC Calculus his sophomore year
came up to me and told me that maybe it wasn't such a good idea to take your sophomore year because
he got a four and I'd have to work really, really, really hard to get a five.
I was not interested in taking PreCalculus a third time so I continued on.
And later on that year a freshman boy asked me whether it was a good idea to take BC Calculus
my sophomore year and after further questioning it came out that he had actually been offered the spot
and wasn't even sure whether he wanted it.
Another freshman girl came up to me with the same question, and I told her it was a fantastic idea,
and if she really was interested, she should email the head of the math department.
Before we both went our separate ways, meets a history and her to Hebrew,
she told me teasingly, you better get a
five, which is the highest score you can get on an AP, so I can take this
class too. She was only joking. I did in fact get a five on the BC calculus exam.
Maybe because I took Algebra 2 twice and PreCalculus twice. And I no longer attend that school, but more importantly, that freshman girl, she's taking
BC Calculus there as a sophomore.
Thank you. That was Aarah Chaykin.
Aravah is a 17-year-old from New York City who enjoys math, reading, and learning about
cybersecurity.
Her favorite author is Percival Everett, but her favorite book is Chrysanthemum by Kevin
Hankes.
Her favorite mathematical concept is Pascal's Triangle.
Both the stories in this episode were developed from the Moss Story Lab.
It's a free program for 10th through 12th graders.
If you're in New York City, it's in person, and if you're anywhere else, it's virtual.
For eight weeks, participants build community and learn to craft their own personal narrative.
It ends with a final telling that can be open to friends and family.
It's a truly special experience that helps students develop skills which are applicable everywhere from
English class to college applications to making new friends.
If you'd like to participate or know a young person who would, go to themoth.org.
The deadline to sign up is September 22nd.
Up next is Iris Hernandez.
She told this at a Twin City Story Slam.
Here's Iris, live at the mall.
So in October of 2019, my parents planned a family trip to Puerto Rico.
Now, I was absolutely thrilled for this opportunity.
I already loved all of my Puerto Rican family in the States,
so for me the idea of going on a trip with them plus meeting my extended family that lived on the
island was beyond thrilling. At my school, I'm the only Latina in my grade, I have this sort of
virtual monopoly on Hispanic-ness. I can say a few phrases in Spanish and show up at the potluck with some rice and beans and the kids are like,
wow, she's really cool.
So this going to Puerto Rico was going to be my opportunity to spread my wings to explore my identity.
So fast forward a few months and it's Christmas Eve. We've just flown in.
We're unpacking at my aunt's house and I hear my parents talking about a Christmas Eve party
that's happening that night, or Noche Buena,
which if you don't know is a Puerto Rican festivity
that sort of culminates all the hard work of the year
into a night of festivity.
So as soon as I hear that this party is happening,
I grab my party dress, I grab my makeup,
and I run to the bathroom, slam the door,
and I start getting ready.
Now I am going the full nine yards.
I have penciled in my eyebrows.
I am doing dark eyeshadow.
There is rouge, there is a red lip.
The water line is perfect.
And my party dress is this little knee-length,
flowy number covered in huge toucans across the front,
which I thought was very apropos for Puerto Rico.
So as I'm putting the finishing touches on my look,
I hear the doorbell ring, I hear people start to enter,
talking to each other, snatches of conversation,
I hear the music start playing,
I'm hearing Bomba y Plena.
So I open the bathroom door a little bit,
and I peer out and I am bored to see how many people managed
to pack themselves into that tiny living room.
So I take a deep breath and I open the door all the way
and I sort of, I strut my way down the hallway
and I'm looking for a particular cousin
that I've heard of from my parents.
I know that she's around my age and we both like theater
and I think, great, we're gonna hit it off off so I'm sort of squeezing my way between the crowds
and I make eye contact with her and I smile and start walking towards her and
she smiles back at me and she opens her mouth and starts speaking in rapid-fire
Spanish and I just stare at her with my mouth sort of open because somehow throughout the entire process of preparing for this trip I had forgotten the important fact that my family in Puerto Rico would speak Spanish.
Like Spanish, Spanish. I mean I got like prima and navidad and hola but nothing that was going to give me any actual clue
to what she was saying to me.
So I kind of collect myself and I go, aye Prima, perdoname, ay necesito hacer algo,
un momento por favor, and I run back into the hallway.
I immediately whirl around and crash into my mom who's coming out of the back bedroom
and when she looks at my face she can see that something is wrong because the perfect
water line from before has migrated to somewhere slightly north of my nostrils.
So I, of course, you know, she's been speaking Spanish the entire time she's here so when
she goes to ask me how I'm doing it comes out as,
Ay, que fue mi hambre, estas bien?
And that was the last Spanish straw for me.
I start to sob and I go,
Mom, can you please speak in English?
And then I rush past her back into the bathroom
that I was in not five minutes before.
And I sit on the counter and I look at myself in the mirror
and all the things I've done
to get myself ready feel stupid.
I was putting myself together to look the perfect Puerto Rican daughter, niece, cousin,
what have you, and I couldn't even speak the language of my country.
I was a poser.
So the party continues and eventually I leave the bathroom.
I come out, I serve myself some food, I sit in the corner and I listen to my family sing karaoke songs that I don't know the lyrics to.
Well this moment certainly didn't ruin the rest of my trip. I had similar hiccups along the way.
For instance, I'd go to a restaurant and I'd try to order in Spanish but I'd make some mistake that would let the waiter or waitress know that,
oh, she doesn't speak Spanish, we'll speak to her in English.
And I appreciated their empathy, but every time it happened, it was another blow that I couldn't speak my native language enough to even order myself food.
I would look around and I would see tourists with their sunburned foreheads, with their tropical shirts, not so unlike my own toucan dress. And I just, every time, it felt like I was defeated,
yet another time.
So when I came back to Minnesota,
I decided that that would be no more.
I pulled out of Latin four at my school
and I went to Spanish one.
And I worked through that and I took accelerated courses
and I worked with my dad over the summer
and I took AP Spanish. And while today today I would not say I'm fluent, I'm certainly
proficient and I'm very glad to be here.
And while I haven't been back to Puerto Rico since that time four years ago, I hope that
soon I can return to the island and I can show my family all the language that they motivated me to learn for their sake but mostly for
mine. Because now when someone asks me, are you Puerto Rican? I can say yeah I am.
Thank you.
That was Iris Hernandez.
Iris is a curious, eager college freshman with a love of learning and all things storytelling.
She is committed to the connection and growth via theater, martial arts, and service.
She's thrilled to share this story about her culture and her own vulnerability.
That's it for this episode.
Remember, both Aarva and Iris' stories were developed from
the Moth Story Lab. If you're a 10th through 12th grader and this has inspired you, just
go to themoth.org slash education for all the info. The deadline to sign up is September
22nd. We hope to see you there.
For over 15 years, Anna Stern has worked with programs that amplify and promote young people's voices, their stories, and their dreams.
The current chapter of Ana's story features her three cats, Andre 3000, Big Boy, and Seal, getting her hands dirty with her pottery craft,
speaking different languages, babbling with her fiancé to her almost one-year-old, and working at the moth.
The stories in this episode were directed by Melissa Bram.
This episode of the Moth podcast was produced by Sarah Austin-Ginness, Sarah Jane Johnson,
and me, Mark Salinger.
The rest of the Moth's leadership team includes Sarah Haberman, Christina Norman, Jennifer
Hickson, Meg Bowles, Kate Tellers, Marina Cluchet, Suzanne Rust, Brandon Grant Walker,
Leanne Gulley, and Aldi Casa.
The Moth would like to thank its supporters and listeners.
Stories like these are made possible by community giving.
If you're not already a member, please consider becoming one or making a one-time donation today
at themoth.org slash give back.
All Moth stories are true as remembered by their storytellers.
For more about our podcast, information on pitching your own story, and everything else,
go to our website, themoth.org. The Moth Podcast is presented by PRX,
the public radio exchange, helping make public radio more public at PRX.org.