Having children in New York City means a life of deadlines
and bureaucratic navigation. While every child is guaranteed a public
education, it takes immersion into byzantine administration in order to ensure
your offspring can access the best schools available, and the grapevine is full
of horror stories and cautionary tales of kids being sent far from home to
sub-par schools.
My wife and I are waiting to hear where our older girls will
attend preschool. Universal Pre-K started several years ago and it’s free to
all kids the year they turn four years old. We are lucky in that we live in an
area that has good local schools. A lot of younger couples have kids and then
find themselves racing a clock to get to a better neighborhood in or out of the
five boroughs that has suitable education choices.
I am blessed with a great asset in making sure my kids get
into a decent Pre-K: my wife. She was the one who did the research and learned
how to traverse the absurdist labyrinth of rules and applications (e.g.:
applying to only one or two schools won’t work, if you do that, the system will
automatically fill in the other choices for you, so your attempt to limit the
choices may backfire big time). She figured out which ones were closest and had
good ratings, and came up with a list of preferences that will mean our older
girls are likely to be in a good place.
The schools we applied to include both public and private
schools close to where we live that run public Pre-K programs.
One of those public/private Pre-K schools is a place called HolyMountain. This school does not have any religious affiliation that we
can discern. It has a mostly Asian student population, but so do most schools
in our area (we live in Flushing, Queens, an area known for its large Chinese
immigrant population; it has a large Korean population as well).
But the name Holy Mountain will always first make me think
of the 1973 Alejandro Jodorowski film, The Holy Mountain, which I first
saw projected onto a wall during a punk rock show many years ago. It is an art
film filled with strange and bizarre images, even watching the trailer many years later is to step away from
reality for a few minutes. One of the
most well-known and memorable images of the film include a parade of crucified dogs
that have been skinned and disemboweled.
So now whenever my wife and I discuss Pre-K for our kids and
we note that Holy Mountain was one of our top choices (it’s nearby and it has
high ratings with a Montessori-based teaching style, so what if it has a weird
name), all I can think about is my older girls parading down 31st
Road in gas masks while carrying crucified dogs.
This week, the results came in: and our girls will be headed
to Holy Mountain in September. Mutilated canine parade, here we come! I now
need to watch that film again. I’ll have to find a time when the rest of my
family is asleep, as I am the only one in my household who has this big a taste
for eccentric cinema.
We are lucky to live in an area where such services are
available within walking distance. For the value it returns, no investment in
public education can be too big.
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