You may recall that when I went to AERA and shared a session with the wonderful, dynamic Helen Gym, she managed to pick her way carefully through the crowd that lined the wall of the room, while I managed to trip over someone’s foot and fell flat on my face. No harm done, the room was carpeted, and I landed gracefully in such a fashion that I was unhurt, indeed bounced up and proceeded to the podium.
Well, it turns out that the fall in Philadelphia was merely practice for what happened two days later. On Saturday morning, I packed the car and drove from Brooklyn to Long Island for what I expected would be a quiet weekend. My dear partner was away for the weekend. I dropped the dog at Doggie Daycare (she is a 60-pound critter and she loves to run with playmates), then proceeded to the abode by the sea. I took the cat inside, then went to the car, thinking I would go for the mail and supplies. But something happened, I don’t know what. I tripped, landed on my left knee and couldn’t get up. I felt a snap inside my leg. There was no carpet, there was stone. At first I thought the pain would go away if I just lay there for a few minutes, but when I tried to get up, I couldn’t stand. So I dragged myself on my back up the steps and into the house, reached up to the phone and called a neighbor. She called emergency services, and within 10 minutes, there was an ambulance, a police car, and assorted other vehicles in the driveway. Literally 15 people were there to help me, and I was grateful for their kind and efficient care. I was taken away by the volunteer fire department ambulance to the local hospital in Greenport, where the doctor did an x-ray and told me I had no broken bones. As soon as he heard what happened, my son took the bus from Brooklyn so that he could take care of me and bring me home. Today, I saw a knee specialist at the Hospital for Special Surgery in NYC, who told me I had torn my ACL, which seems to be a very valuable ligament in the knee. He told me that I did not need surgery but my basketball career was over (sorry, Arne).
The good news is that I am alive and well. I am fortunate to have friends and family who are kind and caring.
I will be in Louisville, Kentucky, next week to accept the Grawemeyer award.
What’s the moral of the story? Be careful. Slow down. Type faster. Walk slower. Watch your step. Try not to multi-task. Live in the moment.
I will try to remember the moral of the story.

So sorry to hear, Diane. Feel better soon!
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And I was so looking forward to the Duncan-Ravitch basketball playoffs!
But on a serious note, Diane, let me add my name to the very long list of people begging you to take care of yourself. You’re so very important to so many people!
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Moral of the story: take life one “step” at a time.
It’s good to know that you’re okay.
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Agree with Dienne and Zulma and congratualtions on the award. You bring prestige to it.
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Hope you heal quickly. Thank you for all you do. Many blessings.
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Glad to hear that all is well now. My daughter-in-law is a social worker at the hospital in Greenport and lives with my son in Southold.
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Thank God you are alright. KC
Sent from my iPad
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So sorry to hear about your accident Diane. One thing I thought of in reading your story is the compassion and support you received from the public employees of that town. In this day and age of tearing down such employees, I’m grateful they could be there to support you.
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Please take care of yourself and be well soon. I know this has to be painful. You are in my thoughts.
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A close reading of your account suggests that the true meaning of the story is how you were focused on pain, unrelenting pain.
David Coleman taught me how to analyze this correctly.
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Dear Diane,
I will add your name to our prayer list for healing, comfort, and living in the moment.
As a great grandmother who has been out of the testing loop for quite a while, my awareness of the testing monster is quite recent and I’m appalled at all that I’m learning. I actually read each and every one of your posts and am trying to learn as much as possible. While I’m not sure how much I can do about the politics, I’m certain there are things I can do to help parents provide students with opportunities to imagine, envision, and create outside of the classroom and still maintain a sense of confidence in their abilities. Feeling like a failure can too easily become a self-fulfilling prophecy. I’m working on putting those pieces together.
With great appreciation for all you have done and are doing, Kas Winters
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My Irish grandmother used to say, “May the road rise up to meet you.” I think you may be taking this too literally, Diane. Please rest and be well.
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I am glad you are okay, and that you have such wonderful support. However, falling twice in a few days is worrying. May I say that I went through a period where I fell more than once, and I changed my routine, and now I walk every day. These days, if I stumble, I don’t fall, my balance is much stronger. May have nothing to do with anything, but my heart goes out to you. Sending hugs and hopes.
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Ouch! Be well. Will you be able to join us at the rally Thursday?
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Diane, I’m so glad you did not break anything and are on the mend. Healing thoughts to you. Elizabeth Rose (Yo Miz).
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Oh, so sorry to hear you hurt your ACL. Wondering if eating protein will help. I ate 6 organic boiled egg whites daily when I broke a hip and shoulder. Egg whites are pure protein, no fat. Feel better soon.
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I am so happy it was not anything worse. Take care, and heal.
Brenda
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I hope you mend soon …
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Hi Diane –
Hang in their, trooper. We’re thinking of you.
Ted
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Please do heed the moral of your own story, Diane. But thanks as always for sharing both your ups and your “downs.” Oh my.
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I agree with everyone else. Take care of yourself. You are so important to everyone, but you must take care of yourself for you and your family first. We are all so fortunatel to have you in our lives!
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I hope you heal soon. I see you raised your son well – we should all be so fortunate to have a son who would get on the bus for mom! (will any bubble test tell us that????????)
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Best wishes for a complete and uneventful recovery!
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Thinking of you, Diane.
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Thanks, Deb, we shall be immortal. At least in our dreams.
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Diane,
I’m so sorry to hear of your fall. I’ve also been dealing with “knees” and now have to accept the fact that I must stretch my calves, walk and lose some weight. Yuck, but I feel I am too young to deal with walkers, canes, etc. So I will do what the therapist tell me to do. Hope your prescriptions are also all attainable. We all have so much to live for.
Take care.
Jennie
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I hope you have a quick recovery. Take care Diane. Thinking of you.
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Thanks, Peter. Raring to go already. Waiting for my body to catch up with my thinking.
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“my ACL, which seems to be a very valuable ligament in the knee”.
Oh, I’ve been getting along without an ACL in my right knee for the last 25 years or so.
If they want to scope you have em give you an epidural instead of knocking you out and watch it. Quite interesting!
And please take care of yourself, eh!!!
Duane
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I’m glad you’re ok. I’m going back to yoga.
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Oh my goodness. So sorry for your fall but happy for your caring and helpful friends, family and medical folks. Wishing you all the very best!
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I executed my “graceful” fall walking too quickly into the supermarket. Flat down on the sidewalk, but besides aches and bruises, I fortunately missed the trip to the hospital! After bending all the aching parts, I immediately visited the frozen food section and grabbed bags of frozen vegetables to ease the pain for the drive home. Since that lovely gymnastic moment, I understand the moral of your story only too well. Sometimes, It takes a good fall to make a body pay attention. Speedy healing and keep repeating…..walk slowly!!
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Isn’t the “wonderful, dynamic Helen Gym” a charter school operator? As in the at-will employment coslayer of the Philadelphia Federation of Teachers..?
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Very sorry to hear the news, Diane, but so glad your typing hands are intact and your spirits high. Mend well. Jen Hogue
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Dear Dr. Ravitch,
Please take care of yourself and mend quickly. Follow your own excellent advice!
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My prayers for a speedy recovery. Please take care.
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Take care of you! As much as I appreciate and admire your energy in combating fake reform, you’re more important than the total of everything you do.
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Oh Diane,
All kinds of healing thoughts are winging their way to you from your legions of devoted followers.
Hugs from one of them,
Melissa
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Sorry about your injury! Hospital for special surgery is great, isn’t it?
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Wishing you well and a speedy recovery. I tore my ACL in a skiing accident years ago, (also MCL and meniscus) and the knee managed to heal on its own without the need for surgical intervention. You do so much for everyone else and have an energy level that is truly remarkable. I suspect that it will be frustrating for you to be slowed down in this fashion.
While you are recuperating, I would recommend Brigid Schulte’s new book: Overwhelming: Love, Work and Play When No One has the Time. Fascinating look at what works and doesn’t work in our society and culture and that has important implications for what is happening with (and to!) education.
Best wishes for a speedy recovery.
GE
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Lots of prayers for speedy healing! Glad I’m not the only one..two weeks ago I was helping my husband load groceries into the car, and fell in the parking lot-broke my leg! It’s because we have so much more important things on our minds than walking…haha
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Times like this…..
Thank you for the work you do!
🙂
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Bless your heart.
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I hope you are feeling better. I can’t thank you enough for being such a wonderful teacher advocate. You make it a little easier for all teachers (including me) to go to work every day knowing that you are supporting us and the students we teach. I am always rushing around too, and have been injured because it’s hard to slow down. One time I was in such a hurry to go to school, I closed my front door on my foot and got six stitches.
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So sorry that happened!! Prayers for fast recovery! Thank you SO MUCH for all you do. You are wonderful!!!
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You’re in good company. In their game tonight against the UCONN Huskies for the NCAA championship, Notre Dame’s women’s basketball team is playing without injured senior Natalie Achonwa, who suffered a torn ACL in the regional final victory over Baylor.
She and you are both inspirations for the rest of us.
Best wishes for a speedy recovery.
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As I read this post I was waiting for a moral around reform. I was expecting to find a metaphor about how students or low-income schools who fall, need a community of people to be there to help pick them up.
Take care of yourself. And thanks for all you do. Reading your blog is the little bit of sanity in my day.
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GillianLouise,
Life offers us metaphors. We take them where we find them. Here is one I learned from John Donne: “No man is an island….”
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I hope you feel better soon! Thanks for posting about the Grawemeyer, as I live in Louisville and had no idea you would be here in the near future. I look forward to meeting you (or at least to seeing you in person).
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Take care.
And I know you won’t stay down for the count.
“Our greatest glory is not in never falling, but in rising every time we fall.” [Confucius]
😎
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Carpe diem, indeed. Your ACL is not what threatens Arne Duncan. Thank goodness that agile mind of yours is so strong! Speedy recovery.
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So sorry about your fall. Please take care of you and get well soon.
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So sorry to hear of your fall. Maybe this will give you time to stay put and relax. Recover quickly.
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PLEASE take care of yourself, Diane—I almost wrote “mom” or “grandma” as you are, for so many students, educators, parents and activists, the matriarch of us all.
And, is there an heir apparent somewhere? While there are many brilliant, dynamic, passionate and driven people in our ranks, there is no one individual who appears, at this point, to rival you for sheer energy, output, knowledge, fearlessness and the ability to lead.
You are, Diane Ravitch, to education, what Babe Ruth was to baseball.
You are, Diane Ravitch, to education, what The Beatles were to rock music.
You are, Diane Ravitch, to education , what Martin Luther King was to civil and human rights.
We stand behind you with full confidence and trust, in your integrity, your judgement, and your ability to speak truth to power.
(In other words, you’d better preserve yourself well into the future. We’re going to need you for all of the battles ahead. So please, take care of yourself and I hope all of these words of love will somehow reach into your body and spirit and greatly aid the healing process.
Best to you, Diane.
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Let me be completely philosophical about this…I think your ‘falls’ are metaphors for fighting the good fight. You are in the ring and getting knocked around a bit. These bumps will not deter you. But enough already, Rocky, I mean Diane. Be careful! We need you at 100%. 🙂
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Dear Diane,
How sorry I am that you had to go through that awful experience. I hope your recovery is quick and that you REST enough to allow it to happen. You mean so much to so many who only know you from the words you enlighten, encourage, and enrage us with. As I am sure many will agree to, you are our hero. Be safe. Be healthy. You simply are the best.
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I am so sorry — take care and best wishes for a speedy recovery!!
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Diane,
You are my hero, as you are the hero of many, many educators! I watched you on Bill Moyers, and recorded it so I could watch it again to fully digest the facts you stated. My husband, a non educator, and a conservative republican, watched it with me. He is beginning to see the light re: education.
I wish you a speedy recovery. I deeply appreciate the personal sacrifices you are making at your age (no offence, I have taught for 38 years, and am set to retire next year) traveling all over the country for teachers, children, and our beloved public education.
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I can’t help noticing that you tend to get more done while coping with illness or injury than most of us do in our moments of peak health! THANK YOU! And if you take a day off a few thousand of us should be able to pick up the slack!
Be well and know how much we all love and admire you. Truth is contagious. So is joy, as all true educators know. Your words and actions have given us an abundance of both.
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Ohhhhhhh, sorry to hear about your fall. Thank goodness there were no broken bones.
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Diane, sorry to hear about your tumbles, take care. While you may not be able to challenge ol’ Arne to basketball, you can score big points for our children and our democracy. I don’t think Arne or Michelle will ever to be able to compete in that arena.
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