There is a video online of teachers reading letters they've written to themselves as first year teachers. I found their words touching, amusing, inspirational and powerful. So I decided to try to write my own. It has taken me all summer long to finish, but here it is:
Dear thirty-five-year-old Kay,
On this first day, you're
thinking you might be too old to begin teaching. I'm looking at you from this
vantage point of sixty, and I'm laughing.
I also see that you are proud and
thrilled to be teaching in this brand new classroom with white boards which you
are thinking are so cool and high tech, but girl, just wait. Somebody out there
is working on this thing called a Smart Board. You ain't seen nothin' yet.
You should know that your
carefully crafted yet coded lecture on this first day of school about not
allowing "hate speech" in your classroom will become far more bold as
time goes on and far less necessary. The time will come—yes, within your lifetime—when
your LGBT students will be safely out and no longer in need of your protection.
You do not know this yet, but the
kids who are about to swagger through the door, looking at you sideways and
pretending disinterest, are actually watching every move you make, hearing
every word you utter and weighing it, making judgments from the first seconds
in your room as to whether you are trustworthy and kind or someone to be
feared. Yes, they will seem puffed up, but they are really just frightened
little bear cubs, standing on their hind legs, trying to appear large and
intimidating. Inside they fear being called out and embarrassed by you or their
classmates. Your first duty always is to help them feel safe. But don't be
afraid to look them in the eye; for good or for bad, there is power in every
word you say to them.
This year, you will make friends
with the school librarian who will later be the best teacher-bud you will ever
have. Hold onto this friendship as if it were the holy grail. Donna will keep you
sane through all the craziness, anger, laughter and tears that is heading your
way like a speeding locomotive.
At the end of the school year,
take a picture of each class and keep those photos in an album in your room. You'll
want to pull them out and reminisce over them when your former students stop
by. And they will stop by.
Warning: Next year you'll have a
student named Tabitha J. You will ask Miss J. no less than fifty times in 180
days to "Please step outside" so you can reiterate a lecture you're sick
of giving and she's sick of hearing about how to behave appropriately in a
classroom. She will be the bane of your work time existence for the entire
year. Just wait. Eight years later, on a quiet afternoon, the phone will ring
in your classroom, and it will be Miss J., calling to let you know she is now a
college student working toward the goal of being a teacher "just like
you" and to thank you for never giving up on her, thus beginning a legacy
of naughty kids who will return, year after year, to thank you for caring about
them as individuals despite their dismal grades in your class.
Your experience with Miss J. will
also introduce you to one of the few aspects of your job you genuinely dislike,
which is dealing with self-absorbed, unreasonable, ignorant parents. You should
know now that throughout the whole of your career, you will be cussed out and
threatened far more by parents than you will be by kids. When that happens,
just let it go. Head for the gym or go for a run or walk the dogs, and as the
sun goes down, let the conversation disappear into the wind.
Oh, and that advice your
university professor gave you about never hugging the kids? Throw that out the
window. When they need a hug, hug them. But be prepared; they will break your
heart with stories of family tragedy. There will be a boy whose father shot his
mother and then shot himself—in front of the boy. Don't worry about teaching
him anything. Just love him. Seven years later you will hear your name called
in a parking lot and there he will be, this boy who battled all the demons a
boy can face in high school, smiling and hugging you and telling you that he is
in his third year of college now, looking forward to finishing his degree.
So don't worry. Your heart will
be broken often and just as often it will be mended by the daily laughter and
love that will fill your classroom from top to bottom, more so with every year
that you teach. Because with every year, you will love them more. In fact,
there will come a day—September 11, 2001, to be precise—when you will begin to
tell all your students every day that you love them.
Be ready to learn. Because yes, going
into this gig, you've already raised four kids of your own, and you've got
heaps of fancy book smarts. But your students will teach you volumes every year
in every subject from fairness to fashion, including which music you
"should" listen to. And they'll be right.
Despite your best efforts, you're
going to make mistakes, just as you did with your own kids. When you do,
forgive yourself quickly. Self-evaluation is great. Self-criticism is toxic. Be
a role model; apologize when necessary, then move on.
Don't forget what your mentor,
Dr. Hubert, told you about teaching: Learn to pat yourself on the back, because
administration will have no idea what a great job you're doing in your
classroom. But don't worry; the kids know, and they will always make you feel
appreciated.
Most important of all, never get
swept up in the current tide of educational trend. Rather be guided in your
teaching by the beacon of warmest light, which is the love in your heart.
Oh—remember what you're mama
said, too: Stand up straight. And lose those girlie shoes with heels; you'll be
walking miles every day just around your own classroom.
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