This will be—What do
they call them?—an "occasional series" recording some of the
not-so-mundane aspects of my day job. When I established the blog, I did not do
so with any intention of ever talking shop, but I realize now that with just a
year and ten weeks (but who's counting?) left in my teaching career, I
should document some of the good stuff.
The other day at lunch I was chatting with a couple of my
seniors about the issues they need to address in order to change the world as
soon as they've earned their college degrees. We do this often. Ricky, a young
man of strong faith who has a very acute sense of morality, was explaining his
idea for an internet search engine that would distinguish between moral and
immoral search results. Our conversation was interrupted when Mirella, one of my
freshmen, brought me a doughnut. This was a unique and happy occasion. I don't
think Mirella has ever ventured into my classroom during lunch before, and I
rarely eat doughnuts.
"I brought this for you," she said, "because
you didn't get one of Myles' cupcakes. Remember?" Wow. How did she remember? The incident with Myles
had occurred way back in early October, just a few weeks into the new school
year. In class one day, Myles had mentioned something about being disappointed
in not getting cupcakes for his birthday. (High school is quite a transition
from elementary school and junior high. My freshmen are always devastated when
they find out we take final exams on the last day of school—no party.) Myles
sits in the front. At that time, Mirella occupied the last seat in his row.
Hearing the note of sadness in his voice, she leaned way out in her seat and
called up to the front, "I'll bring you cupcakes tomorrow, bro." She
didn't know his name. They'd never had a conversation. She simply offered. He
smiled, said "OK!" but none of us were really expecting her to bring
cupcakes.
The next morning before school, my door opened and Mirella
walked in holding a package of four gorgeous cupcakes.
"These are for—what's his name? Myles? I won't be at
school today." Dang, right? A young woman of her word with a great
follow-through ethic. I couldn't wait for 5th period.
When Myles came in I showed him the cupcakes—all four just
for him—and his face lit up. Of course, I had to tease him and say I might
swipe one.
"Oh, go ahead, Ms. Murphy," he said with sincere
grace. "I'm sure I'm not going to eat all four of them!"
I thanked him profusely but declined, explaining that the
cupcakes no doubt contained ingredients that a sixty-year-old woman with high
cholesterol should not be ingesting.
"For example," I said, "these probably have... " and
I held the package aloft carefully so I could read the ingredients listed on
the bottom.
That's when I saw the warning label: "This product
manufactured on equipment that processes products containing peanuts." My
heart sank. Just that day I'd received a medical alert about Myles from the
office. He has a peanut allergy. The cupcakes would not be safe for him.
"Myles," I said slowly, "I'm going to save
your life here. You can't have these cupcakes." I explained why, but he
wasn't upset (though a little disappointed; they did look tantalizing).
"That's OK," he said, "it's the thought that counts. It just
makes me happy that Mirella did such a nice thing." He handed the cupcakes
off to some friends who eagerly offered to eat them for him.
Mirella heard about it the next day when she returned to
school. And here she was, six months later, bakery bag in hand. "You
didn't get a cupcake," she said, "so I brought you a doughnut."
I opened the bag, extracted a beautifully crafted chocolate doughnut with
sprinkles, turned a deaf ear to the screaming sirens of the diet police in my
head, and took a bite. It was heaven. Mirella waved a hand over her shoulder as
she went out the door.
I continued my conversation with the seniors, chewing
slowly, savoring every bite (and silently recalculating what I would eat for
dinner). The bell rang, the kids picked up their mess, and as she was about to
leave, Katelynn pulled a cookie from her lunch bag and plunked it down in front
of me.
"Peanut butter," she said, "with Nutella in
the center. I made them last night. See ya later, Murphy."
If you think for one minute I saved that homemade peanut
butter cookie with—bonus points!!!—Nutella inside for later, you don't know me
well enough to know my weakness for cookies.
And if you think that all the teenagers of this generation
are self-absorbed, amoral zombies who are devoid of human emotion, you should
come on down at lunchtime and meet my kid crew. They're pretty special.
that was a heart-lifting story there now, I don't care who ya'are..reckon? I am pretty sure they had a guiding hand , at times... :)
ReplyDeleteThank you, Glenn! They're great kids--like most teens these days.
ReplyDelete