Cycles

7 08 2008

Maybe it’s just my life, but it sure seems like shittiness/goodness comes in cycles.

#1 I emailed my boss, begging to come in and volunteer my filing abilities; anything to get me back into a routine. The reply was a hook-up; a paid gig. Dummy me emailed back saying that I’d do it for free if all else fails, but it’s the truth.

I don’t know how people stay unemployed and happy for long periods of time. I was itchy two weeks into it. And I’m totally NOT an ambitious overachiever.

#2 Not to jinx anything, but I’m applying for a very cool job OUT of this armpit of Hell. IF I get it, I would be using some very, very cool expeditionary and experiential teaching methods. I’d also get to leave this pit of hell.





Bad Girls Weekend

31 07 2008

Wooowheee, I Have a LOT of Catching Up to Do! SO the shake down? The cliffnotes version to my brief respite? It sucked. It sucked big time.

The long version?

Bad Girls Weekend turned into a weekend from Hell. Once hilarious and intellectual women spent hours discussing babies, chapped nipples, breast feeding, babies, diaper duty, babies, good school districts, infant growth spurts, babies, mortgage payments, babies, and yes, more babies. Is this what happens when you have kids? You turn into a boring baby talker?

I keep thinking that I’m totally emotionally ready to have a kid; thinking that the house, the husband, and the 2.5 (rotten) kids seems like a blissful opposite to what my life is right now. By Saturday at 7pm, when everyone was getting ready for (effing) bed, and continuing to discuss my new least favorite topic (that being babies)**, I walked over the the cooler, pulled out the cheap box wine, and poured the biggest baddest plastic cup of chardonnay I could stomach. My best of the friends who joined me on this camping trip from Hell walked over to me and asked if I was okay. I said, oh yeah, I’m fine. I just think I may need to be really drunk to get through 12 more hours of the baby talk.

I think that was my last Bad Girls Weekend, since there’s no way in hell I’ll ever subject myself to 48 more hours of a camping/drinking trip that has progressively turned into a friggin’ play date.

With all my ranting about chapped nipples and baby talk, I completely forgot to whine about the major follies of the weekend.

(the really long part of the story)

Friday–Got lost. Arrived at my friend’s house a little late. Left my keys in the ignition, locked the doors, and ran into friend’s house, excited to see new baby (this was prior to the excessive baby talk). Wanted to cry for a brief moment before friend mentioned that I have AAA. Duh.

Sunday Afternoon–My mom picked up my dog at the kennel. This was the first time I ever approved of a little weekend getaway for him. I was a little nervous and ended up shuttling him off to a family friend’s kennel, thinking that nothing could possibly happen to him THERE.

I came home and immediately notice this big pink mark on his black nose, scratches on his legs, and him scratching his ear excessively. He didn’t seem to care, but I was mortified. I leave the effer for one weekend and come home to what I assume to be the leftovers of a dog fight. I’d like to call the family friend, but I’m currently trying to figure out what I can say without accusing the person of neglecting my dog.

FYI, my dog looks badass with the skin scraped off the top of his nose. I’m thinking of buying him some boxing gloves for Christmas.

Sunday Night–I hang out with the fam. By 9pm I was itching to get back to my own bed and opted to make the late night drive from my families place to my home (which is about a 2 1/2 hour drive if I’m speeding).

I was cruising along route___, listening to NPR, and reflecting on the weekend’s events when from out of nowhere, I see a trooper behind me. Since no one else was on the road late on a Sunday night, I assumed to red flashing lights are for, none other than, ME. I wasn’t really all that nervous, since I KNEW I couldn’t possibly have been doing anything wrong. Trooper Man (who happened to have very nice green eyes and no wedding band) asked if I knew why I was being pulled over. I didn’t bother to act coy and just honestly said, Seriously. I have no idea. Turns out my left headlight AND breaklight were broken…As was my record of never getting a ticket. 31 years without a violation (unless you count the 40 parking tickets). My steak is over.

I ended up with two “fix it tickets” with threats of having my license revoked if I didn’t fix the problem ASAP and/or pay the fine. Take my job, take my money, take my beer, take my harmful tobacco products, but don’t take the license.

Monday Morning–Go to Valvoline to get the stupid lights fixed. End up getting it taken care of for free by possibly the nicest store manager in town. I had to beg the guy to take a twenty for his trouble. And frankly, his kindness pretty much made up for the three day shitshow weekend.

Monday Afternoon–Drive 20 miles, not knowing where else there’s a friggin Trooper barracks. I walked up to the creepy sterile building and discover the door is locked. Posted on the glass window is a large sign that says, “Trooper in Duty in case of emergency use call box.” Immediately I think, great, I’m going to get arrested for using the call box and not having an emergency. So I knock on the door. No one answers, so I knock again. Still no one.

I finally get the courage to click the button on the call box. It dials into the barracks. First a get an automated message and with the cars speeding by behind me, I have no idea what the message actually said. At this point I was kind of grateful that I wasn’t standing there with half my arm chopped off and/or being held captive by an ex boyfriend with a sawed off shotgun. Clearly this isn’t the place you’d want to go during a real emergency.

After a few tries I get a human voice on the callbox, despite still not being able to decipher what in hell she was saying. The phatum voice cuts out. By now I was starting to get annoyed. Really annoyed. So I pressed the button again and yell, “HI. I WAS TOLD TO COME HERE FOR A FIX IT TICKET. CAN SOMEONE COME OUT HERE AND HELP ME FIX IT.” My annoyance suddenly subsides when I realize how absurd I look screaming into an intercom at a Trooper station.





I’ll keep on tryin’ to sing, but please, just don’t ask me how

17 06 2008

Driving home from work today I had another moment where I felt like, Man, I wanna go home or get the hell out of here somehow. It’s kind of weird, after living almost three hours away from your birthplace for the majority of your adult life, having this urge to go back, pop up again and again. I know the reality of my hometown would probably bore the living crap out of me, but for some reason, the past year it’s been calling me back, which is kind of weird for a girl who purposely moved away.

I feel so clueless right now. I know it will pass and within a few days I’ll be back to being a know-it-all. Right now, with the hormones pumping (and shut the hell up, men/women who think PMS isn’t a legitimate form of psychosis) and a glass of wine (despite knowing that wine and hormones never mix well), I feel like the only answer is getting out of here (WNY). I’m just so scared to leave. I came out this way for college when I was 18 and I’ve lived here permanently since I was 23. I’m such a creature of f’in bad habits.

There are times, like now, when I stop and think, holy crap, I’m NOT 23 anymore?! This little search for self is no longer as cool as it used to be…Kind of like the serial dating…

And f–k you, windows media player, for shuffling Pete Yorn’s “Come Back Home” as I finish typing this.

Wait. I love you media player, but why must you mess with my head? You start this entry with The Who’s Athena, try to end it with going back home until I hit fast forward and you bring me to The Roches,“Quitting Time.” (I don’t even like that song, sucker.) And now you must taunt me with “Angry Anymore” the day after Father’s Day? That’s just cruel. Oh, but I know you love me too when your token of peace is Jimmy Buffet’s “Overkill,” which kindly leads me to “Cultural Infidel” and “School Boy Heart.” I wonder if it’s okay for a girl to identify with a school boy heart…?

Thank you. I needed that reminder, media player.

I suppose
The need to focus never arose
So something like a swiss army knife
That’s my life

(edit) Why must you annoy me with these life leasons, media player? I supply you with a variety of tunes, yet you subject me to Rickie Lee Jones’ “Cycles” right now? What’s WRONG with you?

 

So I’m down and so I’m out
So are many others
So I feel like tryin’
To hide my head
‘Neath these covers
Life is like the seasons
After winter comes the spring
So I’ll ?? and stay awhile
And see what tomorrow brings

I’ve been told and I believe
That life is meant for livin’
Even when my chips are low
There’s still some left for givin’
I’ve been many places
Maybe not as far as you
So I think I’ll stay awhile
And see if some dreams come true

There isn’t much that I have learned
Through all my foolish years
Except that life just run in cycles
First there’s laughter, then those tears

But I’ll keep my head up high
Although I’m kind of tired
Oh my boy just up and left last week
Friday I got fired
You know it’s almost funny
Things can’t get worse than now
But I’ll keep on tryin’ to sing
But please, just don’t ask me how

 





Good Times

17 06 2008

Last full day of school today.  Someone set off a stink bomb causing an evacuation of the building and the fire department to barrel in with two fire engines and two squad cars…

 

I heard a few remarks regarding the behavior of our little pretty ones and reminded myself of a few songs we used to sing at my little suburban elementary school,

 

“Deck the halls with gasoline

Fa la la la la la la la la 

Light a match and watch it gleam

Fa la la la la la la la la 

Watch the school burn to ashes

Fa la la la la la la la la 

Aren’t you glad you played with matches?”

 

Or the more horrific suburban tune, often screamed from the back seats of the route #556 cheesebox,

 

“Glory, glory halleluiah 

Teacher hit me with a ruler

Hid behind the door with a gun a 44

Now there ain’t no teacher anymore

Shut the door in

Her face

Up her but.”  





“What do I have to offer a man right now?”

16 06 2008

I ventured off to happy hour last night and met up with a few former colleagues. As the conversations whirled around the usual topics: school, politics, and…Without fail, men…a friend casually asked how my dating life was going. I pondered aloud, “What do I have to offer a man right now?” The look of shear shock and sadness on my friend’s face made me pause. “What? It’s TRUE!?”

 

I had had a similar conversation over the phone with a former housemate, where, yes I was a little surprised by their reaction to my comment/question. She, like my former colleague, couldn’t believe I would say such a thing about myself. My defense in both cases was pretty simple: shouldn’t we all be able to come to the dating table with expectations that the other person has their shit together? And if the other person doesn’t, how can they possibly be able to offer up an equitable relationship?

 

 





Lessons in Survival: Spinning Out on Turns, That Gets You Tough

12 06 2008

In June of 2007 I met with a hiring committee.  During the interview, I asked the committee what the district’s philosophy of education was.  Instead of receiving a lengthy diatribe, I was given blank stares.  After the interview, I had a feeling that I got the job, but wasn’t really sure that I WANTED it.  Sure, I needed the job, but did I really want to work for a joint that didn’t even know how to explain their beliefs?  Did I want to go back into a middle school classroom?  I hate middle school and really didn’t feel like an effective teacher when in those middle school rooms. 

 

I make it to the second round.  At this point I wasn’t really excited, since during this time I was waiting to hear back from a school I reeeeally wanted the work at.  I agreed to meet with the principal, regardless.  I immediately liked her style.  She seemed to appreciate my desire to teach in an urban setting and was excited by my ideas for the curriculum.  Kind of like my love life, I liked that she liked me…so I accepted the job offer and signed the contract on the spot.

 

A few weeks pass.  In the mail I receive a letter announcing the arrival of a new principal.  Immediately I get this oh-sweet-Jesus-help-me-I’m-in-deep-shit feeling.  I don’t say a word of this to anyone for a few days, since I’m so scared of jinxing the job.  The year prior I had quit another teaching job, so I kept telling myself to just be grateful that someone was willing to pay this kind of money for me to teach at ALL. 

 

I make a few phone calls, inquiring about the basic stuff for starting up the school year.  They tell me that the orientation information is in the mail.  More weeks pass.  I still haven’t received anything in the mail about my benefits, what I would actually be teaching, what I should be planning for, how many kids I might have in the classroom, how and when I need to order supplies.  At this point I was getting nervous enough to discuss it with friends and family, worried that this was going to be yet another disastrous year at a poorly organized school.  And for the record, if a school is disorganized, you bet your ass the kids are a little out of control.  But I kept trying to move forward, thinking that this could be a great move. 

 

The orientation materials come.  I start trying to get excited.  I make my way to the orientation and immediately connect with the other new hires (all slightly sarcastic chicks new to the building, but not new to the profession).  We sit through a few gazillion presentations.  One of my new friend turns to me and says, “I think I’m getting an ulcer already.”  During orientation, the state publishes a report on the top violent schools.  Ours is at the top of the list.  I’m getting bad vibes, but keep trying hard to ignore them, thinking that I’m just being paranoid due to the prior years’ horrific experience.  Lightening doesn’t strike twice, right? 

 

So let’s fast forward to day one.  I have no textbooks.  I have no curriculum.  I have no laptop which I need for attendance.  No printer.  I have no supplies other than the stuff I spent $500 on for my classroom…posters, markers, folders, stuff…(Which I later learn won’t be refunded).  At this point, I get the Groundhog’s Day feeling coming on.  I make it to week 2 without making a complaint.  The kids are horrible.  I’m the second one in the building at 7am and the last one out at 5:30…everyday.    

 

In the middle of week three a kid pushes me.  I then learn that when I made a phone call home the prior week, Kid decided it would be a good idea to impersonate his/her mother, and I fell for the ploy.  Kid gets a slap-on-the-wrist one day suspension for pushing me. 

 

I still have no books.  No one else seems too worried about it, but it freaks the shit out of me to teach literature without a BOOK.  I’m REALLY freaked out that a kid put their hands on me and isn’t expelled.  I had been in bad schools before, but I never had a kid lay a hand on me.  I finally get the courage to voice my complaints, since I really do like my new boss.  Boss is sympathetic, encouraging, and tries hard to be helpful.  At the same time, Boss has no idea where we can locate…BOOKS.  Boss seems to think Kid who pushed me has problems, so I back off, and agree to make a better effort with him/her. 

 

By week four, I’m nursing a three week long cold.  I’m dying, but don’t have the time or the courage to ask for a sick day to figure out why I can’t shake the cold.  The last time I was this sick was 5 years before.  I have a horrible day, kids screaming at me, throwing paper at me…the type of stuff you see in movies…I had been in (and handled) some of the toughest high school classrooms in the city, but middle school was clearly NOT the place for me.  I turn the overhead off, after practically begging them to do their journal starter (something I had been doing with them for four weeks, yet they hadn’t seemed to get the hang of coming into the classroom, calming down, and shutting the hell up…), I calmly walk over to the phone to call for assistance, something I really hate doing…and tell my boss that I’d like to take an emergency personal day.  So we get class coverage, I go home and go to the doctor.  I discover that I have a double ear infection and bronchitis…oh…and anxiety.  When the doctor mentioned anxiety, I looked at him dumbfounded.  I had had my own bouts of depression, but never ever felt anxious enough to make myself sick.  Doc mentions that I’ve lost 20 pounds in the month since my check-up.  The weight loss makes me realize that this job is taking its toll on my body, which is uncool.  Doc offers anxiety med script and hands it to me.  I fill it, but wonder if a job is really worth THIS.  I took a long walk with my dog, talk to a friend, and decide that this isn’t going to work out.  I return the following day and explain everything to by boss.  Boss seems to think that the problem is the lack of cohesive team.  I try to politely tell him/her that yes, this could play a part, but the lack of direction, curriculum, and…BOOKS is what was making it so difficult.  I explain that I always had a soft-handed approach to classroom management, an approach that works in high schools, but certainly doesn’t in middle schools.  He still maintains that the main problem isn’t me and offers a reference for future jobs.  I don’t take up the offer, wishing I could completely erase the experience from my memory and resume.

 

Later I learn from friends that the person who replaced me quit within a few weeks, via a 6am voicemail.  The school later fires a much beloved teacher because his/her test scores are too low.  When I hear both stories I confirm to myself that I’ve made the right decision despite knowing how quitting TWO contract jobs are going to look on a resume.

 

I go into my cave.  I sit around watching Montel and soap operas.  After two weeks of this, my friend reminds me that I still have bills to pay, and encourages me to go back to per dium subbing until I decide what I want to do with my life. 

 

I end up going to a school I knew little of.  The first day is easy; the faculty was wonderful, the support staff was even better.  From day one I felt happy being there.  I quickly make connections and get to know the kids.  Another teacher introduces me to a few admins, which helps me guarantee that I’ll be in this building for the time being.  A freak mishap puts a long-term sub into the hospital and my new boss comes to me asking if I’m certified.  I end up teaching…again…in a maternity leave spot.  I get sucked back in.  The kids are decent.  I get to teach what I know how to teach—high school lit. 

 

When that maternity leave ends, my boss offers another one that will bring me all the way to April.  I don’t think twice and take it.  I’m happy being in this false reality, acting as a “real” teacher, while knowing that it will soon be over.  Kids ask why I’m not a “real” teacher when I act like one.  Colleagues ask why I’m only subbing.  My answers come slowly, but I eventually spill it for a few.  They shake their heads, knowingly.  I hear other educators’ countless horror stories. 

 

I consider trying to go back to the first job I quit and begging my boss (who many refer to as The Devil) for a job back.  I remind myself that even if this person was gracious enough to give me a placement, I would likely end up in another horrible middle school (where all the newbies are placed, regardless of experience).  Put me at the center of a high school with drug dealers, truants, gangstahs and potheads and I can cope.  I can get along with the baddest of badasses and even have a few of said badasses realize that reading isn’t that bad.  I can do all of this when I get to work with a community of teachers and administrators who intrinsically care about the kids they’re working with.  I can do this when I have BOOKS to woo the badasses with.  I can do this when I have working copying machines.  I can do this when I have time to talk to my colleagues in my subject area.  But put me in the middle of a classroom with 30 14 year olds and I’ll leave within a month….   

 

A long time ago, in a drunken argument with my then housemate, we debated the question, “What’s more important: the journey or the destination?”  I advocated for the journey.  I don’t think at 21 I anticipated the journey would be smooth pavement in some areas and roadblocks for miles.  And where’s the free ride when I need it?

 

No to be too dramatic, but the reality of leaving teaching is, at times, a little difficult to hold onto.  I keep getting sucked back in.  I quit, go back to subbing for money until I figure out what I really want, get recruited to take on long-term placements, start applying again for real jobs…repeat spin cycle, two years and counting…  I know what keeps bringing me back.  And though it always sounds cliché, the kids keep bringing me back.  My calling isn’t noble.  I like that they need me and selfishly enjoy helping them.  They make me a better person. 

 

Two days ago a kid (who was once suspended for calling me a f—–g b—h) came up to me in the hall to tell me in a hushed voice that she “did the right thing” and had an abortion after telling her mom that she was pregnant.  As other kids walked past and the bell rang, all I could do was squeeze her hand and say, “Oh honey, I’m so sorry.”  This wasn’t my first abortion conversation of the year; something that makes me really uncomfortable…This wasn’t the first time a kid’s real life story made me want to scream from a roof top.  This wasn’t the first time that someone came to me with their life and wasn’t looking for advice, but just an ear and a shoulder to maybe take a little burden off of theirs.  They rarely come for sympathy, but more so confirmation that no matter what, things are going to be okay, that they’ll get through the pregnancy, the drug addiction, the physical abuse, the neglect, the boyfriend in jail, the cousin shot dead in the middle of the street, the three bus rides it takes to get to school, the after school job that keeps them out until 11 and prevents them from doing homework, their 6 other siblings from 4 different dads, their mom addicted to crack far off in another state, or their abortion … (which of course reminds me of a Carly Simon song): 

 

They don’t know that you’re striving to be someone
And you’re not sure how you will fare.

 

They just want you to be there.

 

Just as long as you’re somewhat right
You can do no wrong.
Their trusting eyes looking up at you
Believing you’re so strong.

They Just Want You To Be There, Carly Simon

 

Like a petulant girl-child, I want what I want, when I want it.  I WANT to be there, but want to be WHERE I choose.  This sense of entitlement seems to be perpetuated by the people I love—people who seem to have a greater vision of me than I have of myself….Which makes me wonder, maybe that’s half the problem.