$182.03

The exact cost of a nasty bout of the flu when one has no more sick days left due to taking maternity leave.  Here’s hoping one stays healthy so as to avoid these astronomical charges yet again!

The time has come…

It seems like just yesterday that I was welcoming home my precious bundle of girly-pink joy.  Yet, here it is nearly four months later and today, in spite of the inches upon inches of heavy white snow that blanketed our entire area, I climbed out of bed and returned to work.

I felt a strange mix of excitment and anxiety, hope and fear, uncertainty and confidence.  In just this one day I’ve learned that I musn’t look too far ahead or else I begin feeling the weight of all the expectations I have placed upon myself.

And while the crankiness of a certain teething toddler (yes, he’s still teething!) isn’t something I particularly enjoy, I absolutely miss his sweet smiles and gentle kisses.  As we made the slow turn onto the daycare provider’s road, I heard a faint, “No.  No.  Mom?  No.  Mom?”  from the backseat.  As if the lump in my throat wasn’t hard enough to choke back, now I had the stinging eyes too!  He did have a bit of a meltdown when we parted ways, but was over it within 30 seconds, which is what makes it bearable in the least.

My classes seem great, with a few characters – but how boring would it be if there weren’t a few of those in the mix?!  I noticed that this is the first year since I’ve taught middle school that I really see them for the kids they still are.  I think perhaps because I moved up from fifth grade, I’d always thought of these students as older and I’ve treated them much differently.  It was a neat feeling and one that I’m not sure I can accurately describe.  It felt like an important moment, a turning point perhaps in the scope of my teaching career.

I suppose I’d best settle in since I’m beat from a full day of school, cheer practice, a quick dinner, and then 3 hours of worship band rehearsal.  Oh, and I’ve already managed to put off one small school project I was hoping to complete tonight!

Whew!

I feel officially “inducted” now as a PMS teacher, having chaperoned my first Mackinac Island Eighth Grade Trip.  It was quite an adventure, and I’m sure that the remaining three days of the school year will be especially interesting! 

I hope to post a few photos after I’ve recuperated from high-tailing it around the island and staying up w-a-y past my typical bedtime.  Calder did well on the bus ride to and from St. Ignace and he enjoyed spending time with Grandma and Grandpa.

To my children

The greatest gift I could ever receive is knowing that you treat others respectfully.  You use kind words and tone when talking with friends, and your conversations with your elders are dignified and appropriate.  You don’t laugh at others being put down or join in when picking on someone is the “cool” thing to do.

I can’t begin to imagine how much the world will change before you yourselves arrive here in the wonderful world of middle school.  But I can pray.  I can hope.  I can teach.  And though teaching is my profession, I’m slowly learning the biggest lesson of all, which is that the teaching I do within our home is so much more important than what I do from September through June in a brick-walled building. 

Mornings like these, where disrespect and ignorance reign are frustrating, to say the least.  Yet, they also strengthen my resolve to raise you both on the Truth that we have in Him and to trust that providing a strong foundation will result in the solid construction of your futures.

Mile-High Ideas

Sitting here, hunched over my computer I am reminded why I enjoy the agonizingly detailed and complicated work that I v-ol-u-n-t-e-e-r to do within the writing project is amazingly valuable.  Gathering here in beautiful Denver with a handful of other talented teachers has proven to be just the motivation I needed to really rekindle the love I have for this kind of work.

There’s always something a little bittersweet about leaving the comforts of home – missing my boys and the way being with them makes my belly do a little flip – and then, ironically, leaving the group of people who somehow have gone from strangers to friends, to an extended learning family as well. 

It’s with renewed vigor and excitment that I think ahead about the exciting work that we can accomplish!!