Anyway, I sat down with hot tea. Peyton jumped in with me, hit her head against the mug spilling hot liquid over both of us. I yelled at her for it, as if burning herself wasn't consequence enough. She burst into tears, hurt more by my short-tempered response than by the spilled tea. I spent the next five minutes apologizing and wiping tears.
The moral of this little story? Life is messy. I know. I make a big fat mess of mine, daily. Have you met me? Let me introduce myself.
The difference between last night with Peyton and this morning with my students is, I think, two things. One, I have more patience at 8:40 am than at 5:00 pm. Two, my students aren't my own kids and therefore they get a more thoughtful, patient, professional response. How backward is that? All the screaming I did was only in my head. In truth, I shrugged my shoulders and said, "Accidents happen. It's alright. I can see that it wasn't because you were being careless."
Life is messy. But it's also redundant, tiresome, boring, mundane and redundant. Go read this article. I read it when I got home from work today and it rang so true for me. I think social media might be killing us slowly, painfully, one fabulous post after another. It's making us afraid of our messes. It leaves me wondering when everyone became a runner. And why is everyone feeding their kids such healthy food? Yes, your meal looks amazing. Your kids are adorable. Your tropical vacation during a month that no teacher can take a vacation has me seeing every shade of green. Don't get me wrong. I've posted those things too. I'm not judging (yes I am). It's just not the whole story.
So the truth is, my kid had an epic meltdown in kindergarten last week when instead of going to the iPod station as she'd been planning, she was reassigned to read in the classroom library. She fell apart. We spent the evening talking about what it means to be able to adapt in life when things don't go as you expected them to. It was good.
Also, Libby just asked me, "Mom, what would you look like if you weren't wearing a bra." I'll spare you and the rest of the internet my answer.
2 comments:
I sometimes surprise myself with the patience that I am able to muster throughout the day. I think we use it all up in the classroom. No. Seriously. We do. I don't even swear at school, and you KNOW how hard that is for me. :) You're doing great, momma...xo
I'm not going to stalk you - well maybe I am. You are so honest and open - love the transparency!
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