Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Here are the first four pages of my book....

For any of you who may read this, I apologize for leading you to the edge of a cliff and leaving you there! 


 

            She turned the page quietly and put down the book, frustrated to realize that not even Ayla and her cave bear clan could take her mind off of the inevitable.  Tomorrow was coming, and there was nothing she could do to slow down its arrival.  Even the week’s vacation had not been the respite it should have been because the clock was ticking incessantly toward tomorrow morning.  She had spent precious time with her family, read three novels, and focused wholeheartedly on rest and relaxation.  None of that was sufficient.  Her mind drifted to her sleeping children, her husband working diligently in his home office, the latest status updates on Facebook, and finally settled on the lesson plans that were a necessary part of her career.  The thought made her soul cringe.

            Teaching used to be a joy, really.  She would go home at the end of the day thinking, “I can’t believe I actually get paid to do this job!”  She went into education, like countless others, because of the wonderful teachers she herself had been blessed with in life.  Her mother, who read countless books to her, repeated books often enough that she’d memorize them; Mrs. Chaisson, her first grade teacher, who lovingly changed the letters on the page to words and sentences that told stories; Mrs. Conques, her third grade teacher, who allowed her to assign parts and hold rehearsals for a play she had written.  (It was a very bad play, and an equally unmentionable performance, but Mrs. Conques took her seriously, valued her as a writer and a learner, and set her life firmly on course towards becoming a teacher.)  High school English teachers Mrs. Maher, Mrs. Mouton, and of course, Mrs. Delcambre, poured themselves into her, helping her to find her voice and project it loud and clear for everyone to hear.  Her first job as a resource teacher for a group of students with learning difficulties cemented her resolve that she was doing what God had created her to do. After 14 years, the fire was gone, and she agonized over the injustice of it all. 

            She had always been an avid reader.  Summers were spent staying up all night reading, and her father’s weekly trips to the library with her fueled her appetite.  The librarians in her small town library knew her by name, and they had figured out very early that the two book check out rule wasn’t going to work for this little girl.  Her father had assured them that she was actually reading them, and that she treated them like treasured friends, so they allowed her the special privilege of taking home as many books as she could carry.  How often had she met her father the day after the library trip, with all the books stacked near the front door, ready for another trip downtown. 

            She smiled nostalgically as she remembered her parents scolding her for reading her books at the dinner table.  “Put that book away and visit with your family,” they were always saying.  Of course, she could see the wisdom in that mantra now, but at the time it just annoyed her because they didn’t understand.  Not many people could understand the relationship she had with books, and more specifically, the characters in those books.  Closing Little House on the Prairie to sit down with her family and eat was leaving Laura in the clutches of that mean girl, Nellie.  Did her mother honestly expect her to close A Wrinkle in Time without founding out of Meg, Charles Wallace, and Calvin were able to rescue her father from the clutches of It?

            She often lost herself between the pages of her books, and as an adolescent, being lost was preferable to being unnoticed.  As a character in whatever book she was reading she mattered, more so than she ever felt she did in reality.  Identities tried on while reading were experiments in boldness, humor, and angst.  She became so much more than the band nerd misfit she was on the outside.  The characters in her books were her friends, and it was crucial that she be understood and accepted.

            By the time high school graduation rolled around, she was fairly certain teaching was in her future.  After all, she was a great reader, and desperately wanted to impart that desire on her future students.  Her writing was strong, her voice even stronger, and she felt she had something important to share. Her English teachers encouraged her, saying it was a noble profession, and that they believed in her ability to be a good one.  She graduated from college, taught a year of resource, and then finally landed her dream job as a high school English teacher.  The butterflies in her stomach the night before her first day of school were not just fluttering…they were turning somersaults and karate chopping like ninjas.

            Her first English job wasn’t just at any school; it was at her school.  The fact that some of her high school English teachers were now her colleagues made her even more anxious to do an outstanding job.  Her classes were filled with reading, writing, and discussion, and content was taught through thematic lessons on the Holocaust, the Civil Rights Movement, Individualism, and JFK’s assassination, just to name a few.  Was she perfect? No, of course not, but she was effective. 

            A former principal once told her that her teaching methods were the most unorthodox he’d ever seen, but they worked, and she should continue.  She carried that description of her around with her like her very first trophy.  She’d worked hard for that identity, and was almost arrogant about the reality that she didn’t fit into a box.  Textbooks?  You must be kidding.  They remained stacked in the corner of her classroom, pining away for use.  She had purpose, drive, ambition, and moxie.  Read the story and answer discussion questions?  Only when she was sick and needed work for the sub to do with her classes….        

            One day she was reading a Holocaust survivor’s autobiography, and the story moved her to tears.  Physically she sat on the stool in front of her sophomore English class, tears silently falling from her eyes, but mentally she was in that abandoned warehouse in World War II.  Mentally she was Gerda Weismann Klein, and it broke her.  Her chest hurt as she tried in vain to hold in the sobs that threatened to break free.  Suddenly she remembered that she wasn’t alone, and she began to decipher the whispers that were making their way into her conscience…”Y’all, look.  She’s crying,” they whispered.  “For real, she got tears running down her face.”  I heard one of my students say, “I wonder what she readin’, I ain’t ever cried over reading nothing.”

            She came back to reality and shared what she was reading with her class.  As she passed around a signup sheet for the three or four students who were fighting over who was going to get to read her book when she was finished, she sighed a sigh of complete and total fulfillment and joy.  “This is why I became a teacher,” she thought.

            It was hard for her to determine exactly when her passion began to cool.  Pinpointing the cause of the decline was even more difficult.  There were lots of external culprits that were easy enough to name.  Her divorce kicked her ass.  Seriously.  There were days when she didn’t even brush her hair for work, and if it hadn’t been for her son she would have remained hidden from the world until she ended things.  Her divorce caused serious financial problems that her teacher salary wasn’t able to fend off.  Her pantry was bare, and her checking account was as empty as her heart.  She spent her time in the desert, and was a stronger person for it.

            But time heals all wounds, and that was as true in her case as it is for anyone.

            If that wasn’t the cause, then what was? 

 

 

           

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