I went to college to become a teacher. I dabbled in other things like design because I was good at it but eventually my desire to work with kids and impact lives in a classroom prevailed so the college of education got me. Admittedly part of that decision could've stemmed from the fact that I struggled with math and I only had to take a methods course in Elementary Education to learn how to teach math, a subject I knew very little about.
Regardless, my image of myself as a teacher who would have fun summer days with my then imaginary children seemed ideal. It resonated well with my potential husband too, so a teacher I became.
Shortly after getting married in college and graduating we moved to Boise and a teaching job was no where to be found. I was told the market was saturated and I should have gone into nursing. Ugh! Who wants to be a nurse? Blood, poop, urine, illness, vomiting, crying (not to mention all that math!)
So after several months doing temporary types of clerical work we decided to start a family before a career. My husbands career was progressing nicely and so our first baby showed up, a bouncing baby boy about a year later.
When I held that little man I suddenly shared something with, I'm guessing, the majority of the population with a newborn. It's that feeling that there is absolutely NO ONE in this world who can take better care of him than ME!
In many ways I was right. But then so are all the other moms and dads that think that. What it meant was that there is no one in this world that can possibly love them more or sacrifice more for that little person than their parents. It provided me with an entirely new perspective on this business of childcare and preschool and a deep respect for those that had to use it despite this feeling that I now knew they all must be experiencing.
Fast forward through some times that we'll come back to eventually, but when I found myself needing a job, really needing a job to support myself, I worked at a childcare for the sole reason that I didn't want to or couldn't leave my 2 year old son. I thought that I'd only do it for awhile. I would grace this industry with my presence and education beyond what was needed and do myself a favor in the process.
heh heh heh...it's funny how life has a way of humbling us without notice.
Amidst the laughter, tears, blood, illness, fun, parents, volunteers, vomiting, staff, owners, urine, poop, tricycles and yes math as an administrator I found myself and my path alongside my son and consecutive 2 daughters, and those dreamy summers I'd envisioned never materialized.
That was over 27 years ago and hundreds and hundreds of children and families ago. A few of those children now bring their children to one of our facilities. It's been a privilege and a joy and here is where I've decided it's time to share some of the incredible stories of this journey.
Parenting is hard. It's made harder when we have to do it alone or in a vacuum with our significant other. It is equal parts joy, fear and anguish. Some people make it look easy and it simply isn't.
The incredible things I've learned from my parents, other parents, all of the amazing teachers I've worked with, my incredible volunteers and board members and raising my own family all contribute to the possibility that I might actually know something that might be of use to other parents.
That all adds up to an equation, that computes to a sum, that in all probability leads to a formula for success, at minimum, a fraction of the time.
And you thought my math hadn't improved in all these years.
I raise families, it's what I do best. Stories of parenting, good and bad reside here for your reading pleasure.
Showing posts with label Preschool. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Preschool. Show all posts
Monday, February 11, 2013
Thursday, February 7, 2013
A Career is born
It was 1959 and my heavily drugged mother yelled out in the
delivery room, “Thank God it’s a girl, I’m so sick of looking at penises!” No self-respecting, pillbox hat wearing,
Catholic mother in a Catholic hospital would yell out such a thing, but I was baby
number 4, number 3 that survived childbirth and the first born girl. I was a treasure she’d long awaited and the
star of the family for a few short years.
About two years later my sister Susie arrived and on her
heels Jeanine. The intruders are pictured above, I'm snuggled up next to my mom. My princess crown slipped
slightly as the sheer numbers increased but also because Susie had some special
needs that my parents were alternately denying and embracing as parents do when
faced with a cognitive disability.
My favorite activity with my parents remained sitting on their
laps having them read me a book. I’d
evidently spent a fair amount of time doing this early on when I was the
reigning princess that I never forgot how incredibly satisfying those moments
were. They became more and more rare as
time went on and I can recall how sad I was about that at the ripe old age of
about 3.
It seems like I spent eons watching my brothers leave for
school, with me begging to be able to go, while my mom reassured me that I
would be next…and best of all when I got there I would learn to read. I was ecstatic.
No more would I have to wait for someone to read me a
book.
I would have the special power to decode those exotic
symbols that took me to places I’d never been, about people I’d never met,
about experiences I never had. I
couldn’t imagine a greater power of any kind.
Fast forward an eternity later and I am finally standing in
my first classroom at my Catholic school a little nervous about the nun whose
veil hung to the floor as she quietly swooshed through the classroom of 25
eager 1st graders. She had us
line up in the front of the classroom where we could clearly see the large
alphabet hung above the blackboard. She
went down the line and pointed with her wooden pointer to each letter and then to one of us standing in
that row to say the letter aloud. The smell of fear suddenly overpowered the lovely first day smell of new crayons and freshly starched uniforms.
As my turn approached not only was I shaking in my newly
purchased black and white saddle shoes, but as was my way, I wanted to throw up
or pee my pants. I did not know any of
the letters and slowly watched as it got closer and closer to me being called
upon. Mortified I muttered a letter that
someone had said a few try’s back and she kindly corrected me (thank GOD for
her) and moved beyond me.
We performed a similar exercise with addition and as I heard
people’s answers to her equations I searched through my limited data bank for
patterns to help me when my name was called.
Again, I failed miserably (in my mind) as she gently told me the
answer. I know there were others that
didn’t know the answers too, but on that day, in my mind, it was just me.
I was furious when I arrived home even after walking the
mile trek, all uphill of course. I
stormed in and announced, “I didn’t learn how to read today!! I’m not going back!” I tried to cover my shame with anger and
vowed not to return.
My mother took me into her arms and told me it takes a very
long time to learn to read and that today was just a start. I cried.
I told her why I was crying…because no one ever read me books anymore
and all I wanted out of this school thing was to learn to read books.
Through my hiccupped explanation she quietly
listened and when I was done, she took a moment that I’m sure she could barely
spare, sat me down on her lap, and read me a book. She patiently pointed out letters and helped
me begin to decode my first book.
My soul soared.
My job today is all around making sure no little person goes
into school on the first day ecstatic to learn, and exits defeated at how
little they know. The early years are
crucial to a child’s future success in school and the more information they
have in their arsenal that first day, the more confident learner they are. Studies show they actually are more likely to
finish school, go beyond high school, and contribute to society in meaningful
ways.
I hope it’s obvious that I did learn to decode just a little
and that I can now scrap with the rest of them as I wrangle with words to
explain why this is important. My life’s
work has been to create places for children and their parents from which to
launch into kindergarten and beyond.
It may not seem so lofty,
but for a quivering little girl in saddle shoes,
it would have meant the world to have known just that one letter.
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