I used to be a bad girl. I was
self-destructive, angry and fearless. These traits, coupled with a decent
amount of intelligence, took me to all the places bad girls go. For many years,
I bounced from bad decisions to bad jobs to bad relationships. My life was a
mess for a long time, and all I knew how to do was make it worse. I couldn’t
talk to my mother, my father wasn’t around, and my friends were either victims
of their own circumstances or they were busy creating better lives for
themselves. I was alone for a long time, and it felt like I would drown
forever.
Lifeguards come in many guises, and it’s only now that I realize that
most of mine were teachers. Mr. S. in sixth grade was the first man who was
nice to me. Looking back, I realize he was nice to everyone, but the point was,
he was nice to me. Mrs. Q was
demanding and serious, but she yanked my latent public speaking talents right
out of me, and then held me to a standard she had no doubt I could achieve. Mr.
G. was the curmudgeonly 10th-grade English teacher whose biting wit
was matched only by his expansive understanding of both literature and
adolescence. After some time, instead of feeling like I was drowning, it
started to feel like I was treading water, and that didn’t feel so bad.
Most of the students I teach today come from the same background I had.
They have decent homes, food in the refrigerator, and heat that works. On the
surface, they shouldn’t have any complaints. Their schools are safe, one or
both parents are around, and they’ve always got the latest gadgets. They don’t
have the kinds of challenges that kids in urban or rural areas face. Their
lives, however, are not as charmed as they appear.
The despair, disgust and rage that plagued me as an adolescent comes in
different forms in my school, but it’s the same three-headed beast I used to
know so well. While it makes me feel good to hear it, I’m not surprised when my
students tell me I understand them, because I really do. Though it's more years
than I care to remember, the point is I do remember how wretched and lonely
growing up can be, even in the best of circumstances. Whether it’s feeling
neglected by a busy parent or isolated by a group that used to be friendly, the
discomfort of growing up still pinches kids in both large and small ways. I’ve
lived long enough to know that most of the things that my students agonize over
today will be long forgotten tomorrow. But they hurt like hell today, and
tomorrow always looks impossibly far away.
So I look at them and really listen when they tell me some funny, sad or
interesting stories from their lives. I let my stomach growl instead of going
to lunch when a student asks my advice on some matter that may be trivial to
me, but is everything to her. I stop
working when one of my current or former students comes in during the only
quiet time I have before or after school to tell me something they saw or read
or heard about that reminded them of what we did in class. Because despite
their outward appearance, a lot of these kids feel like they’re drowning in
pressure from their parents, their peers and their society.
Every day, my students get the benefit of an adult who is truly there—genuinely interested in them and committed to helping them grow. They stretch themselves to meet the rigorous academic standards I set, then beam with pride when I praise them for their above-grade-level efforts. They meet and exceed my challenges, even though they're in the foggy middle of middle school: too old to be a little kid, too young to be a full-blown teenager. So I do all I can for them, because I remember, and I know. I’m the lifeguard now, and no one is going to drown on my watch.
Sofen teaches at Sparta Middle School in Sparta, N.J.
Why do you teach? What brings you back to the classroom year after year? Let us know by sending in a “Why I Teach” column to Teaching Tolerance. “Why I Teach” submissions should be e-mailed to editor@teachingtolerance.org [2]. Check here [3] for further directions.
Links:
[1] http://www.tolerance.org/author/laura-sofen
[2] mailto:editor@teachingtolerance.org
[3] http://www.tolerance.org/blog/tell-world-why-you-teach