What I am concerned with is my teaching. Now, I'm not here to whine. But, you must know, it is HARD to be a teacher. Well, correction, to be a teacher who wants to be a good teacher. It is easy to be complacent and shift the blame to hundreds of other factors affecting education. But to be a good teacher really takes a lot of mental, physical, and spiritual effort.
I am faced with my failure daily. Every day I see how I could have loved more, been more patient, cut out the sarcasm, started with a clean slate with that kid, treated everyone more fairly, smiled more...the list goes on and on. Every day I see how I've mostly taught to the middle group of students without stretching my "A" students and without catering to my special needs students. Every day I can find examples of how I've put my own needs before the needs of my students.
Teaching is hard when you want to do it right.
Of course I find joy in my work. Like when I sat Jose next to Samuel and all of a sudden Samuel was inspired to start doing his work again. I would look over and the two boys would be on a mission to help each other understand math. Or the day I finally began to understand one of my autistic kids. He is brilliant. He is hilarious. I think he has his own comedy acts going on in his head because sometimes he can't stop laughing after someone said or did something. I just know he is replaying the incident again and again. I've totally done that (grape stomping video). I really love that kid. I love seeing one of my tough boys becoming more kind and generous, willing to look out for the underdog and stand up for his classmates. Even though it annoys me, I enjoy my kids that are too smart for their own good and pray that their creativity takes them to many successes throughout their lives. I hurt when I hear the mother of two of my girls who has been completely uninvolved is dying of cervical cancer and forcing them to care for her despitet he fact she never taught them what to care for someone else looks like. I hurt when I notice sexual bondage already taking hold of my boys. I hurt when my students don't have parents and are begging so much for love that they resort to physically harming their own bodies because the pain they feel is just too much.
...but half the time I forget all of this in the day to day struggle of teaching. Keeping up with the pacing chart and making sure kids understand the convection currents that cause wind becomes the fore front focus of my life.
But there was that one time that Jesus spoke to the winds and the waves to be quiet... Peace! He said. Be still!
It takes a village to raise a child. We've all heard that phrase and nodded in agreement, "true, true," we've said and then went along with out day. Well today I am asking you to not move on in your day until you do me a favor. Pray for me. Ask that I would be full of joy, peace, patience, goodness, gentleness and self-control. Ask that I would see what Jesus sees and love my kids fully. Pray for the 140 seventh grade students that I teach. Ask that they would find peace, safety, and comfort in my classroom. Ask that they would be valued, respected, and loved in my classroom. Ask that as they learn science they would come to know just how amazing God the Creator is.
I have one more request. It takes a village to raise a child. Will you commit to pray for me and my classroom? Many days I feel the need for an entire village to be in my classroom with me, at my side, helping me give these kids life. Your prayers would mean more than I can express.