Saturday, August 31, 2019
"You are my sunshine..."
Thursday, June 27, 2019
On being 'straight' at Pride...
Sunday, May 19, 2019
"I've got some news about Rachel..."
Monday, April 15, 2019
I knew his face before I knew his name...
Wednesday, April 3, 2019
Their successes are my successes...
Professionally, I'm just coming into my own as an educator and feeling like I have a separate identity besides 'mom.' I absolutely love what I do. But, an income-driven job, which fills my bank account, is much less rewarding than the one which fills my heart.
Being a mom has always been what motivates me.
Being a mom has always been what fulfills me.
I remember back to when I had given birth to our first son, Braxton. My Grandma Belobrajdic was still alive and she looked at me while I was holding him. She said, "You're going to be such a good mother." I've repeated this story many, many times over the years. As she said that, I felt a calm come over me and I never once doubted my abilities to be a mom from that moment on.
While I am realistic enough to know there are many times I've failed my kids because I could have made different choices or ones which would have better fit a certain situation, I also know each decision I made or will make is done with their best interests in mind.
Everything is based on love for those four.
As our kids have grown into adults, I marvel at their successes. They've each achieved more than I ever had dreamed.
I feel their successes are my successes.
What I'm most proud of is how they treat the people in their lives. I don't necessarily mean only the people they love, but everyone they run across.
The hardest part of being a parent is knowing your kids see and hear all you do.
You are the first example in their lives. It can be daunting and overwhelming to always be the one your children model themselves after.
My own mom was the best example of this I can remember. While she had distinct opinions of how people should act or react in any given situation, she treated people with kindness and respect. "Kill them with kindness," she would say. She was one of the kindest people I've ever known.
I haven't tried to fool myself that I am anywhere as compassionate or caring as my mom was, but I do feel I try extremely hard to follow her example.
She would be so happy to see her grandchildren have inherited her genuinely kind heart.
I feel their successes are my successes.
Today, our son Blaize is starting a new job in Chicago. It's a big step for him. While this is a professional success and I'm thrilled for the opportunities it will allow him, I am even prouder of the large community of friends and colleagues he has amassed since moving to the windy city a few years ago. His energy, empathy, and enthusiasm toward others gives him a solid base for a successful life.
He's succeeding because of who he is.
He's succeeding because of how he treats people.
These are the days I cherish.
All we want, as mom's, is to give the world the best of us...in the form of our kids.
Our next generation.
May my kids continue to be better than I am.
May they continue to treat others with more kindness than I have.
Isn't that success?
It is what it is.
p
Thursday, January 3, 2019
Back to 1...
A clean slate.
365 days suddenly reset all the way back to 1.
It's a do-over, of sorts.
A chance to take a moment to think about what you'd like to do.
Some people call them resolutions. I don't make resolutions. Mainly, it's because I know I can't keep them. They are made in the pressure of the moment and often are too lofty and unattainable to make any real sense.
The older I get, I’m starting to realize that the new year is more like a hope for less heartaches and more blessings then the 365 days just passed.
Everyone suffers heartaches.
Some of us more than others. And, unfortunately, a single string of 365 days can often bring more than one’s fair share.
I have no idea why this happens. I struggle, as others do, when searching for the meaning behind multiple heartaches.
Back to 1.
In 2018, we lost Ed's mom. It was 16 years earlier when we lost mine.
Visiting Ebenezer Cemetery now, we walk from one mom's grave to the other, thankful that they are buried so close. I think they would have liked that.
For us, well, we're the 'parents' now and we don't like it. They're supposed to still be here. Both of our mom's were taken too soon.
Ed is an only child and he is lost without his mom. Seeing his grief brings mine back to the surface.
I tend to push the loss aside and try not to think of the intensity. Of how mad it makes me. Of how sad it makes me. Of how devastatingly lonely it makes me. It never leaves me. Grief...sitting just beneath the surface...bubbling up at unexpected times.
Ed is going through what I did. Trying to figure out how you go day-to-day without your parent. I know what's ahead for him. It won't be easy. I know this because I am still struggling all these years later.
Back to 1.
The new year is another attempt.
Can you successfully make it through? What does that mean to you? For you?
I look at my friends who have suffered similarly devastating losses over the years. It could be argued theirs are even harder as they've lost a child or a spouse. Those are losses I've not had. My heart aches for them...for the loss I can't even imagine.
I think of my kids. They've suffered the same losses as we have, and, yet they are impacted in other ways. No grandparents left. Ed's mom was the last grandparent they'd had and she was the only one in their lives since my mom's death. Grandchildren are supposed to be surrounded by their grandparents. Grow up with them. Know the actual person and not just the stories we tell.
Back to 1.
This year it's down to just the kids and us. It happened earlier than it should have...yet here we are.
We’ll be okay. We have each other.
Somehow the heartaches turn into those blessings I hope for each year. I only need to look to find them. It may only be a glimmer. But there are blessings in the most unexpected places.
When your heart is broken, you draw those you love even closer to you. You begin to pay attention to the little things. You try to laugh a bit more than you had before. You cherish the togetherness of friends and family. Ed tells me not to sweat the small stuff. I'm trying. I really am.
Blessings will come.
They always do.
While I would prefer to have never had the heartaches, I understand we must suffer loss as a part of life. It's the natural progression.
No, I didn't make any resolutions this year.
Instead, I will simply take one day at a time.
A year's journey awaits.
Heartaches.
Blessings.
2019 will be what it's supposed to be. Arm in arm with those I love.
It is what it is.
p
Tuesday, November 20, 2018
"Tell me how you think it's going," she said.
I've taken (and passed with an A!) the first course needed to secure my LBS1 (Learning Behavior Specialist) endorsement.
I've met, and fallen in love with, 6 students with special needs.
I've met, and am gaining immense respect for, the 1:1 paraprofessionals and nurses who work directly with our students.
There's no two ways to say it, this special education world is one you need to work in to understand. While I'm not saying it's some big secret that only a few can uncover, I am saying it's indescribable unless you walk this walk each and every day.
Recently, I had my first formal teaching observation. Part of the process is my submission of a 'reflection' on this part of the school year.
My boss told me to simply write about what's happened so far.
"Tell me how you think it's going," she said.
So, I decided the best way to do this is to write how I've felt in these past months. How being a special ed teacher has made me look at not only my students, but my own classroom staff. How I view my students parents has begun to evolve. How the blessing of a little school, where I have my classroom, has been the unexpected sunlight brightening the entire picture.
My students.
Little mysteries waiting to be solved. My students are "my little onions" because they have so many layers begging to be peeled. Unless you have a true passion for this work, you can easily be lost in the minute-to-minute movements and minutiae. These kids are teaching me to step back, take a breathe, and keep the bigger picture in view. It's not day-to-day in our classroom. We go by moments. I'm learning to celebrate our small victories because they are victories and we all need to be excited about the positive successes. My students may be classified with special needs but they are just kids. They have a right to learn. I'm doing my best to make sure they have every opportunity they deserve to be successful.
My classroom staff.
Before I was a teacher, I was a classroom aide and a 1:1 aide in special ed. This unique perspective benefits the way I look at the adults matched with our students. It's a tough job. It's a tough job. It's a tough job. I wrote that sentence three times because it deserves that much space on the page. For little pay, we ask these individuals to do the work of many people all by themselves. We ask them to do some things many would refuse to do. I try to add humor (sometimes laced with sarcasm) to our day's together. And, laughter! We laugh. A lot. That saying 'if you don't laugh, you'll cry' fits us to a 't.' This many female personalities in one small classroom can be challenging and I'm still learning to navigate my way. I try to let them know how very much I appreciate all they do and I also try to be their cheerleader and supporter. I couldn't make the progress I am with these students without the classroom staff. We call ourselves the 'hot-mess express.' I wouldn't have it any other way. We love this mess.
My student's parents.
Before you judge a man, walk a mile in his shoes. How true. I was blessed with four healthy children. While being a parent is the hardest (and most rewarding) job I've ever had, I never have had to live the additional facet of parenting a child with special needs. These months in this classroom have shown me I need to be more patient and less judgmental. Yes, I have expectations for my students while they're in my classroom but they leave me at the end of a school day. Parents never get a 'day off' and they are parents for life. It's easy for me to push my expectations onto the parents. It's easy to be judgmental. The harder thing to do would be to NOT JUDGE what we don't first-hand experience on a daily-basis. I'm a work in progress in this regard. I will get there.
My little school classroom.
Griggsville-Perry Elementary school. I'd never been inside this school before I came with the previous teacher and my boss this summer to see the room which become my new weekday home. What a gem of a school! The staff is i.n.c.r.e.d.i.b.l.e. I remember asking my boss how this school responded to kids with special needs and she said this is where she comes to 'get happy!' The staff knows our students names and greets them in the halls. The administration comes in and out of the classroom and we're always happy to see them. I sometimes sit at my desk before or after school and hear the teachers in my hallway speaking to each other. There's 'Hello, friend!' welcomes from many and laughter echoing down the corridor. I smile each time I hear this! I feel safe here. I feel accepted. I feel supported. How lucky am I that this is where I was placed in my first special ed position? I'll forever be indebted to the GP staff for making me feel like I belong here. Proud to be a GP Tornado!
"Tell me how you think it's going," she said.
I know only one thing for certain.
I'm where I'm supposed to be at this time of my life.
All the rest continues to fall into place.
It is what it is.
p