I started thinking this morning, about my six years of bliss
– birth to six years old. Ah, how
wonderful those days were. I may have had a scheduled bedtime, but to help me
relax, I always had someone to read me a story. Oh the places we’d go in those
stories!
I had no set time to get up in the morning; and, other
dressing and hygiene, as long as I didn’t get into or make any trouble, I was
fairly free to do just about anything my heart desired. That was within the
boundaries of my home in my younger years, expanding accordingly to neighbors’
homes as I grew older.
As long as I treated others, and my mother, with respect
things got along very well. I mean, if Mom was happy, Dad was happy. We liked
to keep Dad happy because he worked such long days and still had man’s work to
do when he got home at night. Come on you equal-righters, cool your tools. I
was a child of the 50s. That’s the way things were done.
I had it better than some kids, since my elementary school
had no Kindergarten. I had the extra year of bliss. Not that getting up at a
set time and pleasing another adult was that awful. At least for half a day.
Now a whole day was another story. That was when my troubles
began. First grade. Not as much the getting up as trying to keep another woman
happy. I had Mrs. Heck for a teacher in first grade and she was actually not
too hard to please, compared to Mrs. Discher and Mrs. Weiser in second and
third grades. Fourth was the most traumatic, with Mrs. Kuhns. It was the first
time I got slapped and it was for calling the teacher’s pet what she was – a teacher’s
pet. I’m not sure which was worse, the slap or the recess I missed. I think the
stinging of my cheek wore off faster than recess was.
I spent far too much time day-dreaming. At least that was
what most my teachers reported on parent’s night. That and the fact I wasn’t
doing as well as I should have. I didn’t know how in the world they knew how
well I should have been doing. After all, I was still learning. And, it wasn’t
like they spent a lot of time getting to know me. How could they with 25 to 30
other students demanding their attention, while I on the other hand, preferred
living in my own private world.
I won’t even get into junior and senior high school, except
to say it was a night mare. Sometimes in my worst nightmares even today I’m
back there, still trying to remember the combination to my locker or figure out
what was my next class since I lost my class schedule.
I would say that if someone offered me a million dollars to
go back to those high school days I would think about it. If they said I had to
go for all six years, there would be nothing to think about. The only million would be the number of years
that would have to pass before I’d even consider it.
I cried the first day each of my sons started school. A lot
of mothers did. We all said it was because we’d miss them, but if truth be
known I suspect they, like I, were feeling horrible about the end of our child’s
bliss. In reality, that bliss had been
lost a few short years earlier when they’d started pre-school.
Pre-school, another sign of the times. It was the 70s when
mothers left their homes and sought careers. For some – like me -- it was
necessity. For others it was a time when we realized men were not the only ones
who could “be all they can be.”
It was a strain pretending I didn’t sympathize with my sons
every time they came home with a problem in school. I couldn’t let on that
those same years had been the worst times of my life. Too this day, I must remain silent as my
young, innocent grandchildren go off to school.
I must sound excited for them when I ask how school has been. Though, strange as it seems, they actually do
sound as though they enjoy it.
Maybe now I know why. I ran into one of my teachers a few
years ago at a writer’s group meeting. To my chagrin he remembered me. Whatever
I said that instigated his next comment, I will ever be grateful for what he
said. He told me that when I was in school, teachers were not prepared for
students like me. Before I could take
that to mean anything derogatory, he continued explaining that they were not
taught different ways to teach different students. Again, one had to listen to
the entire context to understand he was dishing out a compliment.
Yes, he was telling me that because I had such a creative
mind, I couldn’t be taught with the old standards. He was actually pleased I’d
turned out so well.
Okay, I added that part, because he did seem pleased to see
I’d fared well.
So, I’m actually still in my bliss. I’m doing what I always
wanted to do. Allowing my mind to drift from possibility to possibility as I
try to answer the question, “What if?” Yes, I’m a writer.
You can find my latest novel here.
I love your article and blog by extension dear.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.owenhabel.blogspot.com
There were a lot of shortcomings to the way teachers used to teach back in the day.
ReplyDeleteYes, I lived through some of them. I'm happy it is different now.
ReplyDeleteI totally agree with your teacher, who made the comment telling you that because you had such a creative mind,you couldn’t be taught with the old standards.
ReplyDelete