Reflections

Who saves?

Teachers change lives.

Today, a former student of mine sits alone behind bars and a handful of charges that won’t go away. It isn’t capitalization or The Odyssey that whirs through his mind this afternoon. He doesn’t fill out a Venn diagram comparing and contrasting himself with Romeo (same: they have both now killed a man in a moment of desperation—different: he did it for meth, not for friendship). Perhaps, you’ll say, somewhere in the fuzzy back of his brain, he catches glimpses now and then of the themes we tried to untangle together in the depths of tenth grade—the centrality of love, what to do when you’re depressed, why faithfulness matters, why you matter no matter what. But my money isn’t on it. The lessons are gone, flushed down the drain of his life before. Every hour I spent haggling him to keep reading with us, we’re on page 197you still need three more sentenceswhat are your long-term goals? can you write about that?pay attention—no horseplay in class—your grade is falling; you need to catch up—is an investment soured and spent.

You could step in and encourage me here: “You never know, Sarah. He might remember those things still. You made an impact! Something you said will come back to him ten, fifteen years from now!”

I’d rather stay in the realm of the plausible, though. Fast forward fifteen years, and something could give, but it won’t be an article he remembers reading in English I. He’ll meet a man he looks up to who says the sentence he needed to hear, or he’ll jump on his luck and land funny and finally be ready to admit what he needs. I hope that it happens, but I’ll tell you this: in all probability, it won’t have a darn thing to do with me.


Somewhere along the line, teaching stopped being enough for teachers. I guess we don’t value reading, writing, and arithmetic as valuable goods in and of themselves anymore, because instead we repeat like a mantra that we’re not just educators, we’re life changers. Mother and father, sun and moon, we teach and raise and entertain. We are students’ conscience, their source of love, and we aim to form not only their heads but also their souls, their moral compass and their dreams and perspective. They are falling, falling down into darkness, but we find them and catch them and save them entirely, and ever after they are firm and secure. “I owe it all to my tenth grade English teacher,” they say even as adults. “She gave of herself and changed my life. She is the reason why I am where I am today.”

This happens, halfway, sometimes. It’s true. Teachers talk to the same set of teenagers every day, and as a result we both know more of what’s happening in that kid’s world than most do and we’re also able to speak in a great deal of influence and love. Sometimes, our little efforts stick, and we see a kid about-face from a path of destruction towards stability and peace. There’s nothing like it; transformation like that is a miracle every time. It’s a job perk and a payoff that keeps us chugging along through the other 364 grimy days of attitude and tardy bells and late work to grade.

In far more cases, each of us contributes one drop of wisdom and kindness each into the complex universe of a singular soul. We make up the village that it takes to raise one kid well: teachers and more teachers, coaches and friends, first boss, nuclear family, grandma, Uncle Jerry and Mom’s best friend. At the end of the day, past remembering who said which truth or what sacrifices were made, an adult steps into the sunlight and stands strong, and that’s all.

And then there’s a kid in a jumpsuit who can read and write a little better than he did at 15, although the fact hardly seems relevant to any of what came next.

And somewhere along the line, the storyline changed from “sometimes teachers make a bigger difference than the lesson plan” to “we have to change the life of every kid we teach or else we’re nothing.” This is now who we are and what we do. It’s part of the job description. And when we don’t see it bear out in reality, we consider ducking into fantasy to imagine that no, no, surely we changed that one too; surely we’re still the hero in this hoarse tragedy. Because if not, then it’s meaningless; the work was all in vain. We have failed to rescue every one. We are not the God who saves.

Teachers do as much good as we can, but we are limited mortals with only so much to give. These grand, sweeping statements only set us up for a chronic cycle of guilt and pride—I didn’t do enough for this one—I’m letting them all down; I can’t snap half of them out of their depression—I did it; I am the sole reason this child has recovered. I am the source of her life. I am a giver and a lover and a saint. We are anything but the in between, the merely competent and ordinary. If we have not achieved Superman’s stature, that is our fault, our flaw. Tomorrow, we will try again harder.

Yet this is our fate, though we try to outrun it: we are ordinary people, though we long to think ourselves gods among men. But hope still flashes now and then like lightning for the boy who has to learn to live with blood on his hands, because it’s not up to teachers to save the planet. It’s not the social workers who will bail us out, or the church professionals, or the counselors, or the politicians with their endless programs and money.

Above it all, above it all, there is a God who saves.

Reflections

How to Make Toddlers Tolerable

A handful of strange truths: kids love it when I play with them, I really want to be a mom, I don’t like playing with kids, and I’m terrified of being locked up in a house with them if my own dream comes true. Contradictory? Eh.

“You’d make a great mom,” my fiancé says. I’ve heard it many times before—but inside, I’m not so sure. I’d make a great AUNT, I want to correct him. The truth is that my toddler patience has an expiration date of approximately one hour, some days more, some days less. During that hour, I know how to enchant a child so that they’re giggling themselves into little pretzels, and it’s great, but it also feeds my dread of real parenting. Because invariably, silly-happy pretzel children begin to beg me incessantly for nonstop MORE. They follow me around the house, sniffing me out like beagles if I try to hide in an unused bedroom and get some actual work done. They defy all adult conversations that I so desperately long for, shouting SARAH SARAH LOOK SARAH LOOK AT THIS HEY SARAH over anything I try to say to another human. They wear me out, and then I deflate and stop being fun. But even then they still want more, because they can only remember that deliriously magical Lego smashing session from five hours ago and not the digital-clicking bore of an adult from two minutes ago. I am doomed to children by my own fondness for children.

Aunt: the person who gets to drop in, wild up someone else’s toddler, and then waltz back into her own easy-breezy life when the fun wears off, retaining soaring levels of popularity with the toddler (and a subsequent ego boost) in exchange for minimal work.

Mom: the ultimate prisoner.

But now, I’m actually on the verge of becoming an aunt for the very first time, and that plus the realization that I’m about to move away from my two sweet almost-nephews has given me the energy to stretch that hour longer than necessary. And yesterday, I remembered why back when I babysat toddlers for eight hours a day, three days a week, I actually thought that playing with kids was fun:

Because playing with kids isn’t fun—but teaching them is.

When I’m only trying to play with littles, then I’m mindlessly matching their every whim. You want another round of making car sound effects while we zoom down the couch? Okay. Car sound effects, take 116. I want to smash my head into the TV screen, but that would be a bad example for my watching little, so I don’t. But when I’m actually scheming new ways to infect my unsuspecting little with knowledge, independence, growth, maturity, and practice, I’m back in the driver’s seat. I’m creatively scheming new ways to sneak competence, goodness, life, and blessing into a three-year-old whose entire attention is currently consumed by Hotwheels. This is a game, because the rules are a little different every time, and I’ve got to feel my own way forward: how can I combine fun play, meaningful relational connection, and new knowledge or skills all into one Pied Piper moment?

Vocab is an easy go-to and always important, and itty-bitties absorb it all up without so much as a question half the time. Just try it: pick a new word and start working it into your play as often as possible during a few sessions in a row. Act it out when you can. Say it back to back with its definition: “I’m at the peak of the mountain! I’m at the very top of the mountain!” or “This hula hoop is fragile. It breaks easily.” Toddlers are wickedly smart learners, because they just take it all in, and then all of a sudden they’re parroting that exact phrase back to you—correctly—without you ever asking them to say it. Absolutely incredible.

But I also love telling them what I know about life, because this false idea that toddlers only care about their own toys and kid shows is silly. They actually get a blast out of learning. “Teach me, Sarah!” “Okay. What should I teach you?” “Teach me about French fries.” So first we talk about how it comes from potatoes, and that brings us to the fact that the carrot on his plate was originally underground, and then we’re onto the digestive system. I make a rhythmic chant out of it and trace the journey of every item on his plate: first you chew the rice up NOM NOM NOM, then you swallow it GULP, and then it falls dooooowwwwwn your throat and it falls dooooowwwwwn your esophagus, and where does it land?! “IN THE WATER IN MY BELLY!” That’s right; it lands in your stomach SPLISH! And then the stomach acid GURRRRRRR breaks it down into teeeeny-tiny pieces, and those go all the way through your body and make you STRONG! We do it again and again, and boom, he’s got it. Eventually, I add on intestines and waste. I mean, come on—why not? He’s three, but he’s perfectly capable of understanding the digestive system, and he’s fascinated by it.

And it isn’t just facts alone that are fun; teaching includes skills and developing a strong internal locus of control. Sometimes, weaving moments of growth into our play is as simple as gently saying no when he asks me to get something for him and reminding him, “You’re a big boy. I think you can get it.” Then when he does, I’m quick to swoop in with the praise and recognition of a job well done. Sometimes, it looks like making my stuffed animal talk about his emotions to practice healthy emotional processing, even if it’s at a simplified (and constantly silly!) level. And sometimes, it’s as small as holding the baby’s arms up to help him practice assisted walking again and again and again. It doesn’t really matter what domain each of them is growing in at the moment—I just get a rush out of seeing them conquer something new, spread their wings a little further, grin as they push their way forward toward becoming good men.

Here’s what’s strange: we’ve co-opted play from its original intent and dumbed it down to a pastime for kids when it was always meant to be about the serious work of turning into adults. Okay, that was admittedly an oversimplification; play also exists to simply be play. But if that’s all it ever is, then half its joy becomes stunted, because it was never meant to end there. Of course most adults don’t enjoy playing with children; we weren’t supposed to! Though the silliness itself can be delightful at times, our role isn’t supposed to stop there—we have the power to invest play with deeper meaning every time we jump in. Kids were made to naturally love playing and, yes, learning—and maybe it’s just me, but I suspect that adults were made to naturally love equipping kids to grow and mature in healthy ways.

You know what’s fun? Watching little people flourish.