Saturday, February 9, 2013

Like a Crime Scene...

It's been a long haul. I shouldn't complain as I've been so incredibly blessed. So blessed. However (here I go!), in addition to teaching 34 rambunctious fifth graders, life has thrown a few curves.

Mom passed in December which is hard enough. I happen to be her personal representative and let me just say that the work involved is way more than I ever expected (fax this, Fed Ex that, provide this, prove that, this account number, that policy number, you have no idea unless you've done it). And do you know what? All of these people and organizations I'm dealing with, none of which happen to be in my state and only some of which happen to be in my time zone, want things done during business hours. I am just a tad busy during business hours. If I can't reach them during my 10:30 a.m. recess break, then all that important business has to wait until the next day. We are slowly getting there, but it will take a long time still. Mom was tougher than I can ever hope to be and Dad says Mom would be proud of the way I'm handling things, but it's a difficult thing to be in charge.

The car accident was miraculous. It was inconvenient. It must have stressed me out way more than I thought. Again, so blessed. No injuries, a wonderful teacher driving me to work for a week, supportive husband...it really was smooth as silk. However, it just grinds me to shop for cars because I have zero trust for any sales person and write off every single thing they tell me as a bald faced lie. If I hear, "We just want to earn your business," one more time, I might, I don't know, say it back to them in a snotty tone of voice.

This is how slimy the dealerships can be. We got pre-approved online for financing at our credit union before we even started to shop. I had to appear personally at my credit union for matters concerning my mom's affairs (how does one cash a check made out to one's deceased parent?). Since I was there, I asked a couple of questions about the loan as we had planned to car shop the following day. I know they are all about making money too, but those credit union ladies are so great. First there was one, and then two, and then three. I had three ladies warning me about some of the shady tactics they've seen dealerships try with their members. And sure enough, our dealership tried one of those tactics. Together, we and the credit union were able to fight them off, but I still wonder, "Why did I have to deal with that on top of everything else?"

As soon as we got the car, my immune system fell apart. I woke up sick and scooted right into the doctor. Got treated for pneumonia! Pneumonia moves in so fast! My doctor said, "I'm not even doing a chest x-ray, we're just going to get you started." I've had it several times (before AND after the pneumonia shot...FYI, the shot keeps you from getting "the killer kind" of pneumonia). I finished my antibiotic and am still using another medication along with my inhaler. I never missed a day of school for this. I just couldn't. I considered taking a day off, but couldn't handle the thought of writing out lesson plans for someone else. I heard that one day, our district had 300 subs because so many teachers were sick. I just couldn't deal with it. So, I ended up making it through my days and then resting as much as possible when I was off duty. K is so great about letting me heal and taking on extra chores. I'm starting to perk up!

The dealership keeps emailing. They want me to fill out a survey. I'm not doing it. Their survey is so completely rigged. Our sales guy was pleading, "This is like my report card." Yeah, well, they have these little percentages listed with the ratings: Excellent (100%), Very Good (59%), and it goes down from there. They keep saying, "If you need to rate us less than Excellent, please talk to us about it so we can make it right!" Did you notice there's no possible way to rate them between a perfect A+ and an F? They won't let you score them anywhere between 60% and 99%. So I'm not going to fill out their stupid survey. It's so biased.

I'm almost to the part about "the crime scene." I promise. Just hang in there a little longer.

Nursery. I am currently serving in the stake primary organization of my church (the children's organization, more particularly, the nursery, which is children between 18 months and 3 years of age). It's been fun going around to all of the wards for their ward conferences and seeing all of the amazing things happening in the nurseries. There are some wonderful teachers and leaders out there providing top-notch experiences for those kidlets. My favorite? Kids painting rocks with water. They don't make a peep for at least 20 minutes. Wish I could kiss the person who invented this! In our stake, they like to do all of the ward conferences in January and February. So, I've already been to 5 wards and we have 3 to go. Sometimes, I am in church for six hours on a single Sabbath. I don't mind it at all, it's fun! I'm just not used to it. On top of everything else, this is something new, additional, more demanding on my time than what I was doing before. I happily accepted the opportunity to serve, please note! I'm just getting all these curve balls at once!

And now, for a re-cap of this past week. On Monday, we had what are called Collaboration Presentations. This means that our grade level team got to present to our school community council (parents, administrators, no pressure at all) about what we are doing in fifth grade and how we're doing it. We get scored and paid according to our scores. Our team did well presenting together and we worked together to prepare, but, you know, it's a wee bit stressful to lay it all out there and then take questions. On Tuesday, our principal wanted to meet with each faculty member individually to "see how things are going." So great to be able to meet together, but it does translate to more time away from the classroom. Wednesday and Thursday were parent teacher conferences. I won't even try to explain the preparation that goes into this, but if you teach, you understand. Also, some folks think that conferences are during the day while the kids stay home. Nope. We taught all five days this week and had conferences in addition to everything else in the evenings. Our hours for those days were 7:30 a.m.-7:30 p.m., but some of us show up early and stay late out of necessity. It's great fun to meet with the parents and let them know how successful their child is--I really enjoy conferencing--but it's also very wearing. On Thursday morning, I had to leave my classroom (do you even care? are you still reading?) for two back-to-back IEP meetings for a couple of my students. This necessitated making lesson plans for the people who would be covering my class in my absence. More conferencing. More time away from my kids. And just as I returned to my classroom, a boy tripped on his chair, hit his head, and started gushing blood. I quickly escorted him to the office. Poor guy, it was just an accident...he wasn't doing anything wrong. Just another instance in my list of crazy. Got through conferences and showed up again to teach on Friday. I was asked to interview with the assistant superintendent to evaluate my principal (it's a normal evaluation procedure in our district). I had a great conversation with that guy and was able to share so many positive things about my principal (he said, "Say that again, I'm writing it down as an exact quote!"), but of course, it meant that I was out of the classroom again while someone else covered. Bottom line, I survived this busy week with extra stress! We had a snowstorm blowing in, so I left school to get home safely and now finally, I'm getting to the crime scene.

K got home from work sometime between 5:45 p.m. and 6:00 p.m. He noticed my shoes, my backpack, and my winter coat discarded and strewn between the front door and the dining room, left in random places where I had dropped them. He saw that I had been on the internet checking Facebook because I didn't shut anything down. Guilty as charged--electricity waster! Amusing to him was that I had used tongs to reach high up into his special treat cupboard to snag an unopened package of Winter Oreo Red Creme Chocolate Sandwich Cookies with 4 Fun Winter Shapes. The treat cupboard door was left wide open with the tongs on the counter along side the torn package of cookies, some missing. He proceeded to the bedroom where he found me "sawing logs" while Downton Abbey's Season 3 Episode 1 was blaring away on my Kindle on the night stand next to me. He turned it off and thought to himself, "Poor girl, it's been a long week for you."

I woke up at 8:15 p.m. and grabbed three mandarin oranges to eat next to K on the couch while he watched basketball. We held hands, never saying much. We went to bed after the game and I had no problem going back to sleep. I love that he understands. He just let me sleep. He fixed his own dinner, which he often does. He's willing to let me have what I need. I will cook for him today and we will spend time together. All of this is nothing. Our little trials are really nothing much. We're just practicing for when life gets really challenging.

2 comments:

  1. I think you were inspired to take last summer off and "store up" reserves for all this crazy! I think maybe you need to take this summer off too....
    You guys sound like you are experiencing as much crazy as we are right now. Take care of yourselves!
    *hugs*

    ReplyDelete
  2. We're just practicing for when life gets really challenging.

    What a good perspective! I'm feeling a bit weepy just thinking about it.

    ReplyDelete