This past Monday was Memorial Day, and this was the last full official week of school where I work. This coming week, we have two days of class, then a baccalaureate Mass for the graduating seniors on Thursday, and then graduation rehearsal on Friday followed by graduation on Saturday. Next Saturday is one of the days I get to wear my full doctoral regalia in an official capacity as part of the participating faculty at the graduation, and that part I am looking forward to. Many of the graduating seniors are students I taught last year when they were juniors, so I have a personal interest in this particular ceremony - some of these kids I am really proud of and happy for, as they really demonstrated success. Others, not so much - there are a few seniors who honestly are graduating because of other things besides their academic progress, but that is not my call to make. I am there to celebrate the ones I have personally had a vested interest in, and those are my success stories and I am proud of them. It is a wonderful thing when an educator gets to see his students get a rite of passage into their adult lives, and I am sure that back over 37 years ago when I graduated high school, some of my teachers had the same feeling. Following graduation, there are three days of finals for my students I have this year, and then a closing faculty meeting before we finish out the year. I am ready for this year to end in all honesty, because it has been crazy and I am glad to see it end. It is also my last year at this particular school, as I will be moving onto better things later once I get the green light regarding where I may be going. However, for a couple of weeks after my last faculty meeting here, I plan on taking a much-needed rest for at least a couple of weeks, and then it will be time to start planning my next steps. And, this is where we are.
I have come a long way in my professional life. I started as a maintenance assistant working with my dad at the Holiday Inn on Jekyll Island, GA back when I was fresh out of high school. I went on then to become a landscape professional, then a prep cook, a security officer, and then an administrative professional before landing real status first as a paralegal and finally as a teacher. I went from earning $4.25 an hour replacing wood screws and light bulbs in hotel rooms to managing a class of 80 students divided into four codes (periods) in a parochial school. This comprises 38 years of work total, almost 40, and I actually feel I have gotten to the apex of my work. I was always, I feel, meant to be an educator, and I am there. While I am not in the best school environment, I have gained valuable experience and that goes a long way. At 56 years old now, this is my vocation until I either retire or am no longer able to work, and I anticipate perhaps 24 more years of that until that happens, as I can retire as old as 80 if I want. My first job started during the summer in 1989, and my current job concludes in a summer 37 years later. The irony of patterns is not lost as I look at other areas of my life too.
It was a summer in 1975, for instance, when I finished up a year in kindergarten right here in Baltimore before moving back to my home state of West Virginia with my mom when I was 6 years old. This year, I am about two miles down the street from where I finished kindergarten in the same city, but the differences are noticeable - a lot happens in 50 years. Whereas back in 1975 I had a lot of family here in Baltimore on the west side of town, I now don't have anyone I am close to - many of my cousins who were born and raised here now live out in the suburbs - who can blame them though? I mean, the Baltimore of 1975 had its issues, but it is like a world away from the Baltimore of 2026, 51 years later. And just like 51 years ago at this time, I am now preparing a possible move out of the city for good - when I leave Baltimore this time, there will be no returning unless it is for a day visit to an attraction or shopping (there are good stores here if you know where to find them). As to where I will be going once the green light turns to leave here, that remains to be seen - I will let the offers speak for themselves. In general though, I have tended to gravitate back to areas I used to live in reverse it seems - I recall then it was from Baltimore to three different areas of my home state (first, Augusta, then Martinsburg, and finally my hometown of Parsons, before moving back to Augusta, then back to Martinsburg, and then an interregnum in Georgia at age 9 before moving back to Augusta again and then Kirby nearby there, and finally back to close to home in Preston County, then Georgia again, and finally breaking that with a 27-year stay in Florida between 1989 and 2016, until moving back to Maryland). I am not sure what this is going to mean as to a new chapter or anything, but I have to be vigilant for anything that happens. My work prospects are targeted for areas I am familiar with, and when the best one opens up that is where we go, simple as that. I ask for my praying friends to keep me in mind in their petitions as I navigate this, and I am hoping within the next couple of months to have some solid answers.
I recall an old song in my record collection which was popularized both by Tommy Dorsey's orchestra in the late 1930s and then recorded by the Mary Kaye Trio in the mid-1950s. The song was called "That Lonesome Road," and its lyrics went something like this:
Look down, look down that lonesome road
Before you travel on
Look up, look up and seek your maker
Before Gabriel blows his horn
Weary toting such a load
Trudging down the lonesome road
Look down, look down that lonesome road
Before, before you travel on
I am facing a sort of "lonesome road" now that I have been on for a few years now, and am feeling like I am trudging down it with a heavy load like the song describes. I have felt that way to some degree or another for about the past 6 years as so much has happened and I am still struggling to keep up with it all. A lot of dust needs to settle, and I need to have a place to settle it before I can sort things out. I feel at times like I am traveling by myself - sure, I know God is there guiding my path, and I accept that, but it would be nice to have a support system of some sort with me. True, Barbara is like a sister (despite the fact we are divorced) and I have some special people far away who care about me, but I feel at times overwhelmed by things too. Sadly, I have cousins really close by, and I haven't seen or talked to many of them in years - the atomization of the extended family in recent decades is a tragic loss to our society, and why we let that happen still astounds me. While I am not hurting financially or anything like that, it would be good to know people are there you could talk to, socialize with, and feel like family. I think this could be alleviated if that factor were interjected. But, I am wandering in my thoughts now - let's get back on course.
As I leave the school I teach at now, there are mixed feelings. I definitely am relieved to be out of there, I am a bit concerned about what comes next, and I also will have people I will miss, as I have made some great friends among the faculty and thankfully we all said we will keep in touch after it is all said and done. I also am going to miss some of my students, as several of them did endear themselves to me and I will remember them for years to come and may talk some of them later. But, there are also other kids I will be grateful to never see again too - good riddance as far as they are concerned. I know that sounds awful, but educators have limits - when you have certain kids that cannot be reached or choose to be jerks despite how fair and helpful you tried with them, there is no hope. A few of those may either thank me or apologize later once real life sets into their own realities, but it may be too late for them when they get that realization. It is tragic for sure, but ultimately it is on them and not on the educator for trying. At any rate, all of this comes with the package for being a professional educator, and over time you begin to refine how you work with students and there is much trial and error to experience doing so. However, I do hope my next educational experience with students is more fruitful - I want kids who will soak up things like a sponge and are eager to learn and take their studies seriously, and in some schools you get more kids like that than you do at others. There will always be the occasional disciplinary issue for sure - we live in a fallen world, so things happen - but feeling like you accomplished something during a long day of instructing young minds is what makes it all worth it. So, we will see what happens.
Those are just some random thoughts as I enter a summer that will anticipate a transition of some sort, and I will keep you posted of the journey. Thanks for stopping by, and will see you next time.