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Multigenerational Mom Muses on Twin Toddlers & Twenty-Something Daughters

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graduation

The Class of 2024: Oh, How I Love Them

Every year, I write about graduation and reflect on my takeaways for the year. On how I remember these seniors. And I knew instantly and without a doubt, that I will forever remember the class of 2024 for the relationships we forged together.

I learned quickly that I would need to work hard to build connections with this group because their high school career began with the Covid virus destroying not just immune systems, but also long-established secondary school social systems.

Isolated behind masks and six feet of distance, these kiddos functioned on fractured school relationships: class sizes chopped in half, lunch trays taken to study hall, traffic patterns clearly delineated; staircases assigned to go up and staircases designed to go down (and never the twain should mix).

The traditional mix and match grab bag of cafeteria seating, club sign ups, and school dances weren’t in place. Strangers remained strangers and even friends were kept at arms’ length. They struggled to form connections with their peers and their teachers.

Things had improved to near-normal by their junior year, but even so, once I got them as seniors, they were still hesitant to put themselves out there – especially with their teachers. They had known invisibility thanks to wearing masks as freshmen, and I think they still suffered from not feeling fully seen and understood.

I’ve always greeted students at the door. Always. It’s nothing new. But what was new for me this year was making sure I said their name as I greeted them EVERY time they entered my classroom. EVERY time I called on them in class. EVERY time I saw them around town. EVERY SINGLE TIME.

Saying someone’s name is a simple thing, but such a big deal. It feels personal, makes them feel special, feel seen. It truly does help build trust.

After learning their names, I made it a point to learn something special about each kid: their activities, hobbies, favorite colors, artists, after-school jobs or after-high-school plans.

Somewhere between the greetings and the shared knowledge, they began to open up with me and with their classmates — talking to people beyond their cliques and sharing more than just weekend plans.  

We always explore real world topics in Advanced Comp. Tough world topics. And so many of these students have dealt with (or are still dealing with) tough, real world topics — more than any other group I’ve taught.  Since the pandemic shutdown, addictions, abuse, and food scarcity has multiplied, while family units and financial security has broken down. These traumas made this group starved for connection, but wary of sharing.

But through the careful building of a safe space in my classroom, students began sharing the good, the bad, and the ugly in their lives. Together, we learned about one another’s struggles, gifts, triumphs, and traumas. Yes, together.

I share too.

Because my job as an English teacher is to teach students to find, hone, and use their voices. And if I were to remain silent, they would see me as a hypocrite. As an imposter. A fake. But I’ve learned if I share my genuine self with them, they are much more likely to do the same with me.

And share we did. Our hearts and our minds, our joys and our sorrows, our goals, and our aspirations.

This year’s group of seniors is something special. And they’ve carved themselves a niche in my heart where they will forever remain. This group of kids who loves everything from chick fil a waffle fries to 3D nail designs, Patrick Mahomes on Sunday afternoons and TikTok all night, every night, the kindergarten classroom where they interned, the Atlanta Braves, the Kendrick/Drake beef, the tattoo they designed in honor of their father’s memory, the slingshot dropped and found in the dirt in Mexico, their grandmother’s bracelet, their mother’s sacrifices, being first in their family to graduate high school or attend college or both.

I am so incredibly proud of this senior class, and I cannot wait to rejoice in their future accomplishments. We are eternally connected.

Oh, how I love them

For Teachers, May is the Cruelest Month

T. S. Eliot said it was April, but he would be wrong. For schoolteachersn, it’s most definitely May.

Some would argue I’ve gone completely off the deep end. That May brings summertime and a stress-and-student-free stretch beneath a benevolent sun.

And some of that is true. School years are tough and summer offers a reprieve. But in teaching, we find ourselves anchored to children for a season of their lives and we become invested in them all, those who flourish and those who flounder.

We love watching the stellar students sail like racing vessels, sleek and smart, seamlessly navigating subject matter. They make teaching an easy, breezy ride, and in these instances, May is a celebration.

And we take pride in working with the ones who struggle to learn the ropes, who make waves and challenge us to batten down the hatches and get creative. When they turn the corner and make up leeway, we cheer them on, and May is a momentous and magical month.

But it’s the other students – the ones caught between the devil and the deep blue sea –the distracted, the detached, the loose canons and the ones taking on water, going under, fighting against the current, or worse, not fighting at all– these students are the ones who make May the cruelest month.

Because these kids live in troubled waters and we feel helpless against their storms. They battle bleak circumstances, hungry bellies, haunted pasts, and their futures are so heavy that many will sink. And in May we find ourselves parting ways before finding a way to get them to safety. We’ve tried. And we’ve failed.

We’ve failed them.

So we watch from the pier as the sun sets on the horizon of another year, praying that somehow, somewhere, someone will find them, reach them, get them out of the raging storms before it’s too late.

Yes, we know we can’t save them all, but the ones that we haven’t saved haunt teacher souls so very, very much in May — and forever more.

The Class of 2023

These kids.

These beautiful, incandescent kids

Floating from grad party to grad party 

In bright dresses, pale shirts,

Cowboy boots, and sneakers.

Lightning bugs in their element,

flickering among the tree-lined, sloping lawns.

Fire flies from their mouths

In arcs of energy,

Crackling while they sip soda, crunch crackers and chat

— about fashion, gaming, senior trips, and the beach —

One final, carefree summer,

While on the horizon, shimmering and soon:

Medicine. Engineering. Economics. Design.

A glittering nebulae of promise

drifting in the space between now and later.

Truly the brightest, most beautiful,

Highly-nuanced, and oh-so-noble group

of students I’ve taught in a generation.

They work hard, dream big, take no prisoners

And still play nice. They are Wunderkinds,

These mid-May lanterns

Bobbing, breezy and effortless, and

Soon to scatter the planet as stars. 

Their souls stoked with passion,

Their brains hardwired for change; but also

(thank God for the also),

Hearts breathlessly buoyed in goodness.

And in light.

2021’s Promise-Filled Purple Hurricane Class

Last night, the Cartersville High School Class of 2021 graduated. And in true pandemic fashion, the year of never-ending challenges refused to let up.

Storms came. The sky raged and splintered. The clouds shuddered and roared. Sheets of rain raced across the stadium, pummeling the stage where the seniors were at that very moment supposed to be receiving their diplomas.

About forty people (school administrators, teachers, and techies) huddled beneath a tiny tent just right of center stage (to protect the sound equipment inside, not themselves).

The stands were empty, families and friends recently vacated to parked car interiors, teachers hunkered down in the field house. It would prove a stuffy, stormy, two-hour delay.

The seniors, robed and tasseled and anxious to get the show on the road, were huddled inside the school gym, appropriately named The Storm Center.

The graduates knew the rain was coming. School officials knew the rain was coming. They’d all been watching their weather apps the entire week. Watching as the chance of thunderstorms kept climbing, finally topping out at 100% .

But the seniors had taken a vote. They didn’t care if it was midnight, come hell or high water (and oh, how that high water came), graduation would be Friday. Too many had too many plans Saturday: family leaving, family vacations, graduation parties, Life.

And close to midnight, it was — 11:22 PM to be exact — when the caps were finally tossed.

But first, came the ceremony… and 2021 was’t done making mischief just yet.

The families and seniors had just taken their seats when class representative Alli Archer welcomed the crowd. As she commented on her class’s perseverance, the lights in the stadium flickered and failed.

But this was just one more hurdle the seniors sailed past. They cheered their defiance. Friends and family took up their cause and thousands of phones lit up the stands in solidarity.

The effervescent energy of this class is contagious and God took note.

Class secretary Robert Novak concluded his prayer with a hallowed Amen when God restored all the lights. Chill bumps and cheers erupted in the stadium.

2021 would not, could not, win.

Photo Credit: Trevor Shipman

Despite the hardships and hurdles flung their way, this senior class — this beautiful, resilient 2021 class — didn’t just weather the storm, they owned it. And how could they not? They are Cartersville Purple Hurricanes. It’s in their genes.

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