Saturday, July 23, 2022

When Cleaning is Hard

I cleaned out more stuff today. 

I loaded up my six boxes of teaching stuff that I wanted to donate and headed to the homeschool curriculum swap. They let me set up a table and leave, only to return at the end to pick up what wasn't taken. I wasn't charging money for anything, so I didn't really need to be there. 

Of course, while I was setting up some moms stopped by my table and asked me questions. It surprised me how quickly I could jump back into "teacher mode" and start spouting off foundational skills for reading and writing. One mom said, "I feel like I should be writing all of this down." At one point, as I was describing phonological awareness, decoding, and sight words, I felt the room go silent. I could almost feel everyone turning an ear my way. But hey, I taught for a long time. I know what I'm talking about.

But... I also had to get out of there. It was a room full of homeschool moms and their children. It was a room full of people living out my dream. I really, really wanted to homeschool. My friends all told me that my kids wouldn't want to be taught by me. And if they didn't, that would have been okay. I would have found a different teacher or enrolled them in a public or private school.

But I didn't even get to try it. 

Dream big. But also, dream multiple dreams. Not every dream works out.

I came home, felt melancholy, ate my delicious Mexican food leftovers, and waited... After several hours passed, I got back into my car and drove back to the church where the event was being held. I packed up the materials that nobody wanted and brought them home. And threw them away. Maybe I should have donated it... Maybe I should have worked on finding homes for it all...

But, no, I did what I should have done.
Which was protect my mental health.
Which was getting rid of that stuff immediately.

We've been having some home repairs done on our 100+ year old house this past month, so we happen to have a dumpster sitting in our front yard. So everything went straight from my car into the trash. No regrets. I wasn't going to save the planet single-handedly by hanging onto that stuff until I found someone who wanted it. But I did save myself.

Next!

As if that wasn't enough for one day... There was one more box of stuff just sitting in our laundry room, stuff unrelated to teaching and that I wanted to keep. So I decided to find room for it. I took the box into my sewing/guest room and realized my bookshelves were full. But I also realized there was still a shelf full of pediatrics. It's like my stuff had babies! Apologies for that metaphor. 

So, I found myself pulling everything off the shelf and going through it. I set the good stuff aside for a friend and threw the rest away. I texted my friend and asked, "Can you stand one more box of school stuff? I found some more." Thankfully, she wants it and I'll mail it as soon as I can. 

The rest of it went in the trash. I love that ugly dumpster sitting on my front lawn.

And then, predictably, I cried.

I cried because I didn't get to raise my children. I cried because I'm so good at teaching, but it literally doesn't cover my bills. I cried because it's the end of the semester, it's hot, I'm sad, and I'm just plain worn out. The cry session only lasted a couple of minutes because, like I said, I'm worn out. I'm too tired even to cry.

So it's gone. Ok, ok, I admit I kept a couple of boxes of stuff that I couldn't part with. I don't know why. Maybe I'll use the stuff with my boyfriend's sister's kids when they get older. Maybe I'll donate it all a decade from now. But, for the present, it's in the shed in the backyard. 

There's no teaching or pediatric stuff in my house.

A purge indeed.

I'm glad.

4 comments:

  1. It sounds like a very painful, but healthy, purge. Sensibly done, to protect your heart, but even when we are being protective, we can't block anything out. I admire your self-knowledge - that you know what you can and can't cope with. That you can weep, then recover. That you can mourn, and yet look to the future too.

    I hope that you feel lighter now, without all that stuff weighing you down.
    Hugs!

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    1. Thanks Mali. I definitely feel lighter!

      Why keep stuff I don't want or need? It takes up mental space. It takes up valuable shelf space, space that can go to geriatric textbooks (my new career focus) or, even better, more fabric! :)

      Gotta feel those feelings though... Otherwise I'd get sick.

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  2. This sounds so hard, but therapeutic -- I agree that sometimes, rather than finding just the right spot for something, the best thing is to get it out as fast as humanly possible. I absolutely love this: "Dream big. But also, dream multiple dreams. Not every dream works out." I feel like this is the message our young people need to hear. That it is NOT giving up when a dream doesn't pan out, and that to put everything into one dream basket isn't healthy because everyone doesn't get everything.

    Also, I have no doubt that you are an amazing teacher. And I have no doubt that all those pieces of yourself -- the teacher, the pediatric person, the researcher, the re-maker -- they are all going to come together. I feel like we are all just refining our selves and it's okay to continuously transform into the best versions of ourselves. You are a great example of that! :)

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    1. Thank you Jess. I needed to hear/read this today. <3

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