How Can You Not Enjoy This???

I know that I have mentioned – once or twice – that I get a kick out of my job.  But seriously folks – how can you NOT like a job where this is a "normal" sort of day:

I open the cafeteria at 7:30.  School doesn’t start until 9, but LOTS of kids come early.  Some are there as early as 7:00 am!  They don’t start serving breakfast until 8, but the cafeteria is open so the kids have somewhere to go that’s supervised, rather than wandering around and dreaming up mischief to get into.

As the students come into the cafeteria, I stand close to the door and offer each and every one a cheery "Good Morning!"  The responses are amazing to me. 

  • Some just flat out ignore me.  They hear me all right – they just aren’t going to react to something that pleasant.
  • Some look at me as if I have grown three heads and offer back a tentative smile or a quiet hello.
  • Some respond with a big smile and a "Good Morning" of their own. 

This last category is the fewest in number.  SOOOOO…Ms. Wolf is on a mission.  I will teach these darlings that it is OK to be nice.  Your friends won’t hate you for it, your parents won’t beat you for it and your face won’t fall off if you smile at someone.  This morning, two boys walked right past me after I "Good Morninged" them.  I said it again.  They kept walking.  I cleared my throat LOUDLY – and said "HELLO?  GOOD MORNING!"  They stopped dead in their tracks – turned around to look at me with stunned looks on their faces…and finally gave sheepish little smiles and hesitant "good mornings" of their own.  Ha!  It’s working already!!!

7:45 – A chatterbox decided she needed to talk to me.  "I like it here.  I work on the school newsletter.  Today I am going to interview Ms. Art Teacher.  Are YOU Ms. Wolf?  Oh!  Are you sure?  The one they say is so mean?  You’re nice!"  lol – I’ve got a ‘rep’!

7:55 – A rather tall and big boned girl with plenty of padding came in dressed in a skirt cut UP to there…and a blouse cut DOWN to here!  I was deciding whether I needed to tackle this dress code issue, when I looked up and saw two male teachers looking at me with "HELP!" written all over their faces and the custodian motioning wildly at me to LOOK at the student.  Sigh.  So I trotted over and asked the little darling to go into the office and call home for some clothes that actually COVER some of the volumes of skin she was showing.  She was none too happy, but at least compliant.

8:15 – a ‘thug’ returnee from last year popped into the cafeteria to give me my morning thug-hug.  (I’m thinking bumper sticker here – HAVE YOU HUGGED YOUR THUG TODAY?)  He is back in school under court order, while they are processing a place for him in a "residential program".  We talked – and he informed me that his science teacher doesn’t like him.  I pressed.  Why?  He couldn’t come up with an answer – so I jumped in with both feet.  

"So – the reason you think Mr. MAN doesn’t like you is because he is a big old whitebread man?  (for those of you who don’t understand the slang – whitebread is used as a derogatory term to refer to us plain old boring white people).  My thug grinned and said – yeah.  That’s right.  He is and he don’ unda-stan.  I took a step back and motioned at myself – "And just what do you think I am, if not whitebread?"  And I got the standard answer – not you, Miss!  You’re my dawg!!!  heh.  I’m ‘in’ with the ‘thug’ crowd.  lol

8:55 – I see a girl in the halls on her way to class who is dressed for work – unfortunately the type of work she was dressed for would best be done in the local ‘red light district’.  She had on hooker heels, too-tight jeans and a shirt she had tied up in the back to make too short and as form-fitting as humanly possible.  I pulled her aside and ASKED her to undo her shirt and put it back to "normal".  Oh boy – attitude on steroids!  I simply kept insisting until she finally caved and undid the shirt.  I didn’t address the hooker heels.  I figured walking all over school all day in those things would be bad enough.  As I turned around a parent, who I hadn’t seen standing in the hall, touched me on the arm and said "Good job".  (SO glad I was being the "nice" MS. Wolf today!!  lol)

11:30 – Same girl in hooker heels is in the hall – with her shirt tied back up.  I asked her to stop.  She kept walking.  Poor thing – she doesn’t know that ignoring me is like waving a red flag in front of a bull!  I followed her until I got her to stop.  I told her to untie her shirt AGAIN.  Out came the ‘tude again.  Then she said she’d put on her sweater.  I declined.  If she’d done that earlier, we’d be OK – but she chose to be sneaky and defiant.  Wrong choice.  She yells out in the hall – "LIKE HELL I WILL".  Ms. Wolf turned into Ms. Werewolf.  I marched little miss hooker heels to the office where I deposited her with the nearest admin representative and left.  "Like hell I wil"?  OH NO she DIDN’T!!

2:55 I had a little chat in the hall with our resident GOTH boy.  I have stopped him in the hall the last 2 days for wearing clothing with chains attached.  Personally, I don’t care if he wears 10,000 chains every day – but the school board has deemed chains on clothing potential weapons.  Yesterday he was angry and told me I was picking on him because he wears black.  Sigh.  Today I pulled him aside and explained to him that I understand how he thinks that everybody judges him based on how he looks.  I also understand that he took one look at me and judged that I couldn’t possibly understand him.  I told him I thought that maybe both judgements were equally inappropriate and that I don’t care what he wears – it’s what he does, how he behaves, and what kind of person he is that count with me.  I think we came to terms.

3:00 – My last class of the day finally shaped up some.  Not completely – but some.  I’ll take some.  Tomorrow – I’ll take some MORE!

3:30 – a student that graduated 2 years ago came into my room to see me and chatted a while.  I’m so glad she still thinks

of me!

4:15 – meeting about before school program – Coffee Shop starts next week!!

4:45 – caught in the rain storm from hell on the way home.

Seriously – what’s not to love?

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August 17, 2006

LOL. What, indeed, is not to love? I gather “Like hell I will” was not an appropriate response?

August 17, 2006

i would soooo buy that bumper sticker. wow. i’m impressed w all you do. seriously. it has to take a huge heart to have your job.

August 17, 2006

You thuggin’ it, yo. Our school district has the same “chain” rule, which (though I understand the principle) I encourage my boys to break for two reasons: One, unless they also make the girls stop wearing necklaces, it’s not egalitarian and two, if you don’t keep your wallet on a chain you WILL lose it. When they can guarantee a theft-free environment, my boys can lose the chains. The resident

August 17, 2006

Tin Jesus was all over #1 Boy on this issue until he took to wearing a “Chains Don’t Kill People, People Kill People” t-shirt. However, we DO insist that if you’re going to break a rule you do it consciously, politely if possible and with foreknowledge and acceptance of the consequences. How’d I get off on this, again? ;o)

August 17, 2006

OMG, P, you’re right! What’s not to love! Especially this entry!

August 17, 2006

I’ve missed your stories about the kids….and look, a whole new year of material!

August 17, 2006

You my dawg, Whitebread.

August 17, 2006

Wow. You’re quite something. I wish you’d been my teacher. 😛 Of course I was lucky enough to have some decent ones. Thug hug. hehee!

August 17, 2006

You’re my DAWG??? Does he know of your “Wolf” epithet? LOL Hugz

August 18, 2006

Thug hug! Pardon my redundance, but I do sooo love your stories. You our dawg too.

August 18, 2006

This is a great story, but it’s sad that parents let their children go to school dressed that way; it’s sad that you have to talk in slang to communicate these days, and it’s sad that kids talk back to adults. It’s even sadder that one of your noters feels it’s OK to teach his/her kids to ignore the rules. My opinion on dress codes is that anything that can be taken off or put back on after the school day is not a burden. I think the Catholic school here has it right: white shirt and blue pants or skirts. I have to dress appropriately at work, there’s no reason why kids can’t wear appropriate dress at school. They can make personal sartorial, political or cultural statements after school.

August 18, 2006

Look, I’m all caught up! Yay! It was a great way to spend an hour of my morning, too. 🙂

August 18, 2006

You’re da shizzel dawg. (I’m not entirely sure I know exactly what that means, but I mean it in a good way. LOLOL)

August 18, 2006

You are such a cool teacher; we need more like you. I loved this entry.

August 18, 2006
August 19, 2006

you’re a good dawg you…..

August 19, 2006

You da WOLF! This had me grinning ear to ear. And I love your mission.I think we got that same rainstorm from hell. I was going to drop off our recyclables in the bins on Thursday but then the skies opened up with about a bazillion lightning bolts.

August 19, 2006

haha– glad you had a good day 🙂

August 20, 2006

You are every parent’s DREAM of a teacher. Kudos to you, dawg! And thank you. hugs…

August 22, 2006

That’s so crazy. I really don’t know how you can do your job. I applaud you gal, I really do. I’d NEVER be able to handle it. Babies? Great – they can’t talk back…My method: as soon as they can walk and talk, ship em to boarding school where people are good at dealing with kids!! (LOL – can you tell I’m not having kids? 🙂 )

August 23, 2006

You make a difference in these kids lives. That certainly is lots to love.

August 23, 2006

Dawg, fo shizzle! Datgirl don’t go raggin onya, knowwhut I sayin? You da bomb, I know dat’s right. Peace! (crosses arms)

August 25, 2006

Personally, I love your AT-titude. You keep At it with JUUHSt the right pressure. Don’t evah let up, they NEED to be cared for. Just ask the Hugged Thug. 🙂

August 26, 2006

I always enjoy your stories about school though sometimes it’s difficult to understand what some parents and kids are thinking when they behave as they do. I understand kids pushing dress codes, but there is a limit to what’s acceptable to wear in public.

October 3, 2006

I’m glad you care enough to track the inappropriate dressers down and make them obey. I bet they secretly do as well.

October 8, 2006

I read this and savoured it when you first posted it – but obviously I didn’t tell you so! I love the variety of personalities you confront…oops….,. educate.