Some days it’s just about getting out of bed and thinking
that this day is going to be better than the day before. It has to be. Some
days are hard. This last week was full of new people, new routines, and so many
new things that opened my eyes. This last week was hard. These last few months
have been hard. Some of the hard stuff was my doing. Some was not. Some I will
talk about in time. Some I will not. And most of it, in the end, is not my
story solely to tell.
Last week I met a mother from Ethiopia. At 30, she has seven
children. She walks from her home nearly 3 miles away from my new school with
her youngest child in a sling, strapped to her person. Some days are just too
cold for her to bring her child to school. Some days are just too hard. Last week I watched the ladies I work with provide warm coats and food to the children who would need them the most in the coming days. This was a victory.
Last week I watched a teacher bathe a child who hadn’t had a
bath in weeks. Last week I learned of a 17-year-old mother who was so proud of
the trip she took to the library with her toddler over Christmas break. This
was a victory. Some days the things we think are hard are not really all that hard.
Last week I waited with a child for her school bus to come take her from my school to
another so that she could get the services she needs. She is nearly blind. She has glasses, but
someone forgot them. She has leg braces, but someone forgot those, too. But. This day she was at school and she was happy. This was a victory.
Last week I went from teaching children in this city’s
highest economic bracket, to being in a school that serves the most at risk
families in our community. Last week was hard. Not so much for me, even though it was easy to mistakenly think it was just that. I got to come back
to my warm home. To my children who love me. I got to buy groceries and cook a nice meal for my girls tonight. This weekend, however, as nice as it was, wouldn’t let me
forget what I had to go back to tomorrow. Something has changed. In five days,
something has changed in me and I know now that I am right where I need to be.
Tomorrow will be hard. I will wake up earlier than I’m used
to waking. I will juggle kids’ schedules and try to make sure everyone is happy
even when things are changing all around us. Tomorrow life will be hard. And
then, I will get some perspective, and realize that things are going to be ok.
Even if it takes a while. And that is a victory.