As this school year winds down, I have been asked by numerous friends and acquaintances how I feel about my decision to call it quits after the upcoming year.
"Are you starting to count down?"
"Do you find yourself thinking, 'This will be my last summer break,' or stuff like that?"
Well, yes. And yes. It's pretty difficult not to hear the clock ticking when so much of what we do in Elementary School is counting up, and then counting down. The hundredth day of school is a big event. I have no recollection of this being the case when I was a student at Columbine Elementary, but it not only serves the very practical purpose of giving kids a sense of what one hundred feels like. It also lets teachers know that they have rounded the corner of your standard one hundred eighty days of instruction. Upon the return from any three day weekend or extended break, students and staff are equally curious about how many days until the next interruption.
I have a very salient memory of our former cafeteria manager, commenting on the days leading up to Christmas Break. Before she retired, I was in second place longevity-wise at our school. She reminded us all, "You'll wake up and it'll be January." Initially I flinched at that reckoning, but I can now see the wisdom of her assessment. Thirty years at one location will give you that sense of being on a merry-go-round. Another trip around the sun, as my older brother has often pointed out about birthdays.
But to come to that point where getting off the merry-go-round is a real possibility is becoming very real. This past Saturday, I went over to the school to join students, families, and staff for a morning of painting a mural on the wall adjacent to our playground. It was a highly organized affair, and we were done with the big patches of color before noon. It wasn't the first time I have splashed paint on and around the school where I work. Leaving my mark in some mildly permanent fashion has a mild appeal to me.
I was there.
Soon, I won't be. And one day I'll wake up and it will be January.
All over again.