Nine Years Without You

It’s hard to believe it’s been nine years since that call — the one that changed our world forever. Nine years since I sat in that hospital, praying your injuries wouldn’t take you from us. Nine years since I had to look into my kids’ eyes, your cousins, and tell them you were gone. That you had taken your own life.

As much as everything changed that day, life has somehow kept moving forward. We’ve all continued on, just without you in it. Riley has graduated college and is now living in Miami. Chloe finished both high school and college and has built a life on a farm. Lily is a senior, exploring her next steps and looking at colleges. On the outside, it might seem like we’ve all simply moved on.

But on the inside, it’s a very different story.

It’s been over seven years since we’ve seen Jacey, and nearly ten since we’ve seen Owen. I probably wouldn’t recognize your little boy if he walked past me on the street. We feel like we lost three people that day. Riley will occasionally text me out of the blue, a random question about you or something that reminds him of your life. Lily recently had to write a scholarship essay about a life event that shaped who she is today. She chose to write about the day her cousin took his own life, the day everything changed. The day that light turned to darkness. She was only eight years old, Payton. Eight.

We’re still no closer to answers now than we were then. I often look back at photos from that summer we all spent together and find myself wondering — what did I miss? Why didn’t you reach out if you were struggling?

Sometimes my mind drifts to what life would be like if you were still here. You would have loved spending Christmas Eve at Hard Rock Stadium with Riley, cheering on the Cowboys as they played the Dolphins. You’d be so proud of the life he’s built in Miami. I imagine you visiting Chloe on the farm, diving into her world of show cattle, chatting for hours with her and Corbin. And Lily, you’d adore watching her grow from that sassy little girl into the strong, witty young woman she’s become. She would’ve kept you on your toes with her humor and quick comebacks.

Every day, I still ask why. Every day, I wonder what we could have done differently. And every day, I pray that losing you has made me better — a better mom to my kids, a better teacher to my students, a better advocate for anyone who’s hurting.

I hope I’m more aware now. More attuned to the signs. More ready to listen, to notice, to act.

Because your life — and your loss — changed all of ours forever. Forever 25.

To anyone struggling know that your life matters. YOU MATTER! Seek help!

Teaching 2021-22….Back to Normal?

It’s Monday morning and I feel like it is Friday. I am exhausted, my brain is already foggy and I haven’t even taught my first class yet. As I leave my office my office mate and I chant, “Go Jags!” with fake enthusiasm. This is my new normal this year. Don’t get me wrong I still love my job or the thought of my job; I am just ready for it to feel like it used to. The reality is that it just doesn’t feel normal yet.

As I started this school year I thought life was going to be back to normal. No masks and students full time it was going to be a normal year and time to hit the ground running. Boy was I ever wrong. Now I want to be clear I am not writing this as a poor teachers or teachers are heroes’ post. In the past 20 months there are many professions who have stepped up and done what was asked of them. I won’t even name them all because I will certainly leave someone out that deserves a thank you. However, this post is about the real struggle that our profession and our kids are feeling.

This is year 27 for my husband and me, and we thought after last year there couldn’t be a tougher year on educators and students. I am quickly finding out that last year was a piece of cake compared to this year. Remember that last year was hybrid, virtual, and full in person for us. It was masks and then no masks. It was a lot of change. The mental health struggle is real for everyone. In the first few weeks of school I witnessed behaviors that in my 27 years I have never seen before. I am not blaming kids, in fact, they are just trying to figure out this crazy world like we all are. As I have struggled through the first 18 weeks of school, I tried to reflect on why I am so exhausted and feel like I am having to work to bring the energy to my classes. I have realized that for me it’s the constant worry of judgement and lack of people giving grace. With every word and action I wonder who will take it the wrong way or twist it to a political side. Here is the thing…..I just want to teach, and I want my kids to learn. I want to build relationships with my students so they know there is an adult in their corner. I want them to know I will give them some grace, and that I understand that none of us have a playbook on how to live through a pandemic, especially one that has divided our world. I see kids struggling. I see colleagues struggling, I see administration struggling. What I am not seeing is our world supporting those who are struggling. I just want people to choose kindness. To assume that we are all acting with positive intent. I want to see the joy of students being together and connecting with their teachers. I want to see our community supporting the learning that is happening during this crazy time. I want to see civility brought back to our school, community and state.

I look forward to the day that I wake up excited to go to work. I look forward to the day I don’t have to take a deep breath and paste on a smile before I walk out of my office to bring the energy my students deserve. I look forward to not seeing a world divided but a world united.

Teaching 2020 Style

Just like it has been for all educators 2020 has been a challenge. I live in Iowa and left for spring break last year never to return to the school last spring. We offered voluntary work, I had a son graduate from college and a daughter from high school. I went from trying to figure out how to attend two graduations 3 hours a part to not having either of them in normal fashion.

We then started this school year in a hybrid setting with a lot of tension within our community and school board on what was the right modality to teach in to keep us all safe and give the students the best opportunity to learn. Since that time at the high school level we have been pulled into remote only learning and back to hybrid. Our elementary has been hybrid, full return, hybrid, remote only, and back to hybrid. So to say this year has been challenging for all is an understatement.

However, I am not here to talk about all of that. Honestly, I have and am exhausted by it all. The reality for me is I want to teach in whichever modality is going to keep us all safe. Today I wanted to share how the pandemic has made me a better teacher.

I am in my 25th year of teaching and am teaching health, wellness, two adapted PE classes in person, and one fully virtual adapted physical education class. When I got asked to teach adapted physical education class virtually to many students that I hadn’t had before I was completely overwhelmed with the challenge. How was I supposed to teach and adapt when I am looking through the screen?

Here’s what I have learned. I CAN teach and make good progress with my adapted physical education class in a virtual setting. I just had to think differently. The reality is I have always been a teacher that likes to think outside the box. I have always prided myself on making good relationships with my students and being flexible in different situations. But never have I been challenged to think outside of a box as big as a pandemic.

The pandemic has made me a better teacher hands down. It has challenged me to really look at my standards and align my teaching to those standards. It has made me work to scaffold the work for student success and be clearer in my learning expectations to my students as they will continue the work without me in person the next day. I also have had to realize that we are living in a pandemic and my work may not be at the top of their priority list and that’s ok.

I have heard educators talking about how hard it is to build relationships with kids when you are only seeing them virtually or a couple days a week. I was one of those that worried about this especially since relationship building is important to me. I have had to find other ways to build relationships and check in on my student’s social and emotional health since I am not seeing them on a daily schedule but keep those attempts real and meaningful. What I have found is that I think I have done a better job of checking in with kids and building relationships because I have intentionally built in check ins and have followed up with kids. I have taken the opportunity to visit with students when they walk in my classroom instead of feeling like I have to hit the road running. I would say I have made more meaningful relationships with students this year that are real and authentic BECAUSE of the pandemic. Many strategies that I have implemented I will continue long after covid is gone. You know what…..Kids want you to check on them. Even if they are doing great.

Do I love this year? Absolutely not. Am I working harder than I ever have in my career? Absolutely. Am I feeling an exhaustion that I have never felt in my life before! Uh Huh! Do I still feel that my students are growing and learning as individuals. YES! They are also learning that their teachers are human. We make mistakes, we learn, we grown, we are vulnerable just like they are. We are teaching our students that this is life. That sometimes all we can do is take care of each other and learn together.

I want normal just like the next person does especially when it comes to school. However, next year I will look back on the year of 2020 and be thankful that it challenged me to grow and change as a teacher. I will have a special place in my heart for those students and staff who went through this year with me. So I am going to embrace this challenge and look for the rainbow in an otherwise rainy year.

Just Speak Up

I have been wanting to start a blog for several years. Every time I sat down to start it I began to doubt whether I had any thoughts that were worth sharing. However, in May I attended a Mental Health Symposium titled 1 More=2 Many. As I was processing all the information I had heard during the day and what implications it might have for my school or students one message kept coming through loud and clear. From a parent that lost a child to suicide he said, “Just Speak Up.” We have to tell our stories or we will never end the stigma tied to mental health.

You see I teach health and am very open with my students about the importance of ending the stigma that is tied to mental health. I share with them that seeking help is a sign of strength not weakness. I even share with them my story about my nephew. However, this is the important part. I say the right things but don’t necessarily walk the walk.

Here’s what I mean about that. October 31, 2016 was a beautiful sunny day. I was at work in my office getting ready for the day when my phone rang. That call changed my life forever. The call was from my sister-in-law asking me if I could get to the hospital because my nephew was being life flighted for a self-inflicted gun shot wound. I calmly asked for which hospital and said I was on my way. When I hung up I realized that I must not have heard correctly because Payton would never had tried to take his own life. So I calmly called back and asked again who I was meeting at the hospital. That was when my world was rocked.

Now I immediately headed to the hospital with a thousand questions going through my brain. Was I praying that he would make it or praying that he wasn’t in pain? What led him to do this? What did I miss? What could I have done? All the while sitting in the hospital waiting for life flight to land. The next few hours were a blur of family arriving, meeting with a neurosurgeon to hear options (which really weren’t options) and supporting my brother as he made decisions. What I can tell you is no grandparent, parent,  brother, sister, aunt or uncle should hear the words we heard from a surgeon about someone you love. After a long day in the hospital waiting for the inevitable we had some tough decisions to make as parents. We needed to get to our children before they heard something through social media (another post) and make a decision on how to tell our son who was in his first year of college. As my dad said to all of us that day in the hospital, “Tomorrow we pull up our boot straps and do what we have to do.” And that is what we did.

My husband contacted our son’s coach to help us prepare to get him picked up, and I went home and told the girls. I didn’t tell them much other than “Payton made a bad decision.” I’m not even sure if I used the word suicide. I didn’t talk about mental health. My kids at the time were 8, 14 and 18. Old enough for us to do a much better job of talking to them about suicide. That night was the only night we really talked about it. They didn’t ask any questions and I didn’t initiate any conversation about it. I also was very private about it in my professional life. I went to work the next day to get things in place for my bereavement leave and graded my students’ advocacy projects on suicide prevention. All with a stoic face and a broken heart. The next few days we planned a funeral and said our goodbyes. Then we went back to life.

I never really talked about it with anyone but often found myself angry that people weren’t more supportive and understanding. That people thought it hurt less because it was “just” my nephew. Honestly, most people probably didn’t know because I didn’t talk about it. Each year at the anniversary of his death I am deeply saddened but don’t mention it to anyone. I just deal with it myself.

When I lost my mom to cancer 8 years earlier my girls and I became advocates for cancer. We talked about how breast cancer is what grandma had battled and about the treatments that she had to go through to try to beat it. We wear pink every day in October for Breast Cancer Awareness. We have walked the breast cancer walk for many years. We are proud of our advocacy.

I tell you that because we don’t talk about suicide. We don’t do the Out of the Darkness walk held in our town. We don’t do anything to honor Payton and the beautiful young man he was during Suicide Prevention Month. We continue to “get up and pull up our boot straps and do what we have to do.” I realized after the symposium that I am part of the problem. I tell kids that we need to end the stigma of mental health. That getting help is a sign of strength not weakness, but I apparently just think that applies to other people. Because until May I had NEVER publicly mentioned that my nephew died by suicide. I didn’t talk about it with my own children like I should have which in turn has sent them the message that it is wrong to talk about it. I didn’t seek help for any of us to deal with something so tragic. I know it is a little late, but I have promised myself to do better and to be better. I want to walk the walk. I want my students and my own children to know that we should talk about mental health just like we talk about cancer. I want them to know it’s ok to not be ok. That there is support there for them to get through whatever struggles they may be having. I want to help end the stigma by being a part of the solution.

The truth is I loved my nephew with all of my heart. Was he perfect? Absolutely not. Did he make mistakes in his life? You bet he did. But he was a young man with a great heart. He loved his family fiercely. The reality is he made a choice that we will never understand or have answers too. He left a piece of our heart forever with a little hole in it. We can’t go back and change that day or change the struggles he was feeling but we can try to make the world a little bit better for everyone else. We can try to be there for others who may need support. We can do better.

Side note: I wrote this in early May and for whatever reason it has taken me months to actually hit the publish button. Why? I don’t know. I don’t know if it’s the fear of letting others know, the judgement that may come from it, or still the stigma of mental health and the impact it had on my family. So if you are reading this know that I was finally brave enough to take the first step in walking the walk.

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