First of all, you don’t
make it. Instead, as you rush out of your apartment on the first day of class,
you skip a block on the staircase and tumble down the rest — right knee and
left ankle dislocated. Also, you fall so thoroughly and quickly, like a blink,
that you think you imagined it. You, with an entire weekend of lesson planning,
bathroom rehearsals and slowly cooked optimism. Naa, this can’t be real, you
think. Or! It is a prank, maybe. A joke from the universe stretched too far so
you hahah in your head and un-imagine yourself from the ground. Pain,
awkwardness and the desire to call your mother. Welcome to the Academia!
Follow the story to
before the chaos begins. Before the fall and the limp and the pool of student’s
eyes drilling into you. Before that first phrase: Good morning, Class! And the
clear white silence that greets you back. Before that awkward stretch of time,
eternity crammed into one teaching session, as you exhaust your lesson plan in
the first ten minutes. You know, before that small riot in your head, that slow
killing tension, before you realize that your mouth is open, and the words pour
out and you are cannot pull them back and force them down your throat – too late! You tell the
class about your fall. Laughter follows, sympathy too, and you realize that is
not the day you die.
So yes, before all that.
Maybe then to begin at Orientation? That first morning when you skip into the
room, bright-eyed and alive with your American dreams. New beginnings shine on
your skin. Three years of studenting and teacherly things – how hard can it be?
Except you have class activities due for essays one and two. Easy, breezy, you
think at first, until night when the words begin to blur and tease and mock,
because your English has crossed the Atlantic and now you are simply no longer
sure. Also, what is this lingering headache and obsession with bread. What
is cognitive distortion? *you cry hot tears!
It occurs to you on Day
Three of Orientation that you are not prepared for this, that you do not know
the first thing about teaching and maybe even writing? Because heck, school
people like their commas and most times you are too lazy and anxious to care
about them punctuations. But! There is free food and nice
smiling-people and the guy from the elevator, so you push aside your doubts as
quickly as they enter. Who cares if you ruin the American educational system
with your rabid inexperience?
After three weeks of
teaching you will meet K (Yes, K, because you won’t write real actual names in
this post; what if K gets you arrested/deported?). The first thing about K is
that you think he is a student. You think, from that drowning look in his eyes
that he is a freshman trying to piece together an essay, seeking help from an
instructor. And then, by means of casual introduction you will find out that K
is a Program alumnus with three years teaching experience under his
‘proverbial’ belt. Also, shame on you for thinking otherwise.
You will learn from K
that a student can call you out for looking ‘un-teacherly.’ That
anxiety can seep through your pores and leave your palms dripping with sweat.
That it is not a good idea to keep the markers in your pocket because those
stains are tough to clean out. That some students will sleep in class. That words
and your mind will fail you as you lose your thoughts mid-sentence. So maybe
then that no matter what you do, the first time was always meant to be a mess.
Flip the coin. You, Grad
Teacher, are also a student. You will begin to use words like Epistemological in
sentences and you will do it with a straight face because well, this is your
life now. You will shelve out two separate spaces in your head for
reading plots and for your students’ names. Hopefully, you won’t ever address a
student by a novel character. (Doesn’t matter that both names start with S and
end with A.) Of course, you will learn how to prioritize. There is the unending
backlog of papers to grade and your course assignments to wrestle with, but
you, my friend, must choose Netflix. Chat all day with your friends from home.
Join a dating app and laugh at the absurdity of people on it. Remember that you
are a person on it. Leave the app. Cook some meals. Burn hours on Facebook. Try
to get some work done. Fail at it. Miss home. Etcetera.
This is the journey and
you are figuring it out. Hopefully!
Tochi Eze is a former Lawyer turned wannabe writer. She is a first-year MFA student at Florida Atlantic University, a Program she hopes, among other things, will cure her of her compulsive laziness and procrastination, so that maybe one day she could actually start the novel she has written in her head.
Tochi Eze is a former Lawyer turned wannabe writer. She is a first-year MFA student at Florida Atlantic University, a Program she hopes, among other things, will cure her of her compulsive laziness and procrastination, so that maybe one day she could actually start the novel she has written in her head.