As I embark on my 15th year in public education, I’m baffled that it still happens to me. After all, this is my 15th “first day”!
I have my first-day handouts copied and I’ve spent the last two weeks of summer setting up my classroom. I’ve incorporated some new flexible seating options for student-choice reading time. I’ve personally purchased school supplies for kids who won’t have them, and I’ve persuaded my well-to-do family members to donate what they can for other random classroom needs as they arise throughout the school year.
I know the exact first-day talk I’m going to facilitate with my students and I’ve memorized the names and faces of all of the young adults who will be entrusted to me this semester. I’ve picked out my first-day outfit—something authoritative but also warm and inviting. My lunch is packed perfectly in my fridge, and I’ve set four different alarms to ensure that I wake up much earlier than I really need to for the very first day of school. I’m all good, right?
Wrong. Not even close.
Quite the opposite, actually. Although I’ve accomplished all of the aforementioned tasks, [pullquote position="right"]I am not anywhere close to “good.” In fact, my stomach aches and crippling anxiety is slowly creeping in.[/pullquote]
The worst part? I can’t sleep, and it happens every year. On the night before the first day of school, I don’t get more than two hours of real sleep. I try, but each time I shut my eyes I envision a plethora of fictitious nightmare teacher scenarios, ones which typically involve running out of material before the dismissal bell rings.
Instead, on the night before the first day of school, I lay awake staring at my bedroom ceiling— should add “paint the ceiling” to the long list of things I didn’t get accomplished this summer—and my mind races at a pace which could rival the speed of Usain Bolt.
The following are the most formidable “what ifs” that rob me of my peaceful slumber:
After running through a never-ending list of painful hypotheticals, my husband eventually wakes and turns to interrupt my inner monologue of paranoia. “What are you doing awake? It’s 2 a.m.! You have school tomorrow!” Then he shakes his head and smiles—because he knows.
“Hon, they’re going to love you.”
I emit a loud sigh of relief. Although I won’t fall asleep for a few more hours, I feel comforted in the moment. Only time will tell, but I hope he’s right.