"An English teacher, an English teacher,
If only you'd been an English teacher
We'd have a little apartment in Queens
You'd get a summer vacation
And we would know what life means
A man who's got his masters
Is really someone
How proud I'd be if you had become one"
-- Bye, Bye Birdie
If only you'd been an English teacher
We'd have a little apartment in Queens
You'd get a summer vacation
And we would know what life means
A man who's got his masters
Is really someone
How proud I'd be if you had become one"
-- Bye, Bye Birdie
How well I relate to this sentiment. If only I'd decided to be an English teacher the first time around, when, earlier this year, jobs teaching English/ Humanities were offered to me in two different settings. I would have saved myself some pain and hard times during this year.
I always thought that I should do more with my life than teach -- that I should find glorious adventures somewhere in the world, achieve some kind of power, make a name for myself while I'm still young and can work many long and hard hours to achieve success. Obscurity, low pay, and repetitive basic lessons on To Kill a Mockingbird never were what I wanted to do with my life. I wanted to be seen as important, respected for what I'd accomplished in the world. I don't even know if I like kids. I don't know what age people I do want to teach, which ones I'm gifted at reaching.
Here are the deeper questions that press my mind: Will I fail to be good enough if I never write a novel? Publish an article? Teach a college course? Get a PhD? Will I always be lonely if I never get married because I decided to be a teacher and being a teacher took up all my time? Will I be a spinster? Will it be so bad if I am? Are all high school teachers people who tried to do other things and failed at them? Will I be bitter at what I didn't achieve if I teach? If I commit to teaching, will I have a resume that means that I can't do anything else? Will I be stuck? Will it be a huge mistake?
I'll only be as stuck as I choose to be, and I have faith in a God that places us exactly where we need to be, exactly when we need to be there. My life will be full of adventures if I'm open enough to see opportunities around me and take them without fear. There are things more important than power and achievement in the eyes of this world, I'm certain.
I always thought that I should do more with my life than teach -- that I should find glorious adventures somewhere in the world, achieve some kind of power, make a name for myself while I'm still young and can work many long and hard hours to achieve success. Obscurity, low pay, and repetitive basic lessons on To Kill a Mockingbird never were what I wanted to do with my life. I wanted to be seen as important, respected for what I'd accomplished in the world. I don't even know if I like kids. I don't know what age people I do want to teach, which ones I'm gifted at reaching.
Here are the deeper questions that press my mind: Will I fail to be good enough if I never write a novel? Publish an article? Teach a college course? Get a PhD? Will I always be lonely if I never get married because I decided to be a teacher and being a teacher took up all my time? Will I be a spinster? Will it be so bad if I am? Are all high school teachers people who tried to do other things and failed at them? Will I be bitter at what I didn't achieve if I teach? If I commit to teaching, will I have a resume that means that I can't do anything else? Will I be stuck? Will it be a huge mistake?
I'll only be as stuck as I choose to be, and I have faith in a God that places us exactly where we need to be, exactly when we need to be there. My life will be full of adventures if I'm open enough to see opportunities around me and take them without fear. There are things more important than power and achievement in the eyes of this world, I'm certain.