Little Bitty Kid; Great Big Body…

My son, Luke, is 13 years old.  He is in 7th grade, and he is learning to become a man, but still sometimes reverts back to the little, shy boy I remember from his bitty years.  He’s becoming tall and angular, and he works out, and he is proud of his new, teenage muscles.  He’s an athlete, and he loves soccer, basketball, and boxing on his new punching bag outside.  I can see the man he is becoming, and I’m proud of him.  But, he’s thirteen, prone to attacks on the frontal cortex that isn’t developed.  He is always telling me he knows all the things about every thing.  He swears he is mature beyond his years, but also loves batman with a ferocity of a five year old.  He is the age of my students.  Middle school at school and middle school at home is a new venture in my life.  The hormones, the body odor, there is no escaping it.

As we scurry through the mornings of a school day, Luke is the first one up after me.  Demands of breakfast, backpack, ‘don’t forget deodorant’ reminders fill the space.  Last week, I was eating a bowl of cereal, going through our morning routine, my mind on something.  His mind on the ferocious appetite and hunger that only comes from a little boy in full blown puberty.  Why can’t we keep these boys full?!  All of a sudden, I sucked a mini wheat into my lung pipe and started choking.  You’ve been there.  “This is it,” you think to yourself.  I was literally choking, tears streaming down my face, trying to get it out.  He is looking at me, pleading, “What am I supposed to do?”  After some heaving, I will spare you the details. I was finally breathing again.  In our family, we joke, a lot.  Maybe too much.  I looked at him and said, “I hope your Fortnite battle is going well.”  As he was still holding his phone whilst staring at me.  You know what he did next?  He started crying.

“Luke,” I comforted, “I’m fine.”

“I didn’t know what to do,” he pleaded.  “It’s not funny!”  The few times he allows me to hold onto him these days, I do.  I scratched his head while I comforted my little boy, and he let me.  Reminiscent of the toddler who used to crawl up into my lap.  So, my point is to all my educator friends is: whether they are 6 feet tall or 5’9, they are little bitty kids trapped in great big bodies trying to find their way.  To find belonging.  To find out who they are.

After a few days had passed, I looked at Luke and said, “Remember this 40 year old lady that almost choked to death?!”

“Still not funny,” he answered.

I was all, “When will it be funny?  What do you need?  A week?  A month?  Tell me!”

He said, “NEVER!”

God love him.  Don’t blink.  Soon I will be writing a blog about his High School Graduation, College, jobs, kids, you name it.  Love you, Lukey!

And if ANYONE shows him this blog, I will deny having written it.  #13yearsold

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How to get a snow day…

Oh, the elusive Oklahoma snow day.  How we need you sometimes!  I come from the generation of kids who had to watch the slow scroll of the television in hopes of seeing Broken Arrow Public Schools closed.  I remember Broken Bow closing before us, and I would be mad that their name was so close to ours because I was often duped by their closing.

The thing about Oklahoma is that Oklahoma weather is often drunk.  70 degrees in January on a Sunday.  65 on Monday, and a 100 percent chance of snow on a Wednesday.  We often feel all seasons inside one week any given week in any given month.

A snow day is magical as a kid, as an adult, as an exhausted educator in February.   So, superintendents, if you are reading this, don’t just make the day virtual.  Let them binge watch movies, and go outside to make a snowman or go sledding or have a snowball fight.

My mom, a long time educator, still worked her booty off on a snow day.  We layered up and went on our merry way.  When we came back, hot chocolate was ready; lunch was ready; the snuggly fire place was ready.  We went back out and in and out and in 58 times in a snow day.  She just dried the clothes and made the food and read her book.  Love you, mom.  Thank you.

So, I tell my students the scientific way to get a snow day.  It works every time; everyone must participate.  Here is the catch; snow must be predicted in the forecast for it to work.  Don’t try the following in August and expect the snow.  🙂

  1. Put your pajamas on backward.
  2. Get as many ice cubes from the freezer as you want inches in snow.  6 inches is a good amount.
  3. Go into the bathroom; put the ice cubes in the toilet.
  4. At the same time you flush, you must yell into the toilet “SNOW DAY!”  It works every time.  My own kids will be performing the ritual tonight in hopes of that elusive magic happening tomorrow, and if we are lucky, Thursday too.  So, don’t ruin it.  Before bed, you know what to do.  SNOW DAY! | Snow day, I love winter, SnowKatie 🙂  #katiekinderfromokc  #untoldteachingtruths  #relatetheneducate  #kidsdeserveit  #oklaed