I've been putting off posting this here because I've been putting off breaking the news to my students, but as one domino has fallen today, the other naturally follows. I will be leaving my current school--and Providence, Rhode Island--this June. This was a decision that Lauren and I made a month or so ago and which I told my administration and colleagues about immediately, but for some reason it was difficult to know how to break the news to my students.
The whole thing was a difficult decision. I like the school where I'm teaching--I like my colleagues, I like my administrators, I like my students. I like Providence: it's a great little city. I value the friendships that I started to form here outside of school as well, largely from the two choirs in which I sing. There's a heck of a lot to like here, a heck of a lot to keep me here.
In fact, that was my intention, to stay here for the foreseeable future, but then the headmaster at old Pencey Prep, where I began my high school teaching career and spent its first five years, came calling with job offers for both me and Lauren. We had difficult decisions to make. I suppose the main factors which moved us to accept the job there were
Still, that doesn't mean I'm leaving without mixed feelings, for the friendships that have started to develop but will undoubtedly be cut short, for the wonderful choral groups I've enjoyed singing with, for the wonderfully promising students I've been privileged to work with in every facet of my job from the tennis courts to the classroom to my homeroom to the games club, for the talented and committed colleagues I've been fortunate to work with and learn from. There are so many people here who I will miss and regret that I did not have more time to spend with them.
So it goes, though. In the modern era, it's what we do, picking up and moving across broad swaths of the country: it's how I ended up here in the first place, following Lauren. It's hard, though, because we weren't really made for such things. Until the modern era, fate would plunk most of us down in a spot and we'd mostly stay there for our entire lives. We'd set down roots, we'd build communities.
As I said at the beginning of this post, it's been tough for me to tell my students. I think I said this when I left Pencey, but it's also strange as a teacher, particularly in my first job. Up to that point, my tenure at a place had very narrowly proscribed boundaries. I finished 6th grade, I moved to the junior high. I finished 8th grade, I went to high school. I finished 12th grade and went to college. Four years later, like clockwork, I was plunked out into "the real world," or would have been if I hadn't fled into graduate school. Two years later, coursework done, I moved on again and took my first job. Those jobs, though, no longer have a set time frame. We could stay at a school our entire working lives and no one would look askance at that. Of course, it's no longer quite the norm it once was, particularly not in the independent school world, where we're not bound by state systems of certification or state retirement systems or any such things. Still, students tend to have an assumption that their teachers one year will still be their teachers next year, even if they're not their teachers. We'll still be around is the point, so it feels strange when we move on, and it's just about as strange for us teachers to move on.
But we do. For one reason and another, we do. It doesn't make it easy to say goodbye, though.
During my absence, I did pop by every so often, but not often enough o
grasp everything that had happened. I knew that there was someone in your
life and you'd moved to a new school, but I hadn't realized it was to
follow Lauren. As usual, I'm still playing catch-up.
Sounds like congratulations are in order for both of you! Change always
brings challenges ... but with it a sense of adventure and (in this case) a
few perks! Hugs and blessings,
Your online friends (like me) will be with you, no matter where you go,
through thick and thin. It's hard to go and it's hard to say good-bye. My
best friend is leaving for New Zealand and I'll probably never see her
again. Thank goodness for the internet! With students, I'm always
reminded that they would be graduating, so eventually, in just a few years,
I'd be saying goodbye anyway.
John, you are a person of thought and substance, so naturally, this would
never be an easy decision. It is a well thought out one, and in the end it
certainly sounds right for you an Lauren. I'm sure you will do well
wherever you are and I'm more certain that you will maintain friendships
with those you love. It's not goodbye, it's until we meet again.
Bittersweet congratulations.
Well, I can tell you from experience that family close by when you have
children is really nice. I've also done the long commute thing (almost an
hour in good weather) and the closer commute thing (15 minutes now), and
shorter is better--though I did opt not to live too close to work. I
prefer some private life. Anyway, I think that as hard as this may be,
you've made a good decision.
Some decisions are harder to make than others but you are both smart, level
headed people. You have made a choice that will be beneficial for you both
in the long run. Moving away from my family has been the most difficult
thing for me so I am happy that you will be closer to yours. I'm positive
that Pennsylvania will be better with you here. It has to give you some
satisfaction that your school thought so highly of you that they wanted you
back.
It's not often that people get to "go home again" and resume where they'd
left off. Congrats to you for getting this rare opportunity and hope you
and Lauren are happy back at "Hogwarts" again next year.
I understand completely--no matter where you go, there's always someone
left behind. As much as I enjoy Pencey, there's a part of me that wants to
be back in Titusville with my school and theater friends.