Some of our friends and neighbors are getting ready to start
the new school year. I have mixed
feelings about this, most definitely. We live very near the neighborhood school
that Light attended last year, so we drive by several times a week. I always
look at the large announcement board hanging on the outside of the building
that lists the goings on for the month. It’s starting to fill up- new student
orientation, school spirit day, kindergarten reception, room rep meetings (I
was a room rep for Light’s kindergarten class last year). Seeing the schedule
makes me feel the loss. Truly the school had a great community. The families
were wonderful. The students were wonderful. The neighborhood is wonderful. So,
I do, I feel the loss. I love the hubbub of group activities. I love being
involved in organizations. I love being around students and parents. So I am
sad that we won’t be experiencing those kinds of things.
But, I think about the anxiety level that Light had when he
had to ride a school bus on a field trip, even though I was also attending. I
think about his sensitivities to specific kinds of discipline. I think about
how his need for intellectual stimulation and challenge is a huge part of who
he is. I think about how challenging it is for him to be in large groups of people
and without the academic challenge to motivate him to deal with those
stressors, he was miserable. I know that we have made the right decision. I
think about the administration that had absolutely no interest in working with
us to improve things for Light. I think about his kindergarten teacher who had
absolutely no understanding of how a gifted mind works and the asynchrony,
challenges and intensities that go along with that http://www.sengifted.org/archives/articles/asynchronous-development. I think about how
kindergarten was supposed to be fun for him and nurturing and a place for him
to figure out his challenges and use his strengths. It was supposed to be a
welcoming, fun environment that introduced us to the next 12 years of public
education. None of that happened for him.
What happened for him were daily stomachaches and over all
body aches on our M-F walks to school. What happened was Light crying himself
to sleep every night. What happened was watching an angry child take over my
happy, secure, curious, loving boy. What happened were conversations about
feeling different, feeling misunderstood, feeling unappreciated. What happened
to us were inaccurate labels and negative reports that were gross
misunderstandings of what was happening with Light. What happened was an
educator’s projection of her own family’s “issues” onto our son. What happened
were suggestions for how to “fix” him, to help him conform to the norm, to fit
in.
We know from experience, from hereditary that he will most
likely not ever “fit in” to the “norm.” But we also know from experience, from
heredity that who he is is an amazing human being just as he is, who doesn’t
need to be fixed, but needs a special environment to help him reach his full
potential.
So, I am excited for our own home schooling year, but I feel
sad. I know things will change, they already have. I have lost touch with some
of the moms that I thought I wouldn’t lose touch with. I loved the morning chit
chat, the “late start Fridays”, the before pick up gossip and catching up. The
thing is, I feel that loss, I don’t think that Light really feels it. I have to
be careful, very careful not to put those feelings of nostalgia onto him. I
loved school (although in hindsight, I can’t say that it was really
beneficial). I wish I was more of a free spirit and I think my fear of getting
in trouble kept me from my full expression.
What I won’t miss are the daily battles to get ready in the
morning. I won’t miss the daily battles with homework. I won’t miss the daily
battle of finding something to pack for lunch everyday. I won’t miss the daily
battle with my gut and my intuition telling me that this was not right for us.
The thing is, we have friends. We have awesome friends. We
have a great community. We have fantastic neighbors and now we have met some
wonderful new friends who are also on a home schooling path. I will still feed
my need to be around other people, to be social, to chit chat. And Light will
have opportunities to practice these skills as well without all the extra
stress that goes along with it. So, I am excited for this new adventure. It
feels exhilarating and liberating. And we can be on our own schedule and do
things exactly the way that will work for our family.
I want to wish everyone a happy and healthy school year
whether you are following a traditional school path or paving your way on a
home schooling path. Here’s to a year of loving, living and learning!