This
is the exact question I asked myself last Wednesday, as I happened upon the
reminder from Jonah’s school. Ugh. How many years of my life have I given to
Back to School Night? Seeing as Jonah is my last child, and this is his last
year in junior high, and the high school has become observant enough to note
that nobody has time for back to school night, thus discontinuing the practice
all together, I figured I would end strong and attend. Neil was entertaining
management from China, so I was left to attend all by myself. This is no big
deal once I get to the school, but it is getting into that school that requires
heavy support from my better half.
My minivan approached the stop sign
near our school only to stop behind a good twenty vehicles all headed to the
junior high. This stop sign didn’t exist last back to school night! Dang these
highly involved yuppie parents and their confounded SUV’s. I carefully
considered taking a hard left and spending the next hour and a half at the
local Kneaders, but somehow mustered the strength to stay the course. The stop
sign experience was simply a foreshadowing of the mess that awaited me at the
school. There were vehicles everywhere. Just everywhere. Minivans and SUV’s
lined both sides of the road for half a mile. The side neighborhoods were
overrun with cars. As I rounded the corner and approached the front of the
school, I didn’t even attempt to enter the parking lot. It was obviously full,
full of vehicles belonging to moms who thought ahead and left for the school a
half hour early, moms whose oldest child is now entering junior high for the
first time and who are keen on their child having the optimum middle school
experience, moms who find value in listening to the principal’s schpeel and
will lend an ear to the pleading PTA president (bless her heart). There was no
place for me in that parking lot. My day in the mommy elitist sun ended long
ago. I moaned a little and kept driving. And driving. And, heaven help me,
driving.
It is at this point that I
remembered why I always bring Neil to BTSN with me. It is his job to pull up to
the front of that school, drop me off, then drive miles down the road looking for a parking spot, park in
the next city, then book it to the school at record speeds to meet me in
Jonah’s first period class, while I kindly ask him why he’s late and why is he
out of breath. This night I was on my own, and for the first time I found
myself cursing this school and its demographics. Why couldn’t I live in some
inner city? Why wasn’t my kid attending a Title 1 school? Then I’d have no
problem finding parking. Better yet, why wasn’t it 1985? Back in 1985 even good
moms deemed back to school night as optional. I’d still be among the Parental
Elite in 1985. But alas, this is not 1985, and this junior high nestled among
the craftsmen style homes of modern suburbia is no Title 1 school. In this
school, every parent attends BTSN. In fact, both parents attend as well as
Grandma and Aunt Mary for good measure, which is why I would have had less of a
walk if I had just left my van parked in my garage. This time the urge to just
keep driving until I found a quiet café became almost too much to bear. I could
read my book while indulging in a delicious pastry. I would go home and tell Jonah
that I found all of his teachers delightful although not very helpful as
everyone of them told me to refer to their webpage for any information. Jonah
might buy it, but Neil would be looking for pastry crumbs and butter stains on
my shirt.
I wanted to walk a mile to this
school zero percent, but I did it. Mind you, it was 93 degrees outside. I am
beginning to watch my weather app like one would watch the stock market. Come on baby, just let the highs drop below
90 this week. DANG IT! Apparently these last five years of sedentary
existence have actually impacted my stamina negatively, because you would have
thought I had just finished a Ragnar heat based on the redness of my face and
the voracity of my panting as I entered the school.
I was already late for first
period. Something terrifying hit me as I
meandered down the halls and into class. When did I become that frumpy mother
who shows up to BTSN in her microfiber mom capris and barely a stitch of
makeup? When did that happen? I sat among women comfortably planted in their
early thirties, with their flat-ironed hair and skinny jeans. The variety of
flat that my hair was sporting was the result of bed head, not a Chi, and no
piece of clothing on my body warranted the prefix “skinny”. These moms were undoubtedly numbered among
those parked in the front parking lot.
I’m not one to obsess over
appearances, but sadly my mental state seemed to match my physical state. As
parents eagerly took notes and asked questions, I tiredly cringed, realizing
that the $100.00 I dropped at Target for school supplies was once again
insufficient. I jotted down expo markers, colored pencils, and graph paper into
my phone because I had brought not a single piece of paper or pencil to take
notes with. Then I began to search for calculator apps as the thought of buying
one more TI84+ made me throw up in my mouth.
Nothing brought this mama more joy
than learning that all of my child’s classes rested at the south end of the
school. After running a half marathon to get into the school, I was in no mood
to jog from one end of the school to the other for classes. If Jonah had had a
class on the north end of the building, that class would have promptly become
dead to me. But luckily, even his portable and seminary building were
conveniently situated on the south end of campus so I went to all seven
periods. I have my awesome moments. I even asked a question in a total of two
classes. In Math class I asked this. Exactly
how many math homework problems can we expect on any given night? This was asked with just the right amount of snark
to hint that if this woman dared utter that it would be more than 20 problems,
so help me, I would egg her house. She said no more than eleven problems. I
think she and I are going to get along swimmingly. The other question came in
English class. It went something like this. Mr.
English Teacher sir, you mentioned that you will be giving weekly vocabulary
quizzes. Might I ask how many words you will be assigning and what exactly
these quizzes will look like? Multiple choice, fill in the blank, by some
miracle an oral exam? The thoughts that were running through my actual mind
sounded a little more like. What you
don’t understand Mr. English Teacher, is that this blessed child of mine
struggles most in life with spelling and memorizing. So what you deem as some
simple vocabulary words are essentially a death sentence for my son and all who
live in this house with him. I am simply trying to get a grasp on what level of
crazy we can expect every Thursday night here at the Watson house. I refrained from speaking my actual thoughts.
I’ll save that for parent teacher conference.
I ended the night tired but informed
and deeply satisfied that I had seen this piece of parenting through to the
very end. As I ran my half marathon back to the van in what was now a
comfortable 91 degrees, I reflected on this full marathon of back to school
night drudgery that I had successfully completed.
Sixteen years ago, I attended that
first kindergarten back to school night. I have gone from that stellar mom
parked in the front stall, toddlers in tow, makeup fully applied, signing up
for all the class parties and field trips, to that frumpy middle aged mom
tiredly petitioning for fewer math problems and begging for a cheaper
calculator option. At least I can proudly say that I was always present,
red-faced and late, but present.
Jonah greeted me at the door,
anxious to hear my report. Though I had seemed like that snarky half asleep parent
in the background, I was actually very engaged and though I took no physical
notes, I was making mental notes. We talked all about which teachers I can
already tell are going to be awesome, which teachers will be strict, which are
chill, and which have quirks that are going to be delightful. Don’t
underestimate those capri sporting haggard moms in the back. We may be parked
around the block, but we’ve been around the block, and we’ve learned which
battles to pick and which to let slide, when to ask the hard questions and when
to remain silent, and most importantly, we’ve learned that to be present is
always always better than being perfect. Just ask Jonah.
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