Today my
supervisors gave me a beautiful handmade pop-up thank you card with a sweet
note from each teacher- I have felt so blessed this month to have ended up
working with such gracious and thoughtful people. They have been so silly and loud and constantly made silly
noises and jokes with the kids but under all their characters I can tell they
care so much and take great pride in what they do. It is no wonder- I have learned this month that although
people often brush off preschool as a fun bonus for kids or simply an inferior
way for working parents to keep kids occupied during the workday. In reality, I
see that even though kids may not remember their preschool teachers’ names or
consciously appreciate them later, preschool teachers are entrusted with the
crucial job of guiding people through the most delicate and impressionable
years of their lives. When I put
the little babies down for their naps, my favorite part of the day, and look at
their tiny faces, their wispy hair and their hands just big enough to wrap
around my thumb, it becomes so shockingly clear that these children know absolutely
nothing about the chaos and sadness and deep troubles of the world and for just
a short moment we have a chance to put them on a good path and teach them to be
kind before they grow up and become set in their ways. With older people, even older kids,
helping the right way can feel so hard because it’s so hard to know exactly
what people need and how to give it to them- peoples’ lives can grow so
complicated that no matter how hard you work to give them what you think they
need, you could still get it wrong. With little kids, helping and guiding and
lifting them up is so easy because all they really need is love and attention
and they’re never too proud or suspicious to accept the love you give them.
One
thing this job taught me I need to keep working on is my level of patience. I
had so much fun with the kids but sometimes it felt so hard when three babies
were crying and a two year old was throwing a tantrum to not just snap at
someone or walk out and take a break. It occurred to me this month that
patience is like a skill a person has to practice again and again consistently
to get better at- it’s not like other good qualities like intelligence or
charisma that can sometimes just naturally come with someone’s personality. It
seems like no one is born patient, they just learn to handle chaos and tension
with more and more grace.
Overall,
I feel like this project, though entering it I didn’t expect it to feel new,
really reshaped my view of children, teaching, and simply but more importantly
brought me so much joy each day.
University City Children’s Center will always hold a happy place in my
heart and I hope to return sometime soon.
Clara, this was such a beautiful post! I'm so happy that you volunteered there. What a gift to the adults and children there, and what a gift to you!
ReplyDeleteYou're right about patience. And it makes all the difference in the world to have someone model it for children.