Look, if you had one shot, or one
opportunity
To seize everything you ever wanted in
one moment
Would you capture it or just let it
slip?-- Eminem, "Lose Yourself"
Seventeen years ago I dropped the ball,
big time. My "final" semester of college I had a 3.68 GPA,
was on the dean's list for the fourth time, and was looking forward
to graduation. And then I imploded. There are any number of excuses
-- the end of a three-year relationship I had thought would lead to
marriage and a white picket fence; starting a full-time job for the
university president that felt like a conflict of interest; an
arrogant professor with whom I couldn't work; a calamitous new
roommate situation. It doesn't matter. I self destructed and a year
later was given an "administrative withdrawal" with a final
GPA of 1.85, two Fs on record, and no degree. I was 3 credits short.
This week I decided that, as a 40th
birthday present to myself, I'm going to start the process of getting
my degree. It's the first step towards my next goal: a teaching
license.
I am terrified.
I have a habit of starting projects I
don't complete. My university career was perhaps the biggest, but
certainly not the last. I have abandoned friendships, ruined at least
one relationship, and walked away from a career. I have tucked away
five or six half-finished sewing projects, crocheted three or four
partial baby blankets, written just the opening of too many stories
and essays to count. Each of those is part of my personal litany of
failures, the cumulative effect of which is a crushing sense of
self-doubt and imminent failure. I can't even host a dinner party
without a moment of panic that no one will show or I'll inadvertently
poison everyone who does make it.
Now I am faced with the prospect of two
or three years of classes -- assuming they'll accept me as a transfer
student with that final GPA – just to get my bachelor's degree, and
unknown more to get a teaching certificate. Looking at my track
record, the doubts are coming hard and fast.
There is one saving grace. I believe
teaching is my calling. More than twenty years ago a fellow student
in my algebra class leaned over and asked "are you going to be a
teacher?" I've been asked that same question, or a variant on
it, hundreds of times since then. And the truth is, I love teaching;
it comes naturally to me. So, if I have to get my degree to do it, I
have a reason to finish.
This time, maybe I'll make it. I'm
older, wiser, and have fewer distractions than I did 17 years ago.
Plus, the stakes are higher: this is my one shot.
Wish me luck.
Your post feels so familiar to me. I have a similar problem, mom even called me a quitter years ago. Ouch. Not a title you'd wish from anyone, let alone your mother.
ReplyDeleteYou can do this, really, and I bet you'll be a wonderful teacher. Good luck!
I am so rooting for you Yanna! Since I’ve met you I always thought you were brilliant, and yes, you would be an excellent teacher - it’s evident, this is your calling. Keep us posted!
ReplyDeleteI am so very, very proud of you!!
ReplyDelete