I have been waiting for this day since
the beginning of time. At least that is
what it felt like. Out of my four boys,
he stayed with me the longest. He
attended Montessori only when he “had to” which was last year as I felt to send
him into Big School cold turkey would be an awful shock to his system.
And I enjoyed his company. Immensely. We get on very well together. We gel.
He regularly tells me how much he loves me and if I am not in the same
room, he will yell it out all the same.
So when today rolled around I had a
funny feeling in my tummy. It was both a
happy expectation and a dull sense of unease.
I could feel uncertainty rolling off
Smallest Boy like waves on a beach. I’m
a great one for making mistakes. I like
to think it keeps me humble. Keeps me grounded. So having been around the First Day at
School Block three times before, I thought I had this in the bag.
Janey, I thought Smallest Boy had this
in the bag.
I allowed the fact that he has been
“going” to school for the last five years and nearly five months to cloud how
big a deal today really was for him.
Sure, he stood outside the school gate
each morning and afternoon. He knew
inside “Múinteoir Stephanie’s” office as well as I did. He knew all the múinteoirí. All the múinteoirí knew him. His brothers’ buddies have been greeting him
by name forever. He was known in there.
But that’s not the same as going as a
student.
The wobbles last night were to be
expected. When he bumped himself on the
trampoline and got upset, I put it down to sensitivity about the morning. When he said he couldn’t sleep because he
was “too hot,” “too not tired,” “too thirsty,” “too something” I knew trouble
could be ahead.
And it was. He became annoyed and frustrated at the obligatory
school photos so we cut them short. His
daddy had words of advice and reassurance for him before we left the house and
he was smiling when we got into the car.
On the drive into school, I kept the
radio off so he could chat to me and ask me questions. The first question was asked in a small
voice.
“Will you bring me in today?”
My heart! I can’t tell you. This boy, who has been with me as I walked
his brothers into their classroom for many many months until they were ready to
do it alone, thought he was expected to do the same thing himself.
I reassured him that I would bring him
in as long as he wanted me to. Like I did
for the others.
Another positive step when he ran from
the car and to the gate by himself. Nothing
new. He’s always done this. He joined the “big boys” at the gate. Nothing new there either. He ran back and forth enjoying himself and chatting.
It was almost time to go in and then
he said he wasn’t sure he would “get the hang of this day.” I knew he meant he didn’t know what to
expect.
So I told him. Again.
How Múinteoir would take his books out
of his bag and let everyone know when it’s snack time. How it’s going to be like Montessori for days until everyone gets the hang of
it. How everyone is in the same boat
today and no-one knows exactly what to do.
“I’ve got it now. Thank you.”
And in we went. I thought I had covered everything. But everything is different for
everyone. I thought I had learned that.
It was a strange morning. Stranger than I anticipated. I went home and suddenly the house, the one
that had been heaving with boy sounds for the summer, seemed louder than it
ever did. It was eerie. I couldn’t figure it out.
I realised the truth behind the expression,
“the silence was deafening.”
Then it hit me.
I missed them! I missed my boys. Hand on heart, it was something I never thought
I’d feel or even admit.
I knew I would see them all in a
matter of hours but it felt like days away.
Janey, I thought I had this one in the bag. Like I said; I’m a great one for making
mistakes.
It keeps me humble.