The Sweetest Mother's Day Gift!

I threw yet another dried-out Expo marker into the trash.

Character Ed: What will you do today that—

I made it midway through the morning’s prompt on the wipe-off board before expiring the last of my school-funded supply.

I then reached into my worn teacher tote to produce the bright yellow Dollar General bag from yesterday’s quick trip.

The bag held a multi-colored pack of Expos and two composition notebooks; one for Ellen who left hers in Georgia at her dad’s house over the weekend, the other for James, who never brought one to begin with.

I had nudged my own preschooler through the concrete aisles of the bargain store to secure the materials I needed to make the next day run smoothly with as few mentions of Mrs.Ballard-I-don’t-have-this as I could manage.

To pay, I used the money I make teaching grammar and grace.

I could’ve asked the librarian for an extra marker but I’m a second-year teacher and I’ve already bugged her twice about looking out for lost copies of Holes so that Kendall and Roderick don’t have to share when we read aloud.

Besides, she’s got the book fair coming up and a million testing rules to read off in today’s faculty meeting. Oh, and the RTI meeting and the website updates. Don’t forget that she has to watch Mr. So-and-so’s class because he has a sick kid and the substitute list is dwindling.

This is teaching.

This is knowing that every one of your coworkers wants to help you from the very bottom of their hearts but is sinking in priorities and paperwork to the very tips of their eyeballs.

Just. Like. You.

This is wanting to ask for supplies from outside sources but not wanting to be greedy.

This is wanting to ask for tangible help but not wanting to seem overwhelmed.

This is the thought process every time you consider knocking on another classroom door or sending another note home or writing another grant on a Saturday.

I’m a constant burden carrying a constant burden.

RELATED: Good Teachers Are Leaving the Field and it’s Time We Talk About Why

Like an ant carrying 5,000 times its weight, others line up to follow me with the weight of their own. Siblings/sports/scholarships/sanity/stakes/solitude.

Sometimes the weight is as obvious as a large backpack carrying three textbooks after a heavy homework night; sometimes the weight is as hidden as a smile or snarky remark.

We make an uphill climb every day. If I misstep, those following close behind stumble, too. When I put one foot in front of the other, we can unload one pound at a time the right way, at the right time.

I don’t sit on the highest hill, I follow those above me. They lead as well as anyone could with twice the weight I carry.

But sometimes the weight drops in heaps. Destiny grabs a book from the bottom shelf and the rest come tumbling down on top of her. The whole shelf breaks. We spend the rest of the period cleaning up her mess and her mindset.

But it’s so much more than embarrassment and Expo markers.

The book drops every day in a teacher’s life.

Every 50 minutes, I’m faced with 30 new sets of eyes.

Fifty minutes is so short to teach them sentence structure and strong viewpoints and thesis statements and writing style.

Fifty minutes is so long to hold the stares that will ensure more vigor and depth with less stress/passing-notes-under-the-desks.

I give the same performance six times each day. In first period, I receive applause and rave reviews. Second period brings critique. Third period yields anger. Fourth, stares.

In my planning period, I turn off my lights and lay my head on my desk to collect composure and regret, as I will have to make up that time tonight in my bed after bedtime stories and little boy prayers.

During remission, I scarf down salty bites of quesadilla between spats of stop touching him and one more strike until silent lunch.

The loudspeaker breaks my remission rhythm.

Mrs. Ballard, there’s a parent for you in the office.

The last three bites are swallowed without chewing as I hurry to the office. In the 30-second walk, I wonder whose parent it is, I wonder if I will lose my job because I don’t have tenure, I wonder who will open my classroom after lunch, I wonder if my kids will get stuck in the hallway, I wonder if they will bother another class, I wonder if a fight will break loose.

Alex’s mom showed up for his week’s worth of make-up work and I spend the first 10 minutes of my next class getting it together and then the next 40 feeling behind in my open theater.

RELATED: A Love Letter to My Kids’ Teachers From a Grateful Mama

The last showing of the day brings applause again and even popcorn during snack time, giving me just enough motivation to lay out the script and props for the next day.

At 3:30, I reach for the light switch and see my Yeti cup still filled with hazelnut coffee sitting right where I placed it after unlocking the door that morning.

How was your day?

Did you finish that book?

Where’s your folder?

I’ve asked these questions a dozen times today, but for the first time, it’s to my own son. We walk hand-in-hand to the softball field where he will sit in the dugout or practice his throws into a net outside the fence while Mommy counts laps and pitches batting practice.

I’m only an assistant coach, though, which means half the workload and none of the pay.

But that’s what you do when you teach. You give.

You give and you give and you give.

That’s what you signed up for, right?

You knew what you were getting into.

You have weekends off except when you have to write lesson plans or grade papers.

You’re in the air conditioning when it works.

You get paid even when you don’t work because nine months of pay is split into 12.

You. Have. It. Made.

And sometimes you do. Those are the moments you have to hold onto. Because if there is one thing in this life that’s similar to teaching, it’s parenting. And you’ve got 160 kids today who need to learn verb from noun and right from wrong.

So when you’ve got four new audience members with clipboards sitting in the first row of your debut, give it everything you’ve got.

And when they’re not there, give it everything you’ve got.

It’s what’s behind those curtains that’s going to come to light in 20 years when Derrick is fighting fires and Brianna is performing open-heart surgery.

Who knows, some might carry on your Broadway.

RELATED: Dear Teacher, I See You

To all the teachers feeling under-appreciated, just know that for every one kid putting eye drops in your Diet Coke when you leave the room, there are 10 going to bed with smiles on their faces because you said their writing was spectacular.

For every one time you’ve had to stop a lesson because someone is crying, you’ve helped countless kids by climbing high on your soapbox with a message on bullying.

For every time you’ve had a parent roast you on Facebook for disciplining their child, there are a hundred others thankful for your continuing their accountability outside the home.

For every time you’ve held your bladder until you peed just a little bit, you’ve shown a whole different level of dedication that no one even knows about. Please tell me I’m not the only one.

If the classroom is the stage in which you feel yourself, keep showing up.

Keep showing up for the kids who love you and for the ones who’d never admit that they do.

Keep growing your own love for your subject.

You can’t save them all, but I know you’ll try to anyway.

Because written words on clipboards and crumpled curtains can’t stop your show.

Originally published on the author’s blog

So God Made a Grandmother book by Leslie Means

If you liked this, you'll love our book, SO GOD MADE A GRANDMA

Order Now!

Whitney Ballard

Whitney Ballard is a writer and mom advocate from small town Alabama. She owns the Trains and Tantrums blog, where she writes about motherhood, marriage, mental health, and more. Whitney went from becoming a mom at sixteen to holing a Master’s degree; she writes about that journey, along with daily life, through a Christian lens. When she’s not writing while on her porch swing or cheering/yelling at the ballpark, you’ll find her in the backyard with her husband, two boys, and two dogs.

In Your 30s the Stakes Feel Higher

In: Living
Woman wading in shallow pond with rocks

I’m in the years where I’m not old, but I’m no longer young. Some women my age are just announcing their first pregnancies, while others like me are navigating pre-teen and teenage years. The 30s hold a different kind of tension. The days move faster now. Not because little feet are toddling through the house, but because the calendar is always full. Afternoons are spent running kids to practices, sitting in parking lots, and juggling dinner between drop-offs and pick-ups. The conversations are deeper. The questions are bigger. The stakes feel higher. This season isn’t about sticky fingers and sleepless...

Keep Reading

Sometimes You Just Need a Day Off—Give Yourself Permission To Take One

In: Living
Woman looking at water

I didn’t need a sick day. I needed a well day—and I didn’t realize how much until I finally took one. We’ve labeled our time off into neat, acceptable categories. Sick days are for fevers and doctor appointments. Personal days are reserved for emergencies and obligations. But what about the in-between days? When there’s no real diagnosable health issue and no major event or appointment that needs attendance. The days when there’s nothing technically wrong, but everything feels off.  A day when you’re barely hanging on, but still showing up. That’s where the well day comes in. On behalf of...

Keep Reading

I’m Learning To Feel Like I Belong In a Room Because I Want Her To Know She Always Does

In: Living, Motherhood
Little girl looking in the mirror

It took me 39 years to like myself. I mean really, honestly look in the mirror and say, “You go, girl.” I understand the concept of progress, not perfection, but the idea of always working on myself became a tiring and unrelenting objective. Here I was shrinking that waist, smoothing my skin, studying hard, working way too late, and often burning the candle at both ends to yield results that were still less than the ideal. It’s all well and good to be a doer who sets reasonable and sometimes unreasonable goals, but throughout my teens and into my early...

Keep Reading

8 Truths for the Graduate Still Figuring It Out

In: Living
Teen girl sitting on grass looking at fountain

Dear Graduate, I know you’re feeling it all right now. Anticipation, trepidation, and then other times, you don’t know what to feel at all. I know because I once felt the same. I graduated from high school several years ago, and here’s what I want you to know: It’s okay if you don’t have it all figured out. Sounds cliché, but it’s true. Whether you plan to attend college, take a gap year, get a job, or you don’t know yet what you want to do, it’s okay. Don’t compare yourself to anyone else. It’s so easy to fall into the...

Keep Reading

It’s Never Too Late To Start Again

In: Living
Family at mother's graduation

From a young age, I knew what I wanted my future career to look like. I pursued a path in healthcare, determined to use my gift for compassion to help others. I loved it. Being a small part of someone’s life during vulnerable moments made me feel like I was truly living out God’s calling on my life. Until I had children of my own. The work I did was exhausting—physically, mentally, and emotionally. What I didn’t anticipate was how that exhaustion would grow once I had children waiting for me at the end of each day. I was giving...

Keep Reading

From a Mom Failed By the Medical System: Your Experience Matters

In: Living
Woman holding baby standing by window

I was pregnant with my first baby in 2023, and my pregnancy was “picture perfect,” or so I was told. I went to all of my appointments, and every time I was reassured that everything looked great. My weight gain was “normal,” my baby was measuring appropriately, and his heartbeat was strong. My blood pressure was always a little elevated, but no one seemed concerned. Everything was fine…until it wasn’t. Looking back, I knew deep down something wasn’t right when I gained 10 pounds between my May and June appointments. I brushed it off, blaming a recent trip to Texas...

Keep Reading

Maybe that “Mean Mom” Is Just Busy

In: Friendship
Woman walking away

Ever since Ashley Tisdale wrote about leaving her toxic mom group, I have noticed something shift among women my age, moms in our 40s who built friendships through school drop-offs, soccer sidelines, neighborhood walks, and birthday parties. Here is the thing….no one wants to be labeled the “mean girls mom group.” Recently, I was out to dinner with a friend when she shared something that stuck with me. A woman had quietly left their local moms’ group and later treated them as if they were exclusionary. The final straw? She had sent a group text at dinnertime and no one...

Keep Reading

I’m Going to Tell You the Things Your Mom Should Have Told You

In: Living, Motherhood
Mother with three grown daughters

During my oldest daughter’s freshman year of college, I started being haunted by a recurring dream of an old-fashioned suitcase—one of those hard-sided ones that’s as big as they come. In the dream, when I open the suitcase, it’s overflowing with clothing, shoes, and all kinds of stuff that belongs to me and each of my three daughters. Everything in the suitcase is all jumbled together. Nobody else in the dream is worried about sorting through everything, but I am totally stressed about it. To top it all off, I have to deal with this suitcase while preparing for a...

Keep Reading

Your Worth Is Not Someone Else’s To Measure

In: Faith, Living
Woman looking over canyon

Insecurity is something we all carry in one form or another. For me, it has probably always looked confident and outgoing from the outside. But internally, it can feel heavy, complicated, and exhausting at times. And when someone comes along whose behavior reinforces those insecurities, it amplifies what was already there. There was someone I had hoped to genuinely connect with, but it was clear from the start that the feeling wasn’t mutual. From the beginning, their wall was up. No matter how kind I tried to be or how carefully I showed up, it never came down. Their distance...

Keep Reading

My In-Laws Don’t Like Me and It Breaks My Heart

In: Living
Family silhouette by the water

Since I was a little girl, I dreamed of what it might be like to gain an entire family when I got married. My parents were lovely. I never wanted for anything, and I had very involved grandparents. However, any other family was far away, and much of my childhood was lonely. I dreamed of brothers-in-law or sisters-in-law and their spouses to do life with. Maybe we would go on road trips together or stay in and play games and have a few drinks. I dreamed of raising our kids together and giving my children the cousin memories I only...

Keep Reading