March 17, 2012

Happy St. Paddy's (not St. Patty's)

At 1am last night (this morning?), my phone beeps and buzzes on my bedside table. Text message. I've been in bed for nearly 3 hours. I know, quite the impressive outing on St. Patrick's Day. I roll over, check the message and see that it's from my big bro back in Canada (obviously he's having trouble calculating the time change... I received one from him at 4am last week). It's a slightly random message to say Happy St. Patrick's Day, but he wanted to make sure that I knew it was "St. Paddy" and not "St. Patty". Thinking this was slightly ridiculous, the next day I show the text to my lady-friend MM (who is about as Irish as they come in Canada), and she concurs. Not really explaining why that's the case other than "Patty is short for Patricia, duh!", I argue with her. I was suspicious that it was a bunch of bollocks. We banter back and forth and I abandon it because I really have no idea which is right. And an Irish girl should know, right?

As I turn on my computer and check my emails/facebook, I realize that my brother has proof via interweb. I hate admitting he's right, but it seems that he is. And MM is quick to point this out. Not a surprise there :)

So if you want to know why it's "Paddy" and not "Patty", go here: http://paddynotpatty.com/

My family has a wee bit 'o the Irish in us, so I make sure I mention this bit at our gathering last night. Hopefully good luck will find me.

T

March 14, 2012

New days

A big blanket of a blue sky is filling the windows of my office. My officemates are chipper, although one of them is buzzing and tapping and is being a bit crazy from a caffeine overdose which hit him just before 3rd block. I just finished my PE block out on the field (teaching Chinese kids BASEBALL!) and was able to comfortably don a hoodie and scarf while my winter jacket sat idly nearby. The Ides of March have arrived, but not with dark omens... if anything, they bring brighter days as spring slowly springs into the greater Dalian area. Every year here, I wait (im)patiently

The fallout from Friday has been a mix of good and bad. Countless students have approached me asking if I'm okay, a couple classes have had conversations focused on the fact that they were worried about me and that they were happy to hear that I was alright, and the staff/admin at my school on both the BC and Chinese sides have been extremely supportive. Everyone seems to have made positive decisions in regards to what happened and I continue to feel safe and comfortable at work. On the flip side, I've run into a few problems with students here and there (I'm not sure how much is related to last Friday, but I'm working through the issues one by one), and my weekend away with the hockey guys didn't really help my immune system. Knowing that I was already feeling a bit sick last Thursday meant that my ingestion of a tonne of greasy food and too much, well, soda, allowed for the arrival of a fever on Monday night and forced me to take Tuesday off from work. I was at work on Monday. And I was back again yesterday (Wednesday). And I'm here today, on the road to recovery, mentally, emotionally, and physically. It's been a good day so far and I keep counting these little moments of contentment as victories. I live a pretty amazing life most of the time, and although I've been forced to face my share of rough water in recent years, I know that my life is full of amazing people and fantastic experiences.

I was asked via email if I was able to find a teachable moment in the midst of what's happened. I don't know if I have. It's tough. It hasn't been a collective tragedy for people to get behind and work together to sort out. There was no school assembly, there was very little discussion as a school, and although the students all know what happened, it's hard to guage how they're feeling about everything. Whether it's language or cultural barriers, especially for my grade tens (which is 75% of my teaching load), I'm not sure what's will come of all of this. Have I been able to connect with a few kids lately that I hadn't connected with previously? Yes. Have I become more aware of myself and my teaching habits and how I treat the boys? Most definitely. Do I think I'm to blame for what happened? No. Regardless, an opportunity is here, and once things settle, I think I'll begin to use it to make connections that I may have been more willing to neglect in past days/weeks/months with the continually hormonal boys I teach. I'm definitely more eager to build more bridges today than I was only a week ago. Just like everything, we get caught up in our own personal dramas and we neglect so much of what matters.

My office continues to be full of laughter, as it is almost every day. I have a ridiculously eclectic group of friends in the confines of these four walls and we're constantly howling with laughter. And there's the sunshine. And the scent of spring riding the wind. And the emails/phone calls/messages from people all over the world. And my cold is slowly disappearing. Did I mention the sunshine and two hours of baseball I get to play today? Yep, there's that too.

Thanks for all the messages, prayers, and worries that have been shared this past week. I'm doing well and I'll continue to do well.

I hope that my more humourous stories of China and the world will find their way back here soon. Until then.

T

March 11, 2012

I didn't expect this to be my first post-travel blog post.

I don't know how to begin writing this down. Two days detached, it seems surreal, like a dream, or an acquired memory from a long-forgotten movie. Like when your parents tell you a story about you as a child, and as you continue to hear the story you begin to believe that you actually own the memory. But it remains hazy, as if seen through the fog in a steam-filled shower before work.

Friday morning, I believed that my biggest problem was the fact that I had only had one cup of coffee before my first class at school and that I'd forgotten my computer's power cord at my apartment, thirty minutes away. I thought to myself, "This is not a good start to Friday." Luckily for me, I had a weekend planned with the hockey boys in Shenyang and fully expected to add to my stats sheet. My hockey playing career only started last spring and I hoped to lace up some skates for two or three more shifts with the Ice Dragons.

Again, as I think about how to actually go about telling the story I get stuck. I think about a million details that are irrelevant and even as you read these words, I'm fully aware that I'm having a hard time getting to the point. Thus, I'm going to write it in the simplest way possible. Just so you know, I'm fine and so is everyone else that was present on Friday morning.

A student, one of my students, pulled two knives on me at the end of a PE class on Friday morning. 

I know this seems ridiculous and impossible to believe. However, it's true. I still have a hard time getting past the reality of it. I did not get hurt/injured. No students were hurt. The student was disarmed by a group of teachers in the gymnasium. He likewise was unhurt.

After a blow-up earlier in the class (he was asked to sit on the side after refusing to participate, and then subsequently left the gym and was found in the campus restaurant), I spent about 10 minutes speaking to him, calming him down (he was extremely upset), and gave him a choice to return to class or to return to the main campus and wait for our VP who was in a meeting. He chose to head back to campus so I watched him walk across the street, enter the teaching building, and I returned to my class. He returned to the gym about 15 minutes later. There were approximately 80 students in the gym (3 other classes were there), plus my students were in the adjoining ping-pong room. I was speaking to another student in the main gym area just as the period was winding down. He strode across the gym calmly and approached me and the other student. I asked him to wait nearby, finished my conversation, sent the one student back into the ping-pong room, and confronted the boy, asking him if he'd had a chance to talk to our VP. He then pulled two knives out of his pockets and screamed that he was going to kill me. For a split-second I had the urge to laugh, thinking of how absurd the whole thing was. However, after looking at his eyes, looking at the blades (shiny, sharp, brand new, one in each hand), I took a step back. He took a step toward me. He kept coming so I ran and he pursued me across the gym. I was able to get a badminton net between us. In the next few minutes of making sure the teachers understood the severity of what was happening, we tried to contact our VP/Principal with no luck. Another teacher intervened, the other remaining teachers moved students out of the gym, and I ran to the second floor to get our principal and VP. After getting them out of their meeting and returning to my own class to get them sequestered, I returned to the gym and the boy had been disarmed by two teachers, our VP and a number of the Chinese staff.

As I sit here reflecting on everything that happened, I think a thousand thoughts. And I'm sure you all have a million questions. Had I had problems with the student before? Well, yes, but it had little to do with me. He's a student who's extremely "young" emotionally. He has also, from what I can gather, been the victim of bullying. Some of this happened in my class and he had a blow-up a few weeks ago. I got him calmed down, told him that I'm here to talk and support him and promised him that if I ever heard about any incidents of bullying that I'd help him and take care of it. After calming him down and allowing him the option to speak to his homeroom teacher, I had a lengthy discussion with my class about bullying, respect, and working together. I talked to a few individuals in this class as well, making it very clear that bullying wouldn't be tolerated. This was weeks ago and there was nothing that I could see that made me think it was continuous or on-going. He didn't bring it up with me again.

Did I think the boy was dangerous? No. It's still hard for me to believe it happened. Where did he get the knives from? Likely some sort of regular market. The knives were more or less brand new paring knives with very sharp blades. Not big, but big enough. 

And yes, I'm fine. I'm stressed, I'm a bit anxious about what my classes are going to be like on Monday morning, but yes, I'm okay. I don't know what's going to happen with the kid. I don't know what we, as a school, will do about this. I know that I'm not the only one who has experienced these sorts of things. And I know that I haven't given up hope in humanity. Not completely, anyway.

As a special word of thanks, to RS, RH, and DN, the other PE teachers in the gym with me Friday morning, you guys had my back and looked out for the kids. Thank you for that. Also thanks to all my coworkers and particularly to MM who has done everything possible to make me feel better since it happened.

On we walk.

T