Tag Archives: laughter

Miss Rachel’s Students… and the things they say

One fine day, twenty-five years from now, when my husband and I are living at the beach, and after a long, hard day of sitting on the beach, we’re going to sip our margaritas on the lanai, and look at each other and say, “I can’t believe we spent our lives teaching school.” Neither one of us set out to work with kids, let alone be school teachers, but both of us absolutely love our profession. We currently teach in the same county, and since I have been here almost a decade, the students that sat on my music notes those first couple of years are now the teenagers who sit in his classrooms and who wear the football pads on Friday nights for his team. It’s really fun to share stories of how I knew his kids when they were so little, and for me to see them all grown up and in high school now. I hope this never changes.

Everyone knows that from the mouth of babes flows a river of pure honesty and truthfulness… and that river happens to flow with the purest of intentions. In other words, kids have zero filters and don’t give two flips about how it sounds or comes across and more times than not, it’s so stinkin’ hilarious.

Here are a few memorable things from a decade of teaching thousands of children under the age of 9.

  1. “This is boring!” – a kindergarten boy on his very first day of school and during his very first music class.
  2. “Miss Rachel, your hair is always so smooth and neat, but today it looks like some birds be living in it!” – first grade boy
  3. I was teaching about the percussion family of instruments and had a first-grade class trying to sound out the word “percussion” on the screen. Together the class and I read, “PER- KUH……” (of course I wanted them to then say, “SHUN” to make the word “percussion,” but this sweet little girl very matter-of-factly stated.. “PER….KUH….SET!” Percocet???? Girl, how do you even know that word??? Hahah.., we don’t really wanna know.
  4. Me: “Beethoven was just a person who was angry at the world”. Kid: “Kind of like Donald Trunk? He hates us.”
  5. Me, trying to rehearse kids for a program: “Why are you not singing?” Little boy: “I AM SINGING! In my head.”
  6. “It’s like the instrument is my voice!” – a shy little second grader the first time she played a bass metallophone.

And last but not least, here is a story that I am asked to repeat at least three or four times per year to my teacher friends… it’s known as the “Banana Story…”

Years ago, maybe my second or third year of teaching, we had this little boy named Markel. Now Markel, being the dandy sort of boy that he was…, was always getting into mischief at school. There are students like that, who constantly keep you chuckling, and Markel was one of those boys.

Markel was a kindergartener this particular year and had been to lunch right before coming to music class. He came skipping into the room with dark jeans on and a navy blue collared “dress code” shirt on. I immediately noticed the white paint covering the tops of his little boy thighs, and all over the front of his dark shirt. It was white, dried up paint.., or so I thought.

“Markel!! Have you been painting?” I looked around the room at the other students… nobody else had dried up paint all over themselves. Markel looked at me with such a puzzled look and then said, “Naw! I ain’t been paintin’!” He was so confused as to why I thought he had been painting. I said, “Well what on earth is that all over you then??”

Now, when I’m telling this story orally, this is the point at which I’m laughing so uncontrollably hard that I can’t breathe, my face is bright red, and whoever it is that I’m talking to is like… WHAT??? GET IT OUT!!!! WHAT WAS ALL OVER HIM???

Markel, without skipping a beat then said to me, “We had bananas for lunch today!” I immediately thought, well what does that have to do with anything?? He could tell I was thinking that because then he went on to explain,“Well, I didn’t wanna eat my banana so I just squished it up in my hands and wiped it all over me!!”

WHATTTTTTTTTTT….. !!!

The story always comes with the visual of me showing my listener the exact squishing motion Markel made with his hands…. The same squish you would use if you are squishing stress balls. And so, by this time, I am struggling to fill my lungs to capacity with air because I’m laughing so ferociously hard. More times than not, my listener isn’t really laughing that hard… I guess you had to be there.

And just for the record… I’m laughing pretty hard right now.

Miss Rachel’s Top 5 Keys to Who She Is

  1. Don’t you love second chances? I love second chances. I’m one of these lucky girls who was fortunate enough to get married young, figure out what NOT to do, divorce, and give it another try with a lot more life experience under my belt. Not saying my divorce was my doing, but hindsight is 20/20, ya know. I’m the wife of a high school football coach seven years my junior. What an adventure it’s been with this guy who has brought me to so many uncharted territories! We are opposites in practically every way and have such different backgrounds, but somehow, we find compromise and humor in our everyday lives – especially in the instances when we remember he was in the fifth grade when I was a senior in high school!

2. I never set out to be a mom. I was never the teenager who wanted to babysit or work in the nursery at church and I had never changed a diaper until that warm and very clear day in October of 2010 when I first met my oldest son Eli. He peed on the doctor before I actually saw his face and it was his diaper that was the first one I ever changed. I had another son, Don, a few years later, and then suddenly I found myself to be the single mom of 4-year-old and 8-month-old sons. Scary, scary times. It’s hard to mother whilst laying on the bathroom floor devastated from the failure of a marriage. But alas! The clouds did indeed part and I was blessed beyond measure not only with my husband, but with yet another son, Jack, my last chance at mothering another infant, another adventure which I would’ve never seen coming at age 38. If I had to describe my mothering style with one word, it would be “survivalist.” I do what needs to be done for my boys, I try to bring fun and laughter into most things, and sometimes we are a big disorganized, flustered mess, but I highly doubt my boys ever question whether or not they are loved by ALL of their parents.

3. Currently my favorite thing to do is to sit in my favorite chair beside a large window early in the morning, drink coffee, see who is out driving in my neighborhood, and read that week’s copy of New Yorker Magazine. I feel so artistic and connected to New York City when I read the articles and all the goings-on in the art world up there. Of course, it takes me the whole week to get through one issue because I have three sons and a husband and sometimes those articles are small novels! I love that my sister has gotten into producing abstract-like art and I’m slowly filling my home with her work. My favorites are the ones with lots of color – they really stand out on my obligatory gray living room walls.

4. Besides my family and music, food is my next favorite subject… I’m a FOODIE. I love food. No, no, you don’t understand, I Loooooovveeeee food. Food is my best friend…, well, one of them. And you can absolutely tell it by looking at me. I’ve spent a lifetime trying to lose weight, trying to count points and calories here and there…, but the fact of the matter is, is that I LOVE eating good food. At the end of a long day at school with 9000 children wanting to all sing the same song 100 times each, all I wanna do is whip up a huge pot of Smoky Tomato Bacon Pasta. Now there’s a dish… pasta, tomatoes, bacon, cream cheese…. What else could make you feel that good after a trying day ?

5. Someone that I love very much recently said to me, “Why are you ALWAYS laughing?” I guess maybe it’s because I’m constantly around people under the age of 8, or maybe because my spirit age is around 12 or so. Either way, the internal conversation with myself is always of the highest level of comedy and even when sitting quietly watching TV, or reading, or just sitting in a waiting room or something, you more than likely will hear me suddenly chuckle, at which point you probably will think, “WHAT is she laughing at ??” (The teacher next door to me frequently hears bursts of laughter coming from the other side of the wall but has never really questioned me about it.) My sister did confess to me that “it gets on people’s nerves!” My response to that is, if you think being constantly happy and laughing incessantly is a problem, then go find a grouch to hang out with!!!