Friday, August 23, 2019

A New Start

Summer is over and I am taking classes at Northern Virginia Community College with the goal of becoming a Licensed Teacher in Virginia as soon as possible.  After the failure of the Kitchen Guild and BathExpress, I decided that a new job or career was in order.

The Kitchen Guild (TKG)had been the company of my dreams, as an Interior Designer with a passion for making homes more functional and accessible, especially people wanting to age in place and people with disabilities.  The Kitchen Guild was a company with a 60 + history with the last owner having the company for 17 years. The company had grown to four showrooms and dwindled down to a single Mobile Showroom. Having always had their own in-house installers and talented designers, one of which was a "Voice of Industry" for the National Kitchen Bath Association (NKBA) who was going to be my mentor, was truly a dream come true, not to mention a 15-minute commute.  

In less than a year, it was all gone and I had to decide what to do next.  I didn't want to work nights or weekends.  I didn't want to work with contractors who were unprofessional and unable to do the work properly.  I thought I might try a larger commercial company, but when I got a call from a client who knew I no longer worked for TKG (I had been gone two months) asking me to change the tile color that she had approved, well... I decided, I also didn't want to work with crazy clients.  And finally, I didn't want it to interfere too much with my skiing.  The 2017-2018 season, I only skied eight days. Pathetic.

A friend suggested Substitute Teaching. It fit ALL of my criteria.  
  • No nights or weekends
  • No bad contractors
  • No crazy clients
  • Flexible schedule that would accommodate my becoming a Certified Alpine Ski Instructor, which would equal a lot more days on the slopes.
I didn't really think I would like teaching.  For years, walking through a Middle School or High School, even some Elementary Schools intimidated me because the students were so much taller than me. At 4'11", being vertically challenged only presented itself in the midst of all these young giants. But I thought, I'd give it a try, what did I have to lose?  Well... I LOVED it.  my first assignment was at a High School teaching Ceramics and Photography as a long-term assignment lasting over two months. I was so sad to leave the students when it was time for me to go, I cried.  Some of the students cried too.  As much as they loved their real teacher, they didn't want me to go.  It was very touching.  I truly felt that I had made a positive difference in some of their lives.

During that same time, I also became a part-time ski instructor. I had doubted I would enjoy that either, having to teach all ages from four-year-olds on up to senior adults, who had never been on skis every in their lives. We call them Never-Evers.  It was challenging, but again, I loved it.  I was so happy when someone who was struggling made it down the slope and was smiling at the end. I earned my Professional Ski Instructors of America (PSIA) Level 1 certification. By the end of the 2018-2019 season, I had logged 54 days on the snow. That’s a lot better than the eight the year before. 

I had a great summer traveling and being with family, but now it was time to get serious about starting that new job or career.  Teaching was calling to me.  I'd explain something to a stranger and they would say "You must be a Teacher. You made that so easy for me."  Or, my sister-in-law, recently retired, who had never had time to be a "reader" wanted to become one, but felt she read too slowly. I gave her books that I had enjoyed. I also gave her books that I had shared with my son, ones we had read together and suggested that she read those with her grandchildren. She was thrilled and now we're sharing thoughts on books and what we'll be reading next.  

So now I am taking EDU 200:  Intro to the Teaching Profession. I still want to substitute this semester in addition to doing a 40-hour field placement with an Elementary School (a change of pace from High School). I’ll be taking two other online teaching classes, and finishing my Children’s Specialist certification workbook for teaching children to ski. I’ve already passed the online quiz and hope to take the “On the Snow” exam in December.  Wish me luck, as this new journey begins. 


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