With that being said, well you can guess, that it is a dirty
job.
I don’t know how many times I have ended the work day with
bodily fluids on me, whether that be spit, throw up, poop, or sometimes all 3
days if I am really lucky (that is sarcasm for those who don’t know me well
enough)!
So yesterday I spent the better part of a day at restraint
training, or the technical name is “Non-Violent Crisis Intervention Training”.
They teach you how to work with kids that are in crisis and are being unsafe.
They teach you the steps to take to deescalate and hopefully
not have to go hands on.
This is a process I know well and pride myself in thinking
that I am pretty darn good at it. At the general education schools I have
worked at before I am always the one asked to step in when a crisis is
happening.
I pride myself in not going hands on if I don’t have to
because it kind of eats my soul when I have to restrain a child.
But I digress.
At the training the presenter made an enlightening
comment.
The training packet talked about “professionalism” and he
said there is nothing professional when you are working in education. (His
disclaimer was professionalism was the pressed suit, hands off, everything
looks good on paper approach).
He said when you are working in education everything is a
little dirty. Whether that is coming home covered in bodily fluids or having to
deescalate students when in crisis, it is dirty.
I have struggled with this dirtiness, not so much the bodily
fluids a shower can fix that, but when working with students that are escalated
and in crisis I find a part of me takes on that crisis. It is that dirty part I
can’t brush off.
But when we were practicing restraints on each other
yesterday and we were having to really get into each other’s personal space the
trainer laughed and said “get on in there, it’s going to be dirty at times”
(referring to arm pits).
That was the moment where I was able to finally understand
the beauty in the dirtiness in the job.
This whole year has been a dirty. The students I have worked
with have been extremely tough, the staff I have worked with have been even
more difficult and it has gotten dirty and I struggled with that.
I subconsciously had this idea that yeah, education should
be professional. We meet the criteria of a, b, and c and it is all-good.
NEWSFLASH ROSEMARY, nothing works that way.
People, kids and adult alike, are all unique and that makes
work and life in general dirty.
I never realized how much I hated the dirty part of human
interaction, I avoid conflict like the plague and when big emotions happen I
run the other way. I am learning though that I have a strong moral compass to
do what is in the best interest for kids and by staying the education field I
know things will get dirty and I am learning to accept that.
So today (well yesterday) I am happy to embrace the dirtiness
of life whether that is, bodily fluids or emotional distress.
Being human is dirty business. Let’s celebrate and get dirty!