Even after nearly thirty years of teaching, students still surprise me. Events occur that find you completely unprepared. This was mine. I was putting a few plants from the farmer's market into my trunk when I was interrupted.
"Hello Mrs. Thompson."
I looked up to see Tony, one of my former students. "Hello Tony. Are you enjoying your summer so far?"
"Yeah."
I could tell by his answer that he had something he wanted to say to me. I looked at him expectantly. Tony had been one of my favorites, and I had written him several glowing recommendation letters for college. Most had been superfluous; there was no question that the University was going to accept him.
"I've graduated high school...," he smiled, full of the confidence of youth.
"Yes, I know, and you're going to the University."
"Yeah, so I'm not your student any more."
I paused with a smile. "Obviously."
"And I'm 18."
"Yes, I know."
Suddenly he seemed unsure of himself, in that millisecond change that my kids so often do, converting from thinking you are just a tired old fool to a genius who knows the answer to every question.
"So I was wondering if you and I could get together sometime," he blurted out.
Years of working with young men and women had heightened my sensitively to the "question within a question," when my students had something on their mind that they couldn'tβor wouldn'tβarticulate. This was one of those moments. I looked at him and tried to figure out what he meant.
"You mean like go to dinner or something?"
"No. I mean...well yeah, we could go to dinner...or something." I looked at him, mystified. "I mean, I wonder if you would like to...I mean I want to be...alone with you."
Realization dawned on me and I could feel myself blush. My jaw must have dropped, and he looked away. Kids can be so incredibly fragile at that age, desperate for your approval. I didn't quite know what to say.
"
You mean...alone...with me