Tuesday, January 31, 2012

I'm just what's-her-name in the back row

I used to be a teacher.  When we first moved here, I taught spreadsheets and business software at the local community college (the same one where I hope to be teaching freshman writing in a year or two).  Usually my classes had 12-15 students, but occasionally, for reasons known only to the registration gods, a class would be full to overflowing.  The computer labs had 24 computers in them if they were all working--which was rare--so when you had 25-26 students, it was a problem.

Not just because of the lack of computer space.  Lab time turned into a circus of me trying to be everywhere at once.  In some classes, a spontaneous spirit of camaraderie would develop, and the students would help each other.  But one time I had the class from hell, and there were 25 of them, and they were divided up into snipey little pockets of disgruntled, critical students.

After the first test, one of the students who always sat at the back and never said anything came up to gripe about his grade (which, if I remember right, was a C or so, not failing).  I was friendly, but firm.  The test was fair; most students had done well on it.  At some point in the conversation, he said to me, "You've had it in for me since the first day of class," at which my eyebrows must have raised practically to my hairline in surprise, because he immediately started backpedaling.

I could barely keep track of what was going on in the classroom, let alone plan to systematically undermine a particular student.  I didn't dislike the kid, and I knew for sure that I wanted him to do well, in the generalized way I wanted all my students to do well. To be entirely honest, I wasn't even exactly sure what his last name was, he was just one of that group of 3-4 students at the back who rarely participated.

Which says terrible things about me as a teacher, I know.  But it was a college-level class, dang it.

Anyway.  It's something I've thought of often when I've had a paranoid tendency to think that someone I don't know well doesn't like me or has deliberately snubbed or ignored me.  Chances are slim.  It's almost never about me.  It was a great object lesson.

The rest of this was a long, whiny complaint about a situation I've been in where I felt like that kid in the back row of the class.  But I'm deleting the rest of it and ending here, because it's not worth putting the energy into that particular kind of negative thinking.  Ha, which reminds me of a post I've been meaning to write about negative thinking.  Maybe I will completely switch gears and go for that, because it's not long enough to make into its own post.

So here's the deal. We all know that negative thinking is bad, that we don't like to be around people who are negative, who are always looking for the dark cloud around the silver lining.  Got that.  But then there's also the completely true fact that if you ignore negative stuff, you'll end up neurotic with an ulcer.  I'm starting to think that maybe there's two kinds of negativity-- one that's just honesty, acknowledging the darker side of our experience, and another that's a twisted form of that, where you're always raining on other people's parade, always criticizing and carping and looking for other people's faults.  That first kind of negative thinking isn't bad; it's necessary.  The second kind is the kind I want to avoid (and that's why I deleted the whiny part of this post).

Huh.  and that makes me wonder if there's two kinds of positive thinking, too.  One that's based on a genuine love of life--all of it, good, bad, positive, negative-- and warm acceptance of other people exactly as they are; and another that's based on ignoring anything you don't want to see.  The first kind is something I aspire to (to which I aspire), the second kind gives me the complete and utter creeps because it was such an unhealthy thing for me in my early life.

Do with this disjointed mess what you will. 

9 comments:

  1. ggw those last 2 paragraphs are exactly what I've tried to express to certain people for years. One particular person in my life who just can't see or hear anything negative. And another person in my life who has to spin the most horrible things into something positive.
    There's good and bad in this life and sometimes there isn't any 'reason' for any of it. It just is.
    I'm okay with that. In fact, I'm happier with that than I am trying to fake anything else.

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    1. I know what you mean. Some people are so relentlessly positive that you wonder if they're just going to crack someday. I'm with you-- better not to fake it, just be honest.

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  2. First - So agree about the first part of your post. I'm always trying to tell people this. It's one of the times when Doc Phil was right: You'd stop caring what people think of you, if you knew how rarely they do.

    Second part of post - I love your definitions. Perfect. Definitely true. My nature leans a little more towards Healthy Positive than Healthy Negative, and I have friends who lean toward Healthy Negative more than Healthy Positive. But I don't care for the two extremes.

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    1. Ha, I love the "Healthy Negative" and "Healthy Positive." I hope I tend toward "Healthy" negative now. I know in my past I've been one of the people that was just plain old negative, because I grew up with so much denial and I was sure that people would WANT to have the negative about any particular situation pointed out to them. lol It took me until well into my 30s to figure that one out! And love the line from Doctor Phil.

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  3. Great points made here, as always. My version, as you already know, of the Take It Personal topic is:

    "it's not always about YOU, Diane!"

    As for the positive/negative discussion, I haven't thought about it much. For me, as with so much of life, balance and honesty are just the way I "see" this. Like, we need an honest balance and moderation is the most healthy way to approach it.
    Julie

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    1. OK, I googled to find out but got nothin'. Who is Diane? And well said. You should just e-mail me that line about once a month. :-)

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    2. and you know-- after further thought-- you're right. Honesty is the whole thing. Being honest about your experience, not ignoring the bad (which some do), and not ignoring the good (which I unfortunately sometimes have a tendency to do). I can be a bit of an Eeyore-- which is a possibly vain attempt to make it into something cute and huggable. :-) Good point.

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  4. I was referring to the story I told about my mom being out in the garden after my sister died, and how she heard "the voice of God" tell her that. My mother: Diane.

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    1. oh, of course! I remember that. *knocks self on side of head*

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