Anonymous wrote:I'm the wife of a teacher. I'm reading this thinking what about our kids.. our family? I know it's selfish, but it's there.
Anonymous wrote:That is an unspoken agreement in our jobs. I protect them in lieu of their parents. I really am tired of teacher hatred. No one understands or cares that since Sandy Hook I think of 1000 scenarios and plans on how to save my kids and I, especially since my classroom faces a courtyard and is the closest to the entrance. We die covering and trying to protect our little students. Many have families of our own, not that anyone cares. I want to know if these neglectful parents creating these monsters can take bullets for the teachers and kids their spawns killed. They should be charged along with their monsters.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That is an unspoken agreement in our jobs. I protect them in lieu of their parents. I really am tired of teacher hatred. No one understands or cares that since Sandy Hook I think of 1000 scenarios and plans on how to save my kids and I, especially since my classroom faces a courtyard and is the closest to the entrance. We die covering and trying to protect our little students. Many have families of our own, not that anyone cares. I want to know if these neglectful parents creating these monsters can take bullets for the teachers and kids their spawns killed. They should be charged along with their monsters.
Op here - i wasn't trying to hate on teachers. the whole article just made me so sad. you guys have hard jobs and now we want you to be part fbi-pscyh profiler, part infantry bullet sponge, etc.
it really feels impossible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That is an unspoken agreement in our jobs. I protect them in lieu of their parents. I really am tired of teacher hatred. No one understands or cares that since Sandy Hook I think of 1000 scenarios and plans on how to save my kids and I, especially since my classroom faces a courtyard and is the closest to the entrance. We die covering and trying to protect our little students. Many have families of our own, not that anyone cares. I want to know if these neglectful parents creating these monsters can take bullets for the teachers and kids their spawns killed.[b] They should be charged along with their monsters.
Come on, man. Why’d you have to add the last two sentences. You can’t say stuff like that. You know all those kids were once babies and then crap happened. We’ve all probably taught a potential shooter who, for one reason or another, didn’t go down that road.
Anonymous wrote:That is an unspoken agreement in our jobs. I protect them in lieu of their parents. I really am tired of teacher hatred. No one understands or cares that since Sandy Hook I think of 1000 scenarios and plans on how to save my kids and I, especially since my classroom faces a courtyard and is the closest to the entrance. We die covering and trying to protect our little students. Many have families of our own, not that anyone cares. I want to know if these neglectful parents creating these monsters can take bullets for the teachers and kids their spawns killed. They should be charged along with their monsters.
Anonymous wrote:I'm the wife of a teacher. I'm reading this thinking what about our kids.. our family? I know it's selfish, but it's there.
Anonymous wrote:That is an unspoken agreement in our jobs. I protect them in lieu of their parents. I really am tired of teacher hatred. No one understands or cares that since Sandy Hook I think of 1000 scenarios and plans on how to save my kids and I, especially since my classroom faces a courtyard and is the closest to the entrance. We die covering and trying to protect our little students. Many have families of our own, not that anyone cares. I want to know if these neglectful parents creating these monsters can take bullets for the teachers and kids their spawns killed. They should be charged along with their monsters.
“Last night I told my wife I would take a bullet for the kids,” said Robert Parish, a teacher at an elementary school just miles from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High, where a former student killed 17 people, including three staff members who found themselves in the line of fire.
Since the attack last week, said Mr. Parish, “I think about it all the time.”
And after this happened my kids are sitting outside saying, ‘Mr. K, would you give your life for me?’”
Mr. Klasner said he would — of course. “I said, ‘Did you even have to ask?’”