The Joy of Persistence and Perseverance
“To send him or not to send him”
I remember last year when Lady Mandy begin talking about sending Gabriel to preschool. My initial reaction was one of disappointment and disagreement. I didn’t feel he was ready to go the school, even if for half a day. I didn’t think the school system or teachers where ready for Gabriel to attend school and really it was about me being ready to release just a little of the fatherly oversight and control.
Granted he had been going to the Carriage House for play group on Friday’s but he still was not excited to go. He enjoyed outside time and gym time, but had not quite gotten into the organized/structure part of play group. When I would go in to pick him up, if they were sitting having circle time (singing, reading stories, etc.), Gade was some where else in the room doing his own thing. He may glance in the direction of the circle if something caught his attention, but for the most part Gabriel stayed to himself.
He did visit the Sunshine Room at the YMCA a few times and he really seemed to enjoy that play time while we worked out or the girls were swimming. But again that was a play group and not organized/structured learning. When we would take a break from what we were doing and peak in on him, he would be doing his only little thing, while the other kids ran around, climb around and just goofed around like kids do while playing with each other. So for me to send him to preschool was like a no brainier…NO PRESCHOOL FOR GABRIEL…at least not until he turned four.
Not only was Mandy talking about sending him to school, but she was talking about putting him on a bus…”what you talking about Mandy?!?” Not a hop, skip and a jump type bus ride, but a thirty-minute ride downtown. “What?!?” “Have you lost your mind!!!” There was no way I was going to agree with putting my baby boy on nobody’s bus, especially when neither of our girls have ridden a bus since being in school. It has never been up for discussion when it came to the girls riding a school bus, but now you want to put my little man on a bus. BANANAS!!!
Well the day comes for Gabe’s first day at preschool and his first bus ride. Bus comes and we put him on the bus and he looks back at us like really you’re going to let them take me on this big yellow thing…without you…your not coming…really. I had to turn and head back to the house and overcome with emotion and tad bit of anger…I punch the wall in the hallway. Thank God not hard enough to cause any damage to the wall or injury to my hand. A childish reaction I know but damn was I concerned about what was going through his little head and heart. Knowing he didn’t understand what was happening, didn’t know where he was going and didn’t have us to walk him through that first day of new beginnings.
Now the first class that he was in was a typical class with a typical teacher, who seemed to be stuck in her own individual way and style of teaching. She did not seem to want to change or adjust to individual learning style of a special needs student. Gabriel is a very smart little boy, but does not learn as a typical child does. He is an active and visual learner and needs a structured and sectioned off learning environment that not only is conducive to learning but provides a since of knowing. Having a class room sectioned off for special needs children help them to know exactly what to do in a certain area.
The first class did not work at to say the least. But then someone slipped up and told Mandy that there was an Autistic Class with a young teacher who had her Master’s in Special Needs Education. What, okay that’s the class Gabe needs to be in!!! Mandy set up an appointment to visit the class and meet the teacher and when she left she immediately called me and was so exacted she could hardly stand it. This was the class she keep repeating, from the layout of the room, to the different centers and areas for learning, to the ratio of student to teacher and aides, even the personality of the students already in the class. She was excited and she even said the teacher was excited about her job and welcoming Gabriel into their classroom.
After the first day of being in Ms. Becky’s class, he came home happy, spelling, singing a new song (row, row, row your boat). He started sleeping better and became more social. On his daily sheet his teach commented on how smart and sweet she thought he was. His morning and afternoon bus driver’s and monitors think he is sweet and say they love to hear him talk and sing (even though most of the time they don’t understand and word/sound that comes out of his mouth). The bus driver said she thought is was so good that he was talking so much, even though you have no idea what he is talking about.
I know what he is thinking about on the way home in the afternoon, a couple of blueberry waffles and the new stackable alphabet blocks his momma bought him that he loves soooooo much. I stacks them over and over again and in a few different variations. After school he will spend hours in his room play with his blocks and reading his books and when we go in to check on him, he nice and politely say’s “Bye, Bye” and waves for you to close the door and if he is close to the door he will close it in your face.
On day the afternoon bus monitor didn’t understand what Gabe was singing on his way home and I know immediately it was row, row, row your boat and so I joined in and sung along with him (as we toasted his waffles). I was so proud and so happy he wasn’t just making his usual happy noises but my man was singing and sung the entire song. Granted there were words I couldn’t quite understand, but it was row, row, row your boat. He’s got to songs in his song book now…You Go Gabe!!! PRESCHOOL RULES!!!