Hey! Remember the Era
of Extremes? It's still in effect!
Today I noticed
something was awry during my 7th hour class. The minute I walked in and closed
the door behind me, I smelled it. IT. Usually, I don't smell things in my room.
I have learned to be a mouth-breather. It comes second nature to me after nigh
on 26 years in the classroom. Not continuously, of course. I don't LIVE there,
contrary to the beliefs of some students.
Yes, inhaling through
one's nose is a no-no for a teacher. You rarely smell anything you WANT to
smell. It's not like our schnozzes are insured by Lloyds of London to detect
just the right bouquet of eau de parfum. Nope. Our schnozzes are our warning
system. Tobacco smoke? WACKY tobacco smoke? Fart spray? REAL fart spray? Yep.
We are constantly on duty, like a police pooch on patrol. Except there's no
biscuit to nosh on, or tennis ball to chase when we detect contraband. So
mostly I tune out, and let the important odors slap me in the face. Yes, I've
turned in tokers. Aromas like that shock me into awareness. But I'd rather not
go through the day knowing I'm inhaling butt-gas and armpit-effusion. You might
say I've steeled myself against it, or developed an immunity. Until today.
When other teachers
mention how a certain someone stank up their room to the point of opening
windows with the air conditioner on, to lighting a candle and risking the open
flame, I pause. "I didn't notice anything out of the ordinary when he was
in my room." There are none so olfactorily-blind as Mrs. Hillbilly Mom not
wanting to smell.
But today, it hit me
like ton of sulfur-and-manure bricks. I walked into the classroom, and BO
slapped me across the face like that saucy food in a Tums commercial. Yeah. It
was Seinfeld car level BO. I daresay I still smelled like it when the faculty
huddled together in front of the trophy case for a newspaper picture after
school to mark Newmentia's distinction of being number 3 5 6 or 3 6 5 on the
Newsweek Top 500 Schools list. I can't remember the exact number, and that's
what The Pony told me.
I didn't say anything
to the class. No need to embarrass the little stinker with only one hour left
of the school day. I even resisted the desire to whip out the Febreeze and
spritz that side of the room. Even the area on the other side, by my control
center, stank. That was some potent BO!
At the end of class,
as the students were straightening their chairs, a kid from the stink zone
walked by my desk carrying a Styrofoam bowl.
"Wait a minute!
You know you can't EAT in Mrs. Hillbilly Mom's classroom!"
"Oh…I wasn't
eating. I ate it before. In the hall. I'm just throwing the bowl away
now."
"You are,
huh?" Which is kind of my way of saying that I don't believe for one
minute that a kid brings an empty bowl, devoid of food, into my classroom, and
sits at his desk with it until time to go home. Nope. Not standard behavior.
At the bell, I had to
rush, reeking, for that picture. When I came back, my room still stank.
"Do you SMELL that?" I asked Tomato-Squirter, who had followed me
back as we tried to ascertain who might have brought the stench.
"I smell
SOMETHING. Not sure it's BO. Kind of a foody, garlicky undertone…"
I dismissed her as not
knowing what she was talking about. She always complains about her stinkers.
Maybe her smeller was on the fritz, the lining having been burned out already,
with it not even the end of 1st quarter yet. After she left, and The Pony entered
after his Scholar Bowl practice, I asked him if he smelled BO.
"I smell
SOMETHING."
The Pony does not go
to extremes of any facet. I didn't give his opinion much weight. As I walked by
the wastebasket on the way out, I looked at the trash. I had assumed that Styrofoam
bowl held Planter's Cheese Balls, or some dry snack handed out by one of the nurturing
teachers at the other end of the hall to her own sons, and their sporty
friends. But no. This bowl had a glisten to it. And a plastic fork laying
askance. Sweet Gummi Mary! The BO smell was very strong near the wastebasket. I
leaned over. The smell was coming from that bowl!
I have no idea what
that kid ate, but I'll be ding-dang-donged if I'd sit in class and chow down on
a bowl of BO with a plastic fork.
If only I had a free air
freshener thingy with a fragrance like photography film developer to stick up
in my classroom and improve the smell.
2 comments:
Those high-schoolers of yours are animals. Stink-producing animals.
Sioux,
Let the record show that they are mammals with sweat glands.
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