A Rough Start for the New Literature Teacher
It had been months since the 10th grade had a permanent literature teacher. One had gone on maternity leave; another resigned after just a month.
When Anna walked in—young, composed, neatly dressed—the students exchanged glances:
“Another one… She won’t last long.”
The first lesson began like a challenge.
— Alright, open your notebooks… Anna said.
— We didn’t bring any! Someone called out from the back. Laughter rippled through the room.
— Maybe you should introduce yourself before teaching? another student teased.
— Alright. “Anna…” she replied calmly.
The comments grew bolder. Someone joked about her perfume and glasses. Another student played the sound of a donkey braying on their phone. While she wrote on the board, a paper airplane landed against her back.
Anna turned around.
— Going to leave like the last teacher? someone muttered just loud enough for her to hear.
One student exaggerated a yawn, then dropped their textbook loudly. Others joined in — books fell, chairs scraped, and one student openly scrolled through social media.
The Turning Point No One Expected
Suddenly, Anna sat down on the edge of her desk. Her voice was soft, almost casual… but every ear caught her words.
— You know, I haven’t always been a teacher. A year ago, I worked in a hospital ward for teenagers. They were your age. Some only wanted to live long enough to graduate. To them, everything mattered — books, poetry, just having someone to talk to.
The room quieted slightly.
— There was a boy, 17 years old, with a ser0us illness. We read books together because he could no longer speak.
Anna’s voice didn’t waver.
— He held onto the book even when his fingers could barely move. He told me, “I wish I had loved books sooner. Now I’d give anything just to sit in a normal classroom. Without medical equipment beside me.”
The class was still.
A Lesson Beyond the Textbook
— A girl in the next room dreamed of going to school. Just to sit in a real class. And here you are—living the dream they never could—yet acting like life owes you something.
Her tone was calm, not angry.
— I won’t ask for your sympathy, and I won’t beg. I know the value of what you have. And if you want to find out for yourself, keep going the way you are.
Anna stood, straightened the pile of notebooks, adjusted her glasses, and opened the class register. For the rest of the lesson, not a single sound broke the silence.