Mr. Reading, My Reading Teacher

teacher

October 5 is set aside as World Teachers’ Day, a time to honour educators around the globe. A Daily Dad reader remembers one teacher who made a difference in his life. 

One day, Mr. Reading told us how to deal with a bully. “You stand up to him,” he said. “If he hits you, hit him back.”

A week or two later, the guy behind me kept thumping the back of my head. I told him to stop, but every time Mr. Reading turned his back, the guy would do it again.

So, remembering the lesson from the week before, I turned around and smacked the bully. It was a loud fleshy smack; the whole class heard it. The jerk was about to rain down punches on me, but Mr. Reading broke it up.

The teacher asked why I did that, and I told him his parable about bullies. He smiled at himself and resolved never to teach that lesson again.

Life Lessons

But Mr. Reading (an apt name for an English teacher if there ever was one) taught many other lessons. He had a speed-reading film projector, and every week, he would increase the words per minute the text would flash by. Mr. Reading would have us diagram sentences so they made sense. He taught us about foreshadowing, symbolism, and other literary devices.

I think his sixth-grade English class is where I learned to love to read. The Lottery (by Shirley Jackson) was an apt metaphor for the draft – which was looming just ahead. An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge (by Ambrose Bierce) gave me a glimpse of the realities of war.

I did not see the writing on the wall then, but six years later, the draft introduced me to the realities of the Vietnam War. And I remembered Mr. Reading.

I learned as much about life in his class as I did about English composition. Thank you, Mr. Reading!

___

Photo by Max Fischer.

Don’s life revolves around the many poetry circles in South Texas. His poems have been published in a hundred periodicals and broadcasted on TV and radio. Don has written news and reviews for various media and countless editorials about fatherhood. His political correspondence has prompted personal replies from George W. Bush, Barack Obama, and numerous other lawmakers.

Find his work in the Daily Dad, the Good Men Project, and many other publications.

Don’s life revolves around the many poetry circles in South Texas. His poems have been published in a hundred periodicals and broadcasted on TV and radio. Don has written news and reviews for various media and countless editorials about fatherhood. His political correspondence has prompted personal replies from George W. Bush, Barack Obama, and numerous other lawmakers.

Find his work in the Daily Dad, the Good Men Project, and many other publications.

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