Love Poem: Middle School Math Teacher
Robert Ronnow Avatar
Written by: Robert Ronnow

Middle School Math Teacher

Should I become a middle school math or English teacher?
Leave my bed early in the morning and return with test papers to grade.
With what authority will I persuade those kids to sit still and perform 
      calculations and interpretations.
I won’t be allowed to teach A Good Man Is Hard To Find. Nope, it’ll be 
      Catcher in the Rye, Lord of the Flies and Slaughterhouse Five. Novels
      that annoy.
Poems and math are magic. Words and numbers are things no one has 
      ever seen or heard or touched.
But the administration keeps them separate. The curriculum’s 
      determinate.
The kids are beautiful but combustible. When middle school lets out at 
      the periapsis of Earth’s orbit, that’s the face of joy.

The purpose of school is to introduce us to the world’s innumerable
      wonders. The periodic table, World Wars I and II, Huckleberry Finn
      and Jim. 
Once a gaggle of teenage girls bet whether I wore boxers or jockeys. I felt
      ambushed and unlucky. Also a bit afraid.
There’s little love lost between the students and the teachers. Expect to
      forget and be forgotten. Information.
I remember Mr. Killian my chemistry teacher. So boring about something 
      I now find so interesting and important. He wasn’t boring; I was 
      boring.
I remember Mr. Christensen my history teacher. He was fat and funny but 
      taught as little as possible. I was known to laugh so hard I cried.
I remember Mr. T my calculus teacher. He dressed everyday exactly like 
      Gene Kranz in mission control. I was confused past help so he didn’t 
      help.
I remember Tone Kwas my music teacher. He said I was the worst 
      trumpet player he’d ever tried to teach and switched me to 
      sousaphone. He was right but so what! Playing badly is the best 
      riposte.