JAYNE ELLEN HELFRICK
  • About
  • Pots
  • Words

The Things That Plague Me

3/16/2014

0 Comments

 
All my pillows are in a garbage bag in my attic. My blankets are up there too, along with all my dry-cleanable only sweaters and my winter coats, because March fooled me again. I’m sleeping directly on my mattress, with a sheet and comforter, or I guess trying to sleep. Because it was. It happened again. It was lice.

Did you have lice as a kid? I never did. My first experience with this plague was at 24, not even two whole years ago. I jinxed myself writing that last post, I suppose. Never again will I call an “urge” an “itch.”

My body is a petri dish, where germs and bugs and anxiety come to thrive. Growing up, my family affectionately (or at least, I hope affectionately) referred to me as “Sick Girl.” I was sick on every holiday, birthday, or major event you could imagine. I had strep throat so often, I’m pretty sure amoxicillin should have just been on permanent hold for me at the pharmacy. But guess what: I’m still Sick Girl. Or Sick Lady, maybe? One of the things people tend to say when you start teaching preschool is that your immune system is going to be out of this world. What they don’t tell you is that in order to obtain that out of this world immunity, you will be sick. All. The. Time. Yeah, sure, I probably won’t get the flu virus that was going around last year, but this year’s is almost surely going to hit me. Because I am at the forefront of germs. Kids don’t stop getting sick. Germs and viruses and bacteria don’t go away, they just change as we become immune to them. As we adapt, the germs do too. So every time something new is going around, one of the kids is going to get it. I’m usually the next in line. 

I’m not sure how much more I can take. Five days ago I had bugs crawling in my head. I’m the girlfriend that probably gave her boyfriend lice. I’m the reason he shaved off his beautiful hair. (R.I.P. beautiful hair.) Last week I learned about something called rectal strep. Have you ever thought about how similar your butthole is to your throat? It’s an image I wish had never entered my head. My anxiety is building, to the point where I constantly feel like I’m walking across a tiny thread stretched out between my bed and my place of work, and the only place I really feel safe is tucked away under the covers, or at least three beers in. 

All I’m really trying to say is: be nice to teachers. Because the kids often aren’t, and the sicknesses never are. They just keep coming and coming and coming, like the Energizer Bunny of runny noses and violent coughs. And if you’re a hypochondriac like me, it’s hard to feel safe around those bacteria soaked monsters (I mean children, of course). Soon I will escape the germs. Keep your fingers crossed for me.



0 Comments



Leave a Reply.

    Jayne Ellen

    heavy heeled when walking; heavy handed when pouring a drink

    Archives

    May 2016
    March 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015
    December 2014
    October 2014
    August 2014
    July 2014
    June 2014
    May 2014
    April 2014
    March 2014
    February 2014

    Categories

    All
    Adulthood
    Anxiety
    Art
    Barbecues
    Better Days
    Birthdays
    Blizzards
    Broke Presents
    Change
    Cheers
    Christmas
    Creating
    Crunching Numbers
    Digital
    Drama Queen
    Dreams
    Entry Level
    Extra Cheese
    Facebook
    Germs
    Get Your Shit Together
    Goals
    Goodbyes
    Growing Up
    Holidays
    Improvement
    Itch
    Jelly
    Jinxed
    Judgy
    Kids
    Love
    Manners
    Mindset
    Motivation
    Nostalgia
    Philadelphia
    Phobias
    Post-valentine's
    Preschool
    Productivity
    Raccoons
    Rants
    Resolutions
    Retail
    Romance
    Secrets
    Slumps
    Snow
    Snow Day
    Social Media
    Spring
    Suburbs
    Summer
    Sweet Potatoes
    Symbols
    Tacos
    Teaching
    Tequila
    Twenties
    Vacations
    Watermelon
    Weekends
    What It Feels Like
    Winter
    Work
    Writing
    Youth

    RSS Feed

Proudly powered by Weebly
  • About
  • Pots
  • Words