I teach a class of 6th grade girls. Quite possibly the worst thing I could teach, because they're at a very needy age. Younger children are still babyish enough that I can talk to them like little kids and treat them that way, and older teens have figured some stuff out. But these girls have so much drama that I'm supposed to solve for them...how can I when I still haven't figured out how to coexist with other women?
There was an incident a few days ago when their mentor came and told them she wouldn't be returning to the school. The girls began screaming and crying hysterically. This was overwhelming for me, and I just couldn't feel any empathy. So what did I do? I started yelling at them to get in their seats--which no one did. I got right in one girl's face and screamed at her. I think I made a lot of them hate me. Afterward, I realized that I should have shown more warmth, even if I didn't feel it. But how can I do that when it just doesn't come to me naturally? My responses to their emotional crises are always really thought-out and analyzed because I don't have a feminine instinct about those things.
It hurt when a girl said to me recently, "You only care about the boys. You should just BE a boy." It took a lot of self-control for me to not respond in a moment of anger and wait until the next day to tell her how much it hurt me.
Teaching in general is tough because I have to deal with loud noise all the time, and these girls are obsessed with scented lotions and sprays! I hate fragrance! The only positive about it is that I get to tell them to stop, whereas in many work environments it would be wrong for me to constantly correct my peers and tell them to stop doing things.