Okay, time now for my tale of woe:
I was in first grade and did not yet have glasses. On one day in winter, I was screwing around with some classmates at recess and one of them threw a snowball at me. A snowball containing a large chunk of ice and some flecks of gravel.
And it hit me right in the eye. Imagine taking a sharp steak knife and plunging it straight into your eyeball. That is how painful it was.
When recess was over. I went straight to the teacher and asked to be sent home. My elementary school did not have a nurse at the time. It also turned out that my regular teacher was gone and we had a substitute instead.
So I got sent to the principal's office and the prinicpla asked to have a look at my eye. But it hurt so bad I could not open it to let him have a look at it. So he assumed I was faking the whole thing and sent me back to class.
I think I then went to the school social worker and got the same answer. Because I couldn't let her look at my eye I must be faking being hurt so I can get out of a test or something. I got sent back to class.
I couldn't focus on any lessons or eat lunch or do anything because all I could think about was how badly my eye hurt. Sometime in the day I snuck out of class and went to the office to try and call my mom or something, and got nowhere there either. In fact, the principal, who was a rather large and intimidating man, threatened to give me a spanking when I returned to the office begging to be let out of school.
I ended up having to struggle through the day and then when school was out I was staggering around the playground looking for my mom's car. She picked me up and whisked me right to the eye doctor, who noticed that I had a massive scratch on my eye and I had to wear an eye patch for a while.
Mom was so mad she wanted to bring me right back to school and tear the principal a new one, but I got terrified and begged her not to, because of the spanking he threatened me with. She did it a different day instead, without me being present. He changed his tune and apologized profusely to me and punished the kid who threw the snowball.
So I can definitely understand how children who are obviously sick get ignored. Some teachers just don't care about the welness of their students,are too busy to even notice, or in my case, assume it's an excuse to ditch class.
And I still have problems with that eye.
I was in first grade and did not yet have glasses. On one day in winter, I was screwing around with some classmates at recess and one of them threw a snowball at me. A snowball containing a large chunk of ice and some flecks of gravel.
And it hit me right in the eye. Imagine taking a sharp steak knife and plunging it straight into your eyeball. That is how painful it was.
When recess was over. I went straight to the teacher and asked to be sent home. My elementary school did not have a nurse at the time. It also turned out that my regular teacher was gone and we had a substitute instead.
So I got sent to the principal's office and the prinicpla asked to have a look at my eye. But it hurt so bad I could not open it to let him have a look at it. So he assumed I was faking the whole thing and sent me back to class.
I think I then went to the school social worker and got the same answer. Because I couldn't let her look at my eye I must be faking being hurt so I can get out of a test or something. I got sent back to class.
I couldn't focus on any lessons or eat lunch or do anything because all I could think about was how badly my eye hurt. Sometime in the day I snuck out of class and went to the office to try and call my mom or something, and got nowhere there either. In fact, the principal, who was a rather large and intimidating man, threatened to give me a spanking when I returned to the office begging to be let out of school.
I ended up having to struggle through the day and then when school was out I was staggering around the playground looking for my mom's car. She picked me up and whisked me right to the eye doctor, who noticed that I had a massive scratch on my eye and I had to wear an eye patch for a while.
Mom was so mad she wanted to bring me right back to school and tear the principal a new one, but I got terrified and begged her not to, because of the spanking he threatened me with. She did it a different day instead, without me being present. He changed his tune and apologized profusely to me and punished the kid who threw the snowball.
So I can definitely understand how children who are obviously sick get ignored. Some teachers just don't care about the welness of their students,are too busy to even notice, or in my case, assume it's an excuse to ditch class.
And I still have problems with that eye.
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