thankful
thank – ful /ˈTHaNGkf(ə)l/
to be pleased and relieved
As we enter Thanksgiving break I encourage you to focus on the two words above – pleased and relieved. There’s no denying that the start of the school year is an extremely stressful time. Somewhere between the sight words, the science experiments that almost went according to plan, and the coffee that went cold on your desk (again), something incredible happened.
You made it. (and so did your students)
You made it through the whirlwind of the first part of the school year—those early-morning pep talks in your car, the endless name-learning, the curriculum juggling, the parent-teacher conferences, and the marathon of guiding little humans through big emotions. For that last sentence alone you should be extremely RELIEVED.
And if you pause for one little moment—right now, before the next thing calls your name—you might notice something:
You’ve done a lot.
Like… a lot a lot.
And that’s something worth being thankful for, or, PLEASED.

Thankfulness isn’t always loud. It doesn’t always look like pumpkin-spice-everything or perfectly decorated bulletin boards with cutouts that took two hours longer than they should have. Sometimes “thankful” is simply this:
A deep breath.
A nod to yourself.
A moment of “Hey… look at everything I’ve carried, created, and cared for.” Teachers are natural forward-lookers—always thinking about the next unit, the next data collection period, the next holiday party that will require twenty-seven glue sticks and a prayer. But, it’s worth noting how calming it can be, before you rush ahead, to take a second and soak in what you’ve already done. Doing this on a daily basis can help you focus on the success instead of the stress.
Your impact this year is already written into the smiles, the confidence, the notebook pages filled with brave new attempts, and the classroom routines that magically run smoother than they did in August.
That’s worth celebrating. Right now. Before Thanksgiving break even starts.
AND…all of this is important to remember EVERY SINGLE DAY going forward!
You tell your students to be proud of their growth.
You celebrate their progress.
You remind them that rest is part of learning.
So go ahead… take your own advice.
(Yes, I know. Easier said than done. But try it. Your future self in December will want to high-five you.)
Be pleased.
Be relieved.
Be proud of the teacher you’ve been so far this year and thankful for this much deserved break. Then, remember ALL of this when school starts again. Happy Thanksgiving. -Adam


















