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Right Where I Need To Be

Joe Augustinsky, ACE 19

It is right where I need to be: on one side of a climactic showdown in a spaghetti western.  I stand at the front of the room, giving my best possible Clint Eastwood 19-stpetersburg-augustinskystare, while every imaginable worst case scenario runs through my mind, begging me to cry out in fear and run from the room.  Forty-six eyes stare right back at me.  They wait.  They beckon.  I didn't know eyes could talk, but these seem to be taunting me: "Go ahead.  Your move."  I can almost hear a Sergio Leone score fluttering in the air.  Eternity passes in five minutes.

BANG!

The bell rings, signaling the end of passing period, and a classroom of twenty-three high school students flinches.  The first day of school can now carry on.

I never expected to be facing down a room of high school students because I never planned on becoming a teacher.  In my senior year of college, my days were filled with the construction of a robot that was supposed to kick a football for our senior design project.  My nights were filled with producing a student-run musical theatre company.  I am fairly confident in my math skills and robots plus tap shoes should not equal Catholic educator.   But as I went through the grind of career fairs and emails and cover letters and resumes and first-round interviews and thank you emails and second-round interviews and site visits, I couldn't help but think that none of these companies was where I needed to be.

ACE had a different feel.  After a pastoral staff member from ACE visited my classroom one day, I began browsing the website.  I read about college graduates going out to teach across the country and knew this was it.  This is what I had been missing!  A place where I could talk all day about science and still rehearse at night for theatre.  But even more than that, I realized what all those other interviews had been missing: a calling.  A vocation.  Use whatever word you like, but after months of searching, I finally felt that I could do something that makes a difference.  And every day I get a chance to make a difference by sharing my experiences with my students.

Now, in my second year in ACE, there are no more spaghetti western showdowns.  I still feel like Clint Eastwood at times, but it is less The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly and more Gran Torino: I try to act tough but deep down I can't help but smile.  I just want my students to succeed.  I just want to leave the world in a better place and education is one way that I can do that.  I still stand at the front of the room and look around at my students, but the eyes no longer taunt me.  Instead, they ask: "What are we going to do today?"  I breathe a sigh of relief because, at this moment, I am right where I need to be.