
Dear Mrs. X:
In just over a week, you will be my son’s Grade 1 teacher. He is ever so excited to be under your tutelage. Why, since the last day of kindergarten, entering your class was all he could talk about. He gleefully thrust a piece of paper into my hand on that June afternoon, and said, “Here’s a list of the stuff I need for school next September!”
And I have to admit, I, too, was excited. I’m a school supplies geek from way back. And so, in early August, I set out to buy the items you’d listed.
It was on my fourth store that the realization began to sink in.
You’re a crafty bitch, aren’t you?
This list was a thinly disguised test. Could I find the items, exactly as you’d prescribed? Because if not, my son would be That Kid, the one with the Problem Mother, Who Can’t Follow Directions.
For example, the glue sticks you requested. In the 40 gram size. Three of the little buggers. (What kind of massive, sticky project you’ve got planned for the first day of school that would require the students to bring all this glue, I cannot imagine.) But the 40 gram size doesn’t come in a convenient 3-pack. The 30 gram size does. But clearly, those would be wildly inappropriate. So I got the individually priced 40′s, as per your instructions.
Another bit of fun was your request for 2 packs of 8 Crayola crayons (basic colors). The 24 packs, with their 24 different colors, sat there, on sale. I could have purchased three of the 24 packs for the price I had to pay for the 8 packs. (Clearly, you’ll not be teaching the youngsters any sort of economics lessons this year.) Even the cashier looked at me, as if to say, “Pardon me, ma’am, but are you slow?” as I purchased these non-bargain crayons. But that’s what the list said. And I was committed to following the list.
But the last item, well, now, you saved your malice up for that one, didn’t you? “8 mm ruled notebooks”, you asked for. Simple enough. Except the standard size is seven millimetres. One. Millimetre. Difference. Do you realize, Mrs. X., exactly how infinitesimal the difference between 7 mm ruling and 8 mm ruling is? Pretty small, I assure you. The thickness of a fingernail, approximately. But that millimetre, that small bit of nothingness, made me drive to four different stores, over the course of three sweaty August hours. And when I finally, finally found the last remaining 8 mm notebooks, I took no pleasure in my victory. I merely shifted my focus. To you, Mrs. X.
You wanna dance, lady? Let’s dance.
Because I am just batshit crazy enough to play your games. And, in turn, come up with some of my own.
On show and share day, my son will be bringing the video of his birth. It will be labelled, “Ben’s First Puppy.” Enjoy.
He will be given a list of words, and daily, he will ask you what they mean. Words such as, “pedophile”, “anti-semite”, and “skank”. Good luck with those.
At some point, you will attempt to teach him mathematics. And I’m quite sure that, like most of your ilk, you will require my son to “show his work”. And he will.
Through interpretive dance.
Because that is who you’ve chosen to tangle with, toots. A stay at home mom who is not entirely balanced, and has altogether too much time on her hands. But is, most certainly, A Mother Who Can Follow Directions.
Sincerely,
Ginny
image from here






Oh Ginny you’re such a scream. I wouldn’t want to get on your wrong side but I’d love to have a cocktail with you one day
And I, you
Ha! Love it. But while you are a stay at home mum with too much time on your hands, she is a teacher of feral little animals. As one myself, you gotta get your own back somehow
OK, so as a teacher, level with me: was this a test? Am I paranoid? (What’s that saying about not asking a question you don’t want the answer to?)
Bwahahahahah! That was hilarious. Another good one is “douchebag” How about that Teach!
Ooooh, he actually used that in front of me, so he knows its verboten. In his defense, though, he used it while we were in traffic, and he used it correctly.
go get her… parent-teacher ‘urinary olympics’ is high sport.
i encountered a couple teachers like this. you are, in fact, NOT purchasing supplies for your own child to use. she is stocking the supply cabinet — communal, identical boxes of crayons to last her the entire school year. a tyrannical mob of identical glue sticks…
to the defense of the teachers, the schools often no longer PAY for supplies. but my guess is that she’s stocking the cabinet. and it would be REALLY FUCKING NICE if they just told you that up front.
yeah. 15 years later and i’m STILL pissed off about it…
Well, I figure that in a couple of years, we’ll just be sending them with laptops, so there’ll be nothing to be shared or appropriated. Until then, I just want it noted that I followed the rules.
Label everything with your child’s name. In big permanent marker.
Are you insinuating that this teacher is not only a sadist, but a pedophile, an anti-semite, and a skank? No? My bad.
Oh goodness, no! I just thought those would be sort of difficult to explain to a 6 year old. Go ahead, think of an appropriate way to do it. On the spot. With 25 little sets of eyes staring at you. Ready to report back to their parents what you said.
Sorry, that one’s too easy for a crafty bitch. Especially once she knows he’ll be asking deliciously evil questions, she’ll pop the ol’ dodge: “That’s a question for your Mommy, Dear.”
You could add a couple hurdles for her if you make sure he only asks for the meaning of words in front of other faculty (on the playground, in line for activities, etc.) and prime him for the all-important “where did you hear that word?” question… the answer of course is a variation on “You said it after-
you dropped your chalk
Mr. OtherTeacher left the classroom
the principal’s announcement
when the fire drill started
In front of other faculty members, the effect is usually spectacular and may result in death-by-mortification.
Slightly incorrect/incomplete meanings to common words and phrases also offers endless opportunities for amusement. My nephew once asked what the TV meant when they said “OH face”… he was told that this was the face grown-ups make in response to an “Uh-oh” situation. Two days later, when he apologized to his Aunt for inducing her “Oh face”, she turned a beautiful shade of crimson and the rest of the family exploded with laughter. A year later the same nephew was (understandably) misinformed regarding the meaning of “lascivious” with awesome results in a public restaurant.
No doubt, with time on your hands, you’ll have endless fun coming up with more tricks and traps.
Yes, I was an evil child. My parents taught me well. They warned me that, from time to time, my teachers may not respond to my comments/actions in exactly the way I would expect, but that I would be handsomely rewarded for any difficulties faced, so long as I remained polite and respectful. I was a straight-A student, and NOBODY bothered me.
Oh… and congrats on raising a sharp fella. Proper use of “douchebag” at his age is a sign of awesome context-awareness. Work on his poker face and he will be well-respected by the faculty, wherever he goes.
“feral little animals” (from GYL) – Ha!
You’re hilarious. Love it!
Aw, thanks Katie! And one day soon, you’ll be regaling us with tales of those animals. Oooh, that might be a good name for a teacher blog – Feral Little Animals!
seriously ginny, i never really thought i’d want kids, but some of your posts make me think it would be an absolute riot. they’re like little minions you can send out to wreak havoc on the world!
Oh, there’s rioting, all right.
Wait, that wasn’t what you meant, was it?
I spent just over $84 on school supplies for my 9th grader last year and I swear about $81 came back to the house unused in June.
Of course, none of my inventory matches even one thing on the grade 10 list.
It only gets worse. And they’re all in it together.
So I’m NOT being paranoid!
Too funny. Interpretive dance. Ha!
When my daughter was in grade school, I was incredibly conscientious about the supplies. By junior high, supplies were just scavenged from around the house about 10 minutes before the first day of school. What can I say? The teachers broke me.
By high school, I’m sure I’ll be Back to School Scrounging, not Shopping. But until then…
You are so right. That is too awful. What’s wrong with “a little glue stick” and then telling you when it’s running out? That teacher must be one anal woman. And I thought I was bad.
I’m going to guess that it’s because those messages have to go through small children. A group that, historically, needs strings on their damn mittens.
Teach me, Master. I will be your faithful student and disciple.
Oh my. I’ll be tipsy on power if you’re not careful, faemom. Or maybe it was the Bloody Mary at breakfast. Either way, I’m going to lie down, now.
Ah, but did he say “douchbag full of hot sauce”? That one’s been bouncing round our house lately.
I laughed out loud at “interpretive dance.” Wheeee!
Full of hot sauce, you say? Nice twist, Beej.
“Through interpretive dance.”
Oh, SNAP!
Mm hm, that’s right!
If you see those pocket folders with brads, grab the entire box. I’m convinced people are hoarding them or selling them on the black market, or they don’t exist at at all.
REALLY?? Come to Canada, where brads are cheap and plentiful.
Tablets and fat pencils were all we were required to have. And I guess a satchel to carry them in. Of course, glue sticks weren’t invented then.
And a slate, for you and your sister Mary to share?
Great Little House ref!
I can only hope that I will be as crafty as you if the occasion ever calls for mental-tango with a teacher. Josh has been talking about home schooling though – I might have to take my craftiness out on nearby crossing guards.
Home schooling is for the disciplined. Alas, I am not one of them.
“Home schooling is for the disciplined”??? I was homeschooled and I think my mother would bust a gut laughing if she heard that.
Hilarious!
Way to play! Go, you!
heehee
I would have bought the cheap crayons, the 3 pack of glue and the smaller notebooks then just shrugged off being labeled ‘the mom who can’t follow instructions’. Your way is more fun.
Fun. Crazy-making. Whatever.
Here’s one for you. Have him ask her “What word begins with an F and ends with UCK?”
The answer? FIRETRUCK!
He’ll be in the principal’s office fer sure . . .
LOL!!! I’m stealing this! I don’t even have kids yet but I’m so using it. Genius.
I think we share a similar madness, Ginny. I did the exact same thing for 1st grade with Little One. By third grade, I have changed my tune a bit.
Crayons? I got your crayons. Paper? Reams of it. Don’t like it? Well, my name isn’t on it. I just unloaded my reams onto the mountainous pile or paper near the window.
Baby wipes? What 7-9 year old in the class is wearing diapers? And would your really wanna wipe them? I don’t want you wiping my kid, thanks anyway.
Anti-bacterial soap. Do you think that is gonna make much of a difference in a class of twenty-odd little kids in a school of hundreds, with buses and doorknobs and what not? Dream on.
My daughter generally got what was on the list, but also came with other things. Folders with puppies on them. Why? Because she didn’t want to be just like everyone else. Yellow #2 pencils, yeah, I sent in 60. But Little One has some psychedelic pink and yellow ones for personal use.
I do think Little One would like to demonstrate her math work through interpretative dance. Now I need to get the right music for her…..
okay, Ginny this made me laugh out loud. OMG, fucking hyseterical. Stumbling this one for sure.
I love you today more than ever. Thanks for the huge laugh
Thank you! I was beginning to think I was the only one seriously pissed off at the ridiculous school supplies lists my children bring home. For the last four years, my son has had the same group of about six teachers. EVERY one of them has their own separate supply list and none of them want the same things. One wants folders with pockets, another wants a specific size with a certain number of tabs, one wants only red folders, .. three boxes of kleenex… those STUPID glue sticks… 8 packs of crayons (to which I have always sent the 24 packs with my children instead).. one teacher wants narrow highlighter pens, another wants the fat ones.. blah blah blah. His school supplies list was TWO PAGES LONG! I kid you not. Thank goodness he made it to high school this year where the teachers tend to treat the students like they are old enough to decide for themselves what size notebooks they need and whether or not they need to carry a bookbag.. and NO MORE crayons and glue sticks! Yeah!!!!
I agree with the person who commented that teachers use this stuff to stock their supply cabinet. I am inherently AGAINST spending all this money buying MORE than what my own child needs just to fill up the supply cabinet for other kids. And it makes me even more mad when I spend our money buying the “good stuff” and it gets dumped into the communal pile and my own child ends up with some crappy RoseArt brand markers that don’t work because some other kid’s mom went cheap.
Homeschooling is always an option to get you out of this crap, stay-at-home-mom. I can guarantee that in the unlikely event I ever send my kids to a public school, I will be putting the school’s supply list into the wastebin.
I forgot to note that (as per an investigative report by John Stossel) even the worst government schools in America spend well in excess of $15000 per student per year. In a class with 25 students that would be $375000 per classroom per year. They should be buying the supplies for you–ones made of gold and platinum, at that.
That $15,000 per student per year includes teacher & other staff salaries & benefits, utilities, maintenance, food for school lunches, textbooks, etc.
what text books? Oh please they tell us that spend on that but in reality those are used books. They tell the student not to write on them, or they will pay $25 for it.. And FYI at least 5 teachers in every school should not be allowed to teach… For making our children hate school and for giving us parents a hard time one way or another…
I was just in shock this year to find out that my daughter’s teacher didn’t have a big list for us. Apparently this is the first year they’re letting teachers ask for stuff from parents at all.
At the school she was at last year, we got the lists. They weren’t too bad though. They had preferred brands and sizes listed, but really weren’t picky about it all. I rather like having the supplies be shared, since that means my daughter doesn’t have to haul it back home or anything. They also didn’t tell us we all had to buy particular items… the list was a wish list and you provided the items you chose. After everything was brought in the teachers let us know about shortages for anyone who cared to give more.
You’re a better person that I am. My school supply shopping consists of getting whatever the one store has that is close and telling my daughter to have the teacher call me if she doesn’t like it.
There is a special Mommy heaven for parents like you.
I’ll be having cocktails with the devil and lighting 8mm notebooks on fire where I am going.
I’m sorry: I will have no extra 8mm notebooks for your fire. Because once I actually found the little buggers, I bought many. And I will not let them go.
Congratulations, you have made it on to emails from crazy people.
http://emailsfromcrazypeople.com/rate-more-crazy/ (May not stay on the first page for long.)
Thanks for letting me know about this, Sean!
Oh and just so you know, dear Ginny, this is definitely something you should be proud of! You officially made it to the Home Page today. Congrats!
Great Post Ginny!
In our school, not only are we buying those three gluesticks for our kids, we’re buying so many because of the kids in the class who don’t show up with any. Or not the right ones. This is what I was told once, when I asked ‘why so many?’
I miss the days when you could just send in your $, teachers bought the supplies, and the kids had to just show up in their new sneakers
Now, you better hope your kids teachers don’t turn out like MY kids teachers … and they bookmark your blog and become faithful readers LOL.
So many of the schools have the pre-assembled packages. Mine does not. Sigh.
I love your “don’t get mad, get even” approach. The interpretive dance bit was amazing.
What’s amazing is that the thought came to me, fully formed, in the aisle of the fourth store. Clearly, my brain has devoted too much space to revenge.
ROFLMAO….Woah.. here’s the supply list for my 1st grader:
——————————————————————–
# 1 journal– Primary Marble Journal-(Early Creative story tablet for K-2 by Mead, 100 sheet, no spiral composition book, space for a picture and lines at the bottom)
# (1 composition book) Regular, marble cover composition book
# (12 pencils) Number 2 yellow pencils no designs, please
# (6 sticks) Glue sticks
# (1 pack) Crayola, classic colors, washable markers
# (2 notebooks) 1 inch clear view cover, 3 ring binders/notebooks
# (2 packs) 8 count Crayola crayons
# (1 pair) Fiskar scissors
# (4 markers) Expo, chisel tip dry erase markers
# dry erase eraser
# single, yellow highlighter
# red (1) blue (1) yellow and (1) green pocket folders
——————————————————————-
I laughed so hard, because I spent 74.00 on this list buying EXACTLY what was described… when my friends payed less than 30 and got “what ever was left on the shelf” because I’m the “mom that follows directions”… I’m betting by 6th grade I’ll be one of the “whatever moms”
I’m sure that after this year, the madness will end.
Want to hear the punchline? I was tooling around on the school’s website, clicked on my kid’s class’ supply list.
It’s not the same as the one I was given in June.
I think they’re just messing with me at this point.
i realized when my firstborn was entering 1st grade, and i scoured the earth and internet for “composition notebooks with 1inch ruling” for apporoximately 2 weeks…that it was all a sick and twisted little game that i was not willing to play!!
“composition notebooks?” for a FIRST GRADER?! the shit that my first grader “composed” in his “composition notebook,” could have just as easily been “composed” on a spiral notebook. he was not “composing” war and fucking peace for god’s sake!!
screw it. i’m totally that “Problem Mother Who Can’t Follow Directions”…and damned proud of it!!! now, i just get a few markers, some paper, some pencils, a notebook, and some hand sanitizer… i figure they’ll tell me if they need something else.
they ALWAYS tell you when they need something else!!!
Ooooh, yes, the hand sanitizer! Except, well, read this: http://800miles.wordpress.com/2009/08/21/a-new-improved-way-to-get-your-kids-off-your-back/
So true Cam! My mom would always try so hard to get all of the exact supplies that were listed and then they’d end up never being used, and in fact still sealed closed at the end of the school year. Finally by middle school she just sent us with pencils and notebook paper; I believe there were about 2 times during all of middle school when we didn’t have the supplies needed but no one else did either… we didn’t have lockers and no one could actually be expected to haul all those supplies from class to class.
hey ginny!
Girl! Imagine shopping for 4 kiddos- 3 schools.
The lists were astronomical! -BUT I believe we didn’t spent over $75 total, including 2 new graphing calculators! Am I correct Tysdaddy?
But I’ve learned over the years. Most teachers really will work with you. And most lists are not written by your child’s specific teacher but by a group of teachers from several different schools in the district and often end up with a BUNCH of items that will not be used. So I usually go in and have a conversation with the teacher and bluntly say something to the affect – “I’m shopping for the best prices and have to stay on a budget – I’m buying the cheaper 24 count crayons and the on-sale folders and notebooks – deal with it. And as for the numerous boxes of tissues – I will be sending one and if more are needed by the end of the school year let me know.” My third graders teacher was very quick to put the kabash on the specified “plastic folders” saying that she actually preferred the paper ones!
Oh and we keep stuff from year to year. What’s the point of buying new binders, when the old ones will suffice or a new pencil box each year? Even scissors, rulers, pencil sharpeners and calculators get reused, often year after year after year! I haven’t bought pencil boxes or scissors for years! And forget the big glue sticks! Buy the 3 packs – teachers know most parents will anyway.
Take care my dear and have a great year! two hours til bus time for my older two! Three and a half for the younger two!
The only thing the kids were asked to bring to kindergarten was a backpack. And he’s using the same one this year. So, so far, so good, on the reuising thing.
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This has just gotten onto Emails From Crazy People. Check it out, Ginny!
OMG, this is so funny. My twins are starting kindergarten this year and I just bought the pre-packaged stuff from the school because I know I would be just as anal about following directions and driving myself crazy.
Thanks for the laugh this morning, Ginny.
I saw your email on emailsfromcrazypeople.com. I sent it to my wife who immediately made it go viral through emails to her fellow stay at home mom friends. Nonetheless, I am so curious to find out how close you were to fulfilling any of your threats/promises.
Very funny.
ohhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh man does this sound familiar. The supply list from my son’s first grade teacher started out with a bold/capslock on warning “PLEASE BUY THE EXACT THINGS I HAVE LISTED ON THIS LIST, DO NOT BUY GENERIC OR OFF BRANDS, THESE ARE TRIED AND TRUE AND THE ONLY THINGS I WANT IN MY CLASSROOM, DO NOT DEVIATE FROM THIS LIST, OR BRING ANY “EXTRA” GOODIES YOU THINK WE’LL NEED OR WANT… I DO NOT WANT ANYTHING THAT ISN’T ON THIS LIST. IF YOU NEED HELP IN ACQUIRING THESE THINGS, PLEASE CONTACT ME AND I WILL TELL YOU EXACTLY WHAT STORE AND AISLE TO GET THESE ITEMS. ALSO, PLEASE INFORM YOUR CHILD THAT I AM HIGHLY AGITATED BY NOISE, SO THEY NEED TO BE AS QUIET AS POSSIBLE AT ALL TIMES AND NO HARD SOLED SHOES AND CLICK PENS, PENCIL WILL BE TOLERATED”.
I almost crapped myself. She’s a first grade teacher and she can’t stand noise???? Wrong career dear???
The list included and cost us $150+ to fill
3 boxes of 64 Crayola Crayons
2 packages of thin highlighters, 2 packages of thick
2 pkg of thick and thin markers
6 pkgs of Clorox wipes
6 boxes of Kleenex brand tissues
8 rolls of Bounty paper towels
3 pkgs of construction paper
5 boxes of Quaker granola bars in only 2 flavors she specified
10 pkgs of loose leaf wide ruled paper 200 pgs
8 tubes glue sticks
4 bottles Elmers
100 pencils!!!!!!!!
3 pencil boxes
1 extra pair of shoes, velcro close only, indoor shoes, could not be worn outdoors, but the outdoor shoes could not leave the school
and get this shit…
25 tennis balls. to put on the feet of the chairs so no noise was made when they got up and down.
Now, there were 24 kids in his class. Where the HELL was she going to store all of this???
Did we get one single solitary thing back at the end of the year? Nope – nada – nothing. Except the shoes.
OH OH OH I almost forgot – fish food and rabbit food.
I got the 2nd grade list in advance from another parent – it was almost the same with some other things added – yeah… we’re homeschooling now. Abeka academy.
WOW. This just…this just blows one’s mind. Tennis balls. For the chairs. And the shoes? Jaw is dropped…don’t know if I can ever put it back in place after hearing that each student had to bring 100 pencils…
ya, I think I would have written that teacher back, all in bold caps, of course. NOT A CHANCE IN HELL. have a nice day
*25* tennis balls? Seriously? Even if any part of that request was not insane…did the teacher not realize they come in packs of three?
25 is not divisible by 3. It’ll be *years* before they get into fractions.
I just discovered this at emailsfromcrazypeople.com. This letter is my new favourite thing! Thanks for putting a smile on my face.
Cheers!
Oddest thing I have every found on a school shopping list was ketchup. Ketchup!
So far the lists I’ve seen haven’t been too punitive. For elementary school all the lists for all the different grades and schools are handed out in the stores and I haven’t seen very much beyond dry erase markers, tissues, and (recently) hand sanitizer. No way in hell would I be buying 25 tennis balls, and 2 packs of 64 crayons and ridiculous numbers of shit like that.
I’m here from emailsfromcrazypeople.com as well.
I’m no expert, Ginny, but I’m 99% sure that you’re made of win.
I failed to mention that I had to put my sons initials on all 100 pencils. Now that…. that was a fun night. NOT.
I agree this is made of more than win!
wow…i would hate to be your kid. seriously. if this is your reaction to a grade 1 school supply list, what the HELL is in store for this kid in 10 years?
sad.
i just love a hyperbolic post, meant to make people laugh about the absurdities of life, don’t you geoff? i mean, what fun would it be to read a post about going to buy your kids school supplies if ginny chose not to use her wickedly funny sense of humour?
this kid, in 10 years, will most likely be well-adjusted, and have a great sense of humour like his mother.
@Carrie,
That list takes the cake. This one is more than just an annoyance, it is a blatant abuse of power on the part of that teacher. It looks like a “How high will you jump” test for parents just to see how demanding she can get away with being. The quantities she has demanded are outageously high. I would have to wonder what she’s doing with all the surplus that she could not possibly be using for you own child. Selling it? 25 tennis balls???? @24 kids– wtf is she needing 600 balls for? Demanding ANY tennis balls is out of line, especially since SHE is the one with the problem with noise, but even so, the most each kid should have even been asked to bring would be four, just for that child’s own chair. And that crap about being unable to tolerate noise….omg, NORMAL first graders make noise, I’d be very concerned how she plans to handle it when a child inevitably does make noise. That person has NO business teaching children and if my child brought home a note like that, I would immediately make a visit to the superintendent of the school. You were wise to get your child out of there!
@Susan, I don’t want to take away from Ginny’s powerful post… but I wanted to add that I asked at the end of the year where all the extra stuff we brought went to and was just glared at and was told, “it’s in storage”.
We complained heartily. To no end, of course.
When he came home one day with absolutely ruined (required) tan pants from painting sans aprons, w/oil paints, I asked the school to replace them. He’s a tall husky boy – they’re hard to find and expensive… they refused.
Another jumper from EmailsFromCrazyPeople.com. Just wanted to tell you how enjoyable that was to read. Your responses here also come across as very intelligent and witty.
Thanks!
Oh, my, Ginny, you certainly brought back memories! My now-33-year-old daughter had a similar school supply list for 1st grade. I couldn’t FIND the stupid boxes of 8 crayons, so I sent in a box of 12 instead. And the three boxes of kleenex? I figured she could take them on day 2 of school since she was already overburdened with the other minutia from the list.
Wrong-o! The box of 12 crayons was RETURNED to me by my child that afternoon with a note from Dear Teacher gently pointing out my error. A note that also reminded me that my child had FAILED to bring in her kleenex and I was therefore a Bad Mommy.
But that’s okay. I got even, just a couple of weeks later. My daughter was acting out in class because she was bored out of her skull; they were doing pre-reading work that she’d been doing since pre-K, and she was already a fluent reader. I pointed out to Dear Teacher that if she actually checked to see if my child could read, she might find the cause of her behavior. I was, of course, not believed…but at least the teacher did try what I suggested. Then sent her off to be tested for her specific reading level. Turned out she was reading at 5th grade level already. So she had to eat a large helping of humble pie. It was very, VERY satisfying.
And then the whole school got even. The PTA got the supply lists, gathered them up from wholesalers, and sold them in one fell profit-making swoop to insanely happy parents who were spared the drive-all-over-town dance. Ha! We BEAT them at their own game!!!
But it’s been 27 years, and I still am filled with rage at the memory of that 12-pack of crayons being returned to me. Hang in there. It only gets worse.
I have to say, if my sons teacher returned any of the items on the list because they were “unsatisfactory” then she can tottle he ass off to the store and buy them herself.
and if she complained about the kleenex. I dont care if it costs more, i would have bought about 20 of those little travel size and sent him the next day with those! lol
By 6th grade I wouldn’t LET my mom get me the stuff on the list, I wouldn’t even let her SEE the list. She wanted to get everything exactly the way it was on the list, and while we didn’t give into a community pile (we each had our own supplies) I still didn’t want exactly what they said anyway. For example, I got a TI-89 instead of a TI-83 in high school, no one knew what it was, or how to use it, and only now in college are teachers not allowing it (WAY too powerful, you can basically plug a calculus question into it and it’ll solve it for you if you want). I liked having my own twist on the norm, I used .5 mechanical pencils (better than .7 to write really small), erasable pens, and whatever notebooks I wanted to damnit!
one added thing, I never brought gluesticks (if we EVER needed them I would borrow a friend’s) and my treasured 96 pack of crayons lasted me through elementary school. I was a problem child from day one. (I’m almost 19)
Ginny,
I greatly enjoyed your post. I do not have any children and I applaud your attentiveness to detail. My Mother had the same issue when my Brother & I were going through elementary & High schools. My Mom never did find a way to get even with the sadistic teachers and their outlandish supply demands, however I was able to make a few of them blush once I entered into High School.
during my drama class, I had to introduce myself and either say a joke, sing a song or do a dance. I chose a joke. A rather off color joke. Yeah… I had the class laughing & the teacher blushing. That same year we were selling candy bars for… you name it, it’s been sold. This time around it was for Drama Club. I would walk up to a person & anounce rather loudly: “Hi, I’m a soliciting thesbian. Wanna by my candy?” My Mom was called by the counselor and we had a talk about using words that were too big for the teachers & the students to comprehend.
As a side note, if you are not yet familiar with the sales offers that the schools do. Be prepared. They NEVER FUCKING STOP. Your child will be made into a micro sales agent until he/she get’s into High school. You will have more bars of over-priced nasty assed chocolate, cheap plastic “rewards” for an excellent job at selling, catalouges of wrapping paper, cookie dough, pop-corn, cookies, useless nick-nacks and god know what else they can pawn off on a child to bring home so their Mom’s & Dad’s will take to the office & sell for them, just so the school will get $0.30 for every dollar sold.
It’s better off to donate money to the school instead of selling or buying that crap. Take it from someone who sold the shit for years. No wonder we do so well at retail jobs once we get out of H.S. We already have the skills that were set in elementary school & refined through Jr High and perfected by graduation.
Ginny–
Thank you. Seriously.
… because the difference between our children growing up to be the President or a bag lady is getting the damned name brand crayons.
If ever you’re in Colorado, I’m buying you a drink. God bless.
Stephanie
My kids are in College/High School. I’ve also been there, yearly.
You have confirmed my suspicions. I have no idea how my darling wife pulled it off each time. You’ve given me another reason to thank her. For that I thank you. I WILL tilt a glass in your honor.
As much as I enjoyed your letter to your son’s teacher, I feel it’s a waste of energy that could be put to use more constructively. Time is money and you’ve invested a lot of time AND money into finding the EXACT items on your son’s school supply list when you could have easily invested that time in a more constructive means of vengeance…
(Though, I do admit the bit about interpretive dance made me chortle.)
On a more practical side-note– If there’s anything I’ve learned by being a product of the public schooling system it’s to WAIT to buy school supplies. I try to think of the list in pirate fashion more akin to “guidelines”.
Often times, the list changes (as you’ve seen). Most of the lists are standard per classroom and different teachers have different items they need. Sometimes the lists are just generic lists that teachers put out. But, you usually don’t specifically know what to get your child until the first week of school is out. My mother used to wait a week or two to buy us school supplies because there are better sales and, by then, the teacher had made any changes to the supply list.
Different teacher’s preferences come into play in the lists as well. I know for a fact that Crayola crayons are preferable to RoseArt crayons, for example. This isn’t because they don’t function as a crayon is supposed to function; It’s more because Crayola makes a better product. The colors are more vibrant and their crayons are stronger (they break less) and they tend to last longer in general. If there is a question about any item, I’m certain you could just ask why it’s necessary as opposed to the other. If I were a teacher, I would prefer to clarify rather than be confronted.
Multiple quantities of things such as glue sticks are meant to assist children who either have parents too poor to fork out +$50 for supplies. If you feel you only need ONE of something, then by all means buy only ONE. Things like Kleenex are requested in bulk because schools and classrooms tend to run out of these items during cold and flu season. (It’s meant as a “share the load” type request.) In the meantime, the schools attempt to stock up on these items in advance. However, there is almost always a shortage of these items later. In this case, sharing the load is a good thing… but for essentials like crayons and gluesticks, there’s no reason you should feel the need to provide extraneous items unless you feel like being generous.
Had I any children, I would buy what I thought was acceptable. If there was an issue, I’d expect my child’s teacher to communicate with me. Though, as in the case of the tennis balls for chair feet someone mentioned above, there are some things that would just be “tough luck” to the teacher– I think I would have sent my kid to school with a box of foam earplugs instead (see any firearms store or special order online) of tennis balls. They’re far more economical. If loud noises bother the teacher, HE or SHE should be the one to foot out the bill for the tennis balls, NOT the parent.
So, yes– you followed directions and given the teacher a snappy letter about her “demands”. That’s wonderful. But whether or not you’ve intended to do so, you’ve also instantly labeled yourself as a “problem parent”. I’m not saying this teacher will do this, but I’ve seen and heard of instances where parents make things more difficult for their children by being temerarious.
Lighten up a little? Teachers put up with a lot of crap for little pay, so at least wait to see if she REALLY is as anal as her list and your interpretation of said list made her out to be.
You have Moxie, Ginny. Keep fighting, but pick your battles.
Regards,
K
Clearly you are one of those holier-than-thou types. And you are CLEARLY not a whole lot of fun either. She wasnt asking for your bullshit lecture. Either sit back and enjoy the joke, or click away to another page. But either way, for the love of God, get over yourself.
Psychological studies have shown that people tend to point out in others what they hate about themselves.
yeah, except it wasn’t a real letter that was ever sent to the teacher.
duh.
No, really? Wow. (Note my sarcasm)
I guess people aren’t allowed to reply constructively to a funny letter, huh?
talk about a waste of time and energy, how long did it take you to rant and piss on a joke letter?
Clearly you’ve never read a rant of mine… What I do with my time is my choice. Ponder this for a moment, though– you READ what I wrote. How much time did that take out of your day? =)
Loved your letter! Hilarious.
Wouldn’t it be wonderful if the government just supplied the $ for the school supplies?
As a teacher and mother of 3 graduates I hate the lists too.
Our school has each grade level come up with a common list. My input is always to make the list as short as possible. We have some required items and some that can be reused.
The ADHD child does not need the box of 96 crayons and 1 box of Kleenex per child IS needed. Color coded folders and similar (i.e. same type of lines) help with organization and that does help a lot of the kids. (We don’t return them, we trade them around.) I pool the pencils and if we run out I buy more with my own $. That’s a lot easier that trying to make the kid who breaks the pencils in half, or eats them, pay for them. I return the extra glue sticks, erasers (rarely any left over), etc.
At Christmas I suggest that Santa brings a new small package of crayons or markers.
Generic glue sticks should be outlawed. I replace those with my own $ too.
Hope you have a good start to the year!
I think the single most AWESOME thing about my son’s school (he’s in third grade), is that to make a bit of extra money, the PTA will go get the supplies for your kid for you. For about $35.
And I figure those PTA ladies are just about as hellbent on getting the right stuff as you are. I always bought the cheaper or easier option before they offered this service because I absolutely do not fucking care! Let the teacher deal with the extra millimeter for chrissakes.
Wow… do you REALLY think that the teacher will be strict about a 7mm/8mm ruling or how many crayons a kid brings to Grade 1?? It’s 2009 not old England in the 60s. Calm down… poor teacher :-S
God Ginny, that was fantastic! I especially love the batshit craziness you oozed on that piece of article.
Should my future girl be as batshit crazy as you, I would most certainly be making love to her as hard as I could muster! For I am utterly besotted with you!
My sister was complaining about the list and the whole crayon thing being completely stupid. I am so sending this to her. You are not alone.
As a teacher I got a real kick out of this letter. I have dealt with crazy parents and also have some crazy colleagues as well, so I can see both sides. As a teacher I may be more laid back then some but I know I wouldn’t care as long as they had the required supplies. I do know teachers who would care, but I think a majority would just be happy they showed up with something close. I do not think it was a test! Most likely the teacher asked for specific supplies to prevent the never ending questions that would come if she didn’t (What size glue do they need?, What color notebooks?, etc.). I also know I dish out a lot of my own Catholic School teacher salary (basically minimum wage!) to replenish kids supplies as they run out mid-year. So cut the teacher a break, it’s first grade, enjoy it!
PS- I think this year I will def. have my students show their work through interpretive dance:)
“As a teacher I may be more laid back then some”
HAH!
….
In all seriousness though, have the kids show their work through dance! I’m sure they (and you) will enjoy it. Kids can be very creative.
Wow Ginny. You’re a fucking crazy bitch. Go get some therapy before you stab someone for buying you two-ply tissues instead of one-ply.
must be easy to drop by and leave a threat without your name, email address, or own personal blog. it takes a BIG man (or woman, whatever) to be anonymous.
so, when you see or read something funny, something that’s been elaborated on a little bit to bring out the humorous side (like how many years of Seinfeld episodes or a novel by David Sedaris?), you just assume the person is a nutcase?
you must lead a sad, sad life…. can’t recognize talent when you read it, let alone get a joke.
Wow Named. You’re a fucking nutty coward. Go get a sense of humour before you insult another person for publishing a hilarious tongue in cheek take on the excessively detailed eponymous school supplies list.
Okay your letter was hilarious. I can truly understand your irritation with such a specific list. My child is only in preschool and I was shocked at the items that were needed for preschool!
As a teacher, I can also understand the frustrations of students not having supplies. Each year I spend approx. 200.00 on community supplies for the classroom. 500.00-700.00 on educational materials for the classroom. 200.00 on materials for lessons. My school reimbursed me a whopping 85.00 for classroom materials.
When I began teaching, I tried the whole “collect all the supplies” method..however..I quickly got tired of the same parents supplying supplies while other parents did not send in any supplies. Now, each child keeps and uses their own supplies (or they can use communal ones that I purchased).
As a teacher I must say that I sincerely hope this wasn’t anything you actually sent to anyone. We try not to do it (and maybe high school teachers like me are meaner than those in elementary school), but when it comes to insane parental e-mails… well, it will be taken out on your kid eventually.
But damn, I wish our students brought any supplies at all to high school. If my classroom has tissues it is because I purchased them. Most of the time we’re lucky if they show up with a pen and some notebook paper.
OK, so here’s the deal:
- If you didn’t get that this wasn’t serious, well, I guess I just wasted 5 minutes of your life. Whatever.
- I ADORE teachers (the good ones, anyway). They work way too hard for way too little. I die a little when I hear that they pay for stuff out of pocket.
- Many people have it way worse than me. Not that I thought it was that bad. I had an afternoon to kill, I was hanging out with my daughter, so yes, I actually did go to 4 stores. With the dual purpose of window shopping for a new laptop. At no time did I actually resent the list. It’s actually quite a reasonable list.
Two funny bits that happened after all of this:
1. I was on the school’s website about a week before school. For some unkown reason, I clicked on the supply list for The Boy’s grade. It was NOT the same list I shopped from. I was ready to shop again. Then they changed the list back. Touche, school.
2. When the teacher told the kids to unpack their supplies this morning, my kid denies having any. Luckily, the teacher clued him in that the 10 pounds of weight he carried in his backpack on the way to school was probably the supplies in question. It just felt so wonderful to know that all my dilligence was appreciated by The Boy. (Sigh)
You mean this wasn’t seroius? I wish I’d have known that before I shit-bombed your house. Sorry.
Joke’s on you: my house is brown, and your little prank went undetected for WEEKS.
Sarcasm doesn’t translate well over the internet… I “got it”, but chose to comment in a way I thought would diffuse some of the stronger commentary you seemed to be getting. I really did like your rant. It was an excellent exaggeration of some of the back-to-school frustrations parents go through, and it was quite picturesque. I really enjoyed your rant.
I can see both sides of this issue, but in reply to jadewik, there are teachers in my school district making more than twice my pay, and getting the whole summer off! On the other hand, the priceless secretary at the elementary school across the street from my house is way underpaid!
I don’t know a lot about teaching– but I do know there are factors such as tenure that can contribute to income level. Then again… in school districts like the one where I live, which is in the national news lately, there are people on the school boards who need to be removed. I really could rant about that all day….
Sometimes, you do what you love no matter what it pays.
ROFL awsome, this is something my sister would do. ur great Ginny
are techers really that specific? isn’t the list just a kind of guide so that you don’t bring in totally the wrong stuff.
that is certianly how I will be treating it when I send my kid to school in a couple of years.
When I was at school, in the UK, there was no list. We just had to provide our own pencilase and whatever pens and pencils we wanted. all the notebooks, gluesticks etc etc were provided by the school.
Yes some teachers really are very specific and at times anal about the supplies requested. I had an English teacher in 10th grade who specified a certain size of index cards to be used to take notes on that would later be put into some kind of research paper. When presenting the request to my mother, she popped open a drawer in her desk, produced a stack of pastel index cards that weren’t anywhere near the right size (and PASTEL not the required white) and told me to ask the teacher if I could just use these. Relaying this to said teacher the next day–including that it was my mother’s request–the teacher scowled at me and said “Why do you always have to be such a non-conformist? Can’t you just get the index cards on the list?”
I’m still not sure who I was more irritated at, my mother for sending me in with pastel cards, or my teacher for blaming me.
On the other hand, she was the only psychotic teacher I had until college. Fair enough trade, eh?
I saw this on emailsfromcrazypeople.com. But I don’t think you’re crazy. You’re my hero.
My daughter’s teacher also asked for tennis balls for the chairs, but she’s sensible about it. She just asked for anyone who had some used tennis balls they were willing to part with to bring them in. She’s getting the chairs in her classroom quieter over time.
I’m popping over from Emails from Crazy People and I must say that your tongue-in-cheek letter made me laugh so hard! I struggled with supply lists from 2 schools this Fall and felt very similar to the emotions that you so hilariously portrayed in your “letter”. Thanks for the laugh that I needed this morning!
I say this post is BRILLIANT.
This year, my 1st grader’s school supply list included 24 glue sticks. TWENTY FOUR.
The supply list was for the entire 1st grade. There are 6 first grade classes… about 16 to 20 kids in each class. You can do the math.
WTF do they need all that glue for?!
I sent 6 glue sticks with my kid on the first day… if they need more in a few months, I’ll be glad to send a few more. But I thought TWENTY FOUR was a tad excessive!
Oy vey.
Sorry Ginny, it shouldnt have turned into all of this. Most of these people giving you a hard time are fourteen year olds with no life that saw you on Emails From Crazy People. Just ignore them, clearly they are too stupid to understand it was all a joke.
You are a fabulous writer! LOVED this post (found it on emailsfromcrazypeople) and can’t wait to read more of your blog!
A friend of mine pointed me to this post, and I must say, I love you! You have nearly put me into labor from laughing so hard. Thank you for this post!
i am an EFCP nomad who has come up with a formula/recipe: take a teaspoon of cute, add essence of intelligence, sprinkle a heaping dose of great-sense-of-humor, throw in a doesn’t-take-stupid-crap-attitude, shake thoroughly, heat at 150 degrees and stir for nine months, and you will get Ginny: the most bad-arse blogger i have ever read. i applaud and commend how by trying not to be a “problem parent” you have put yourself at the top of the list! hilarious, great job! i love people like you!
Hilarious! I clearly need to come up with something for my son’s teacher who insists on being several minutes late (daily) to start class, claims the clock must be slow yet miraculously lets the class out on-time if not a couple minutes early. Hey, I have ultimate respect for a teacher’s job, but shaving time off my kids education is not ok.
I love you XD that sounds like it will be a fun school year (for you at least)
you made me laugh til i cried.
hilarious!
Hey, Rae: you need to zip the lip sweetheart. There are any number of people who read this on emailsfromcrazypeople who have come to this blog in order to praise Ginny. Dissing those of us who happen to find that site great for a pre-work chuckle is both infantile and rude.
Ginny, as a mom who literally tore her hair out over this year’s school supply list I SALUTE YOU.
It’s a shame so many people didn’t take this as it was intended; you write in a very humorous manner and I completely identify with you!
Keep up the good work
A gal pal e-mailed the link to me because thanks to various mayhem at Kid’s elementary school, I started homeschooling this year. You’re one crazy lady, and I love it!
Cheers
Well, had you actually paid attention before you went off, you would see that I said “those who are giving you a hard time”. Anyone with a lick of common sense would see that I was clearly not referring to everyone as one large group. In the future, how about you learn to read an entire post before you throw your little bitchfit? Because that, “sweetheart”, is what is infantile and rude. Have a great day, and grow up while you’re at it.
I laughed so hard I had to turn around and read it to my husband who had numerous “spit takes” while tryign to eat pizza!
Ive done the school disctrict list and now await the rest of the list.. from the teachers.
I have not seen a list for my high schooler yet; we will get those on the first day of each class.
This wil be after all the main supplies are already scarce on the shelves .
Adding insult to the injury; Not only are they no longer on sale; but the prices have been marked up as they are now part of office supplies! LOL
Brilliant.
Hahahah, Ginny!
I completely understand that! I really feel like saying that to my lil’ sister’s teacher!
Seriously!She asked for that glittery glue in magenta colour, of course i bought purple ’cause…MAGENTA? why would a 8 y/o know the difference?! so, Eileen went to school and they were ready to do the work and all…
My sis and another 5 or 6 other children were questionated about the puplr glittery glue.
Gosh, how bad i felt! i embarassed her! there i went after MAGENTA glittery glue… where did i find it? the 5th store, of course! and why? because all the other store offered me the PURPLE one, saying there wasn’t much of a difference!!!!
So, yeah, i sooo get you!
Kisses, TuCa from Hamburg, Germany.
“Through interpretive dance” Brilliant.
My friend and I always enjoyed exploiting vaguely-phrased exam instructions in physics class, such as “List any assumptions you have made”. Oh, we thought of LOTS of assumptions that made all of the exam answers be 0.
Wow!!
GREAT letter! I laughed very much!
As a former teacher who worked at a school in an area that was deemed “too economically disadvantaged” to even HAVE a parent request list, I used to spend upwards of $5000 a year in my classroom. Everything that was consumable or not specifically required by the school district was on my dime. In fact, I often had to spend my own money at Kinko’s when I ran above my “designated” photocopy limit at school or ran out of paper.
I really resented the ‘consultant’ heavy administration that would rather blame than assist teachers and the stay at home illegal alien parents who got FREE food and services handed to them while I busted my butt.
I quit teaching and went into another industry when I realized that I’d make more money hourly working fast food – and began telling the student teachers that interned in my classroom, “If you are intelligent enough to get a teaching credential, you are intelligent enough to get yourself a job that pays you what you are worth!”
Gotta say this forum made my day. It was a link someone posted on my facebook, so your definitely making the rounds Ginny. Kudos to you ladies and gentlemen. I’m actually appalled at the nerve of some of these teachers. In my day you just showed up to school, taxes used to take care of the rest. If I had any children I would definitely be the problem mom who can’t follow rules. Give em’ hell and thanks for a great laugh. We should all express ourselves through interpretive dance.
Ginny, your letter was a hoot!
While some of the posts are incredible (24 glue sticks?!) I really hate the “blame the teacher” attitude of so many.
If the government paid for essential supplies teachers wouldn’t be wasting their time preparing lists, counting and labeling supplies, finding places to store the extras until they are needed, trying to figure out who has brought what, etc.
Personally, I would just get good quality pencils, erasers, scissors, crayons and markers to start with. Talk to the teacher about the rest of the list, if need be.
I remember in the 5th grade (mid-90s) my teacher requested some items for a Sacajawea doll. On the paper she sent home with us, she requested that none of these items were “store boughten”. She was verbally reamed by my mother on no less than two occasions and eventually publicly apologized and corrected herself in front of the class.
Did you actually send this letter? If so, how flabbergasted was this teacher?
Christ. Exploded is right.
This might be one of the best emails I’ve seen in a while. As a person who works with children, and unfortunately (no offense) sometimes their parents, I would receive a message like this with glee. A parent worth sparring with! Hooray!
As for confusing things to explain to 6-year-olds… I frequently have to explain taxidermy to them. Try that one on.
dear god, i thought i was the only one…..
This might be the funniest post I’ve ever read! Hilarious! And that list that included tennis balls is a close second!!
Oh thank you for this! I am laughing my ass off over here. Still. I love you.
That made my day.
As the SAH mom of 4 in 3 different schools on 4 different schedules that also need things like going to speech therapy and the like, I was preparing for this school year in a panic. I had developed a schedule that would allow everyone’s needs to be met. One week before classes started the school informed me that the K I had so carefully did all the paperwork in triplicate and attended all the meetings for in February was not the class #3 was enrolled in and that there wasnt a damn thing I could do about it. I was in more shock and terror and panic than when I was in a car accident and the medics told me not to move anymore because they were certain my spine was fractured and I kept telling them I was fine (delusional). My dear friend found your letter on emailsfromcrazypeople and sent it to me. I laughed so hard I cried and then laughed again. I finally was able to snap out of it and laugh the whole thing off and decide that the dictatorial monopoly of public school wasnt going to win every battle for my children’s education. The next time I get a request for 12 extra large gluesticks that are no longer stocked I will definately have my eldest show his math skills with interpretive dance. He has ADHD and before him I never knew that was a necessary step to solving the problem but for him it definately is. Thanks for the laugh.
OMG!!! I just spit my coke on my screen…LOL The link was posted on our forum Kudo’s to you.. But where were you when my kids were in school… Could’ve used this then…. But then, you were probably in school too…
Hugs,
PattiM
(Pattie’s passion)
I Scrap So All Moments Are Remembered!
Ginny, you rule. Were I a teacher I would send a copy of this letter home, attached to my list of requested supplies, with a short note reading something to the effect: “Hope nothing on my list proves so onerous. Feel free to instruct children to provide math proofs through interpretive dance.”
Like so many others, found this through emailsfromcrazypeople.com. Thanks for the laugh, and please, remain crazy. There are by and far too many sane parents out there, and their children are fucking nuts.
I wish you were in Australia – I owe you a cup of coffee for having authored such brilliance. Sitting through the “Learning Journey” today I was conscious of having received the look of death for daring to sit on the desk instead of the fiendishly small chairs. It made sense to be comfortable suffering through an hour and a half of “stuff I made your child do in the 2nd grade”. It appears that the glue was not only used to stick parts of my child to herself and other objects – it was also used to produce meaningless and useless objects of dubious artistic ability. Please feel free to torture the Year 1 teacher as I suspect that Infants School Teachers possess a hive mind. The hive mind is directed solely towards wearing overly-bright clothing; speaking at an unusually slow pace in an ever so slightly sing-song tone. The function of the hive mind is to produce unartistic works and painfully neat handwriting. Clearly the hive mind is powered by the endeavours of children who can write neatly and the ennui of those who are academically gifted but who lack artistic sensitivity.
If you figure out a way to defeat them then let me know.
Fried gold.
The ONLY thing that could have made that any funnier, was if the writer had emoted about when she finds out that all the school supplies were going to go into a “General Fund” because the state decided to stop stocking the schools and instead gave Administrators, nicer office chairs… THAT would have been AWESOME!
Your “Letter To My Child’s Teacher…” blog entry was hilarious! The teachers at my school have read it and rolled with laughter! Thanks for the comic relief during our first week of school. We needed it! I am a new fan!
I think Ginny Revenge is the best kind there is.
Okay, I just went back and read the comments and man oh man are people ever fuckin’ RAH—tarded!!!!!!!!!!!!
HAHA, love it.
Guess it’s time to stop being the creepy lurker in the corner…
Ginny, absolutely love the blog. I found you through the posting of this to Emails From Crazy People, had to excuse myself to the back of the office warehouse for a couple minutes to calm down the hysterical giggle fit I was going through while imagining the show work through interpretive dance, and promptly told the Mrs all about it.
We’re both instant fans and ravenously perused the archives (which BTW I have you to thank for reminding me of a favourite saying from back in the day… political correctness be damned but “Go Hard, Retard” is back in my common vernacular… that’s right, I’m taking it back). This is easily among the best blogs of any format I’ve come across.
As to the mass influx of trolls in the comments on this post though… wow… just wow. You really would figure that the tone of the post alone would make it pretty idiot proof to ascertain that it is, in fact, for humour value alone… but then nature went and made better idiots… natural selection must be on vacation.
Can’t wait to see what else comes along.
I teach high school and I would LOVE to have interactions like this from a parent. I sometimes do/say outrageous things just to see if I can get a response. Gotta break up the monotony somehow. I can’t wait until your children are in high school.
This cracked me up. I know just how you feel. I was so irritated shopping for school this year. The teacher wanted a specific size bin with NO lid…I took a freaking ruler to the store and measured every single container. After 3 or 4 stores I gave up and got one a different size. Turns out the one I got is the same one the teacher had and all the other students bought! GAH! All that time for nothing!
You made my husband laugh and laugh. Great post. We aren’t there yet but man, I can only imagine.
I stumbled on this post today and laughed until I cried. I thought I was the only parent who drove to four different stores to try and find the washable thin tip markers and was required to buy 10 glue sticks for a first grader.
Excellent blog – thanks for the laughs.
Hi, our kids’ teachers must pray to the same god. We had to travel through 3 counties to find a pencil case with 3 holes. I kept seeing the same people at all the stores. It became like a competition. I would have beaten any one of them and stole their pencil case had they found one first. Also? A 2″ binder, which evidently is much better than a 1 inch or 3 inch binder, both of which were available in infinite amounts at every store we visited. I, too had to pay more than double for the 8 pack of Crayola, because our list specifically stated NOT to buy the 24pk. I almost did anyway, cause I wanted to see what would happen. I have problems with authority like that. Please let me know which day your child will be doing his interpretive dance, as I would like to attend. My son could use some tips on his rhythm.
Oh, I remember those lists, I never really knew why they were needed. But I remember sandwhich and gallon-sized ziploc bags being on the list. Did we ever use them? No.
But you have given me some great ideas when this little guy or girl pops out and starts going to school… Thanks so much for this post!
When I read it I laughed so much I cried.
I must say I am quite thankful I belong to a school district that provides all the needed materials to be used in the classroom. We pay high school tax but we are not burdened by these insane requests for school supplies.
I was taken aback by the list in provided in the comments for 100 pencils, 3 boxes of 96 count crayons and tennis balls. If only one parent bought all the items on the list surely that would be enough for the entire class. That teacher is quite insane and should not be allowed to teach. Thank God she was not my son’s teacher, I would have scheduled a meeting with the principle or the school board to question this woman’s sanity and her ability to effectively teach my child.
With that said, I offer my sympathy to all the parents with school supply lists.
Today you literally brought tears to my eyes from laughing so hard. I too have always been a supply geek, but the past few years of school are doing everything they can to sour me on my love of new pencils and folders. It’s nice to know that someone other than me has noticed the sadistic bent that school supply lists have taken. I have shared your pain in finding glue sticks and have now moved on to dry-erase markers which seem to only come in multicolor packages or wholesale quantities.
Fyi, this year’s holy grail for me was a yellow folder with both pockets and clips. Four stores later, he took orange. It was either that or a hostage situation at Staples….
It’s been many years since I have had children in school and none of the supplies required were this specific except for the #2 pencils. This is one of the best experiences I’ve heard of and, like others, I would definitely want to be on your bad side. I am sure, however, you are a delightful lady and would have a lot of fun with you. Thank you for sharing this experience.
That was to read that “I would definitely not want to be on your bad side.” Guess I am campaigning to be the typo queen. LOL!
This was laugh-out-loud funny! I’m on both ends of this, as a Mom and a teacher. I fail this test every year, because I figure if the teachers doesn’t like what I buy my kiddo, she can come talk to me about it. At which point, I will tease her unmercifully about her detailed list.
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Hilarious!
And now for the bit where I think too much:
While I understand the frustration of chasing down specific items, and the apparent ban on the 24 crayon boxes, I also remember coming to school with my tiny, cheap box of 8 bargain-bin crayons or an assortment of last year’s offering and watching everyone else in class pull out their huge, new Crayola boxes with the glitter and neon crayons and built-in sharpener.
My school had fairly simple lists. Some books (sizes specified), #2 pencils, but mechanical ones were allowed as well, erasers, et.c. …and “some crayons and coloured pencils”. That’s where it got tricky. Everyone brought the biggest, most expensive boxes of crayons they could find (or so it seemed). As the child of a single, low-income mother, I had to make do. (Oh, boo hoo, I know)
I was usually the one with the cheap notebooks, and everyone else had Turtles or My Little Pony or whatever was popular that year on theirs. It didn’t matter; my books were just as good – sometimes even higher quality – as the others’, but when you’re a kid, sometimes it really sucks not fitting in. It especially sucks when the little bastards decide to start a club and you can’t join because your backpack and pencil case don’t have karate-chopping mutant testudines on them. Not that I’m bitter…
Anyway, I can understand the motivation behind the very specific lists, but think it would be easier if the school supplied it instead of making the parents run around.
I also find it a bit sad to see some people in the comments talk about how they are against the communal piles because their kids might end up with something too cheap because another parent didn’t get the 24 Crayola crayon box with the glitter and neon crayons and built-in sharpener.
i’ve been reading everyone’s comments on this fab piece. don’t you all love it?
i hate to be “fix it gal” cause, well, i hate fix it gal. can’t talk to her about a thing. she has all the answers.
that said, i’ll share what my kids school does. to start, i have 8 kids so i have plenty of experience (most of it can be seen on vintage walmart surveillance cameras) buying school supplies. fun times. i can only suggest tequila shots in the parking lot before entering the store. seriously.
on to the fixing – now i have 3 little ones in elementary school and honestly, the school did the fixing. every spring at registration i pay $20 – $35 (depending on the grade) to the pta for supplies. on meet and greet day in the fall there’s a bag of supplies waiting on my child’s desk with her name on it. glory!
it’s a good fundraiser for the pta and saves me from being arrested in the supply isle.
grim
So, I must admit that at first I was taken back, but then I realized that it was all in good fun and laugh my arse off. To add to the list of useless items that where never needed :
1 Catholic Bible : (had to go to a special store for my special school which wasn’t so special)
1 ten pack of floppies (from a list from 4 years ago, they are now ‘stored’ in my trash can and still unopened
1 first communion dress : had to be a specific style, from a specific store, and was covered up by our ‘robes’ made of felt. . .
And to top it off, seven years of ‘raffle tickets’ where we where told to sell at least 250 dollars worth of raffle tickets which my parents opted not to do, since we had the funds and didn’t want to bother others who may not have the funds.
But to make matters ‘better’ I went to my first year of college this year, and had to hand over my schedule to receive my books (which where often out of stock or not available and I had to go in 4 times to get my 4 classes worth of books) and I was given three books (worth a total of about $200) that the teacher did not want and the store would not give full money returns let alone even take returns!
Maybe I will try and homeschool my (future) children?
no comment
Not real? I was hoping to hear about your son giving answers through interpretive dance and how the teacher reacted.
breathe.
I stumbled across this site whilst googling something else ENTIRELY.
Oh I needed to read this story so badly today…..today more than any other day. I feel your pain, sister. I was doing the same “school supply” scavenger hunt as you a few months ago.
Thank you for this post. You brought a smile to a day that has been tedious and overcast (in spirit and weather).
Absolutely Hilarious!! However, I must admit that my daughter’s school provides supplies for grades k-6 so I was spared “the list”. However, woe to the teacher that ticks me off – I now have “ideas” LOL
These are all hilarious stories and yes what a crock. Our first grader’s list this year was copied from the list given to parents that bought the “pre-package” through the PTSA. I thought I’d try and do it cheaper by doing it myself. I was warned about finding the right stuff and not to wait until the last minute. (I may have saved a buck or two).
I had all the same problems of finding the wrong quantity’s and brand names vs. cheaper versions.
First there was a typo 24 fine tip blue Sharpies. (it was supposed to be qty. 2). They come in packs of 2 for ~$3-4? When I added it up I knew it was wrong = ~$40 just for these pens. I sent in one set and a note of apology. Only then told it was a typo. I wonder how many sharpies the school has now. I imagine a huge Sharpie storage room or blue fine tip markers.
16 #2 SHARPENED pencils. They come in packs of 12. I broke open the packs and sent the right quantity, feeling cheap on one hand and worrying about breaking the rules on the other. And why can’t they sharpen their own pencils? They have to sharpen it very soon anyway, again and again, what’s one more time?
Oh, and when we sent our children to school, that first day on the bus, with these big packages of items, what a sight. My little one was already falling over backward from the new big backpack full of a lunch bag and a snack bag and now a huge bag of supplies! The other kids with the pre-orders had HUGE boxes to carry. I have a photo of them sitting on them waiting for the bus. Now I know why many parents pre-delivered the boxes to the classroom a few days beforehand.
I’m learning, I’m slowly learning…
I’m only 22 but I went to private school, with horrible uniforms. My mom always made me go and pick out my school supplies alone while she did the rest of the shopping. after my first grade teacher reduced ME to tears over THE WRONG COLOR PENCILS (they were green painted No.2 not yellow) I started picking out the off beat things just to piss them off. Teacher asks for the 8 pack of crayons? I get the biggest damn pack they make, she wants yellow pencils? I get 100 multi color ones. Plain binders get glittered and collaged to death, Uniform, ALWAYS moded! When I was starting 3rd grade I discovered PURPLE INK and FOUNTAIN PENS… Only my art teachers thought I was wonderful…
Cruising your New Years Top 10 List and so far this one is my favorite. It would seem I am not alone. That’s quite the list of comments above mine.
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Okay, from my youngest child’s second grade supply list:
(please realize that I have been buying supplies on my own for 3 kids for several years; the prepackaged is nice but 4x as much money). But now they’ve got me stumped for sure…they’re moving into a completely different language that even the stores, who keep the all-important lists, cannot decipher:
50CT 12 RED BL SHORT WAY BOND (is this paper, a notebook, a short wave radio, or what???)
I’ve posted this on my Facebook page, asked people in the store, etc., and even the teachers don’t know what this is…
And they want 16-count boxes of crayons, at $1.17 a box…when 24-count boxes are on sale for .25 each. I’m going to send the 24-count boxes, but remove the extra crayons for at-home use, lest they think I’m “one of THOSE” parents.
This is one of my ALL TIME FAVORITE posts. It must be, did you see all those capitol letters? Last year at this time (At least I think it was this time of year) I linked to your post. This was such a great post and I think so many parents would agree with you. I really want to post again, but I don’t want to just link to it. I want to give you due credit though. I’m new at blogging though….is there an easy way to do this?
Thanks!!!!!
I love this post.
Kellieharker@ymail.com
PS Im willing to cut and paste and insert your logo and website link if that’s the easiest way. I just want you to know and not be worried that Im stalking and stealing things from you. Okay, I better stop while I’m ahead now.
I hope you don’t mind. I linked to this post from my blog. After a day of back to school shopping, I couldn’t think of a better way to describe my emotions than your letter.
That was just awesome – can’t remember the last time I laughed so hard! The tears were running down my face and I couldn’t even finish reading this to my husband! Thanks for the laugh and memories as we just went through this debacle as well!!
I particularly appreciated the interpretative dance.
Great letter! I found you on Stumbleupon!
this made me laugh out loud… thanks.
my first born son received everything requested exactly as requested when he started kindergarten (seriously – 30 glue sticks? 4 boxes of crayons? 4 packages of markers? 4 glue bottles?)
my daughter, my darling 2nd child, did not have the benefit of a mother who followed the supply list to the letter. she was the kid with 10 pack markers, not 8 like specified… 18 ct colored pencils, not 12… 70p notebooks, not 100 pages…
she is ALSO the one who I have received calls from the teacher because she stood up to her teacher when she: did not want to dance like a south american bird in front of her peers (too “dorky”); told her friend she did not have to make an extra paper mache globe for an absent student (other child HATED the project the first time around)…. oh i could go on…
my son, on the other hand, is so afraid of getting in trouble by the teacher…
hmmmm….
Oh this made me laugh! I happen to teach first grade and I HATE having to make that stupid list every year! Each teacher has the same list, but we all disperse supplies differently. In my classroom, the crayons, markers, and glue will be communal because I don’t need to hear one more argument about crayons. It’s a stupid crayon! Use it! I don’t care if it is broken, if the paper came off, if it was on the floor! Use the damn crayon! (only without the cursing, cause I have to be a “good role model”) And heaven knows first graders don’t need glue with them because then they would be glued to things. Like their desk. Or each other.
Most teachers don’t really care if you get the exact right thing (some do, I don’t). We just want to make sure that all the kids have what they need to do all the wacky things we want them to. And we have no budget. Most teachers spend several hundred dollars a year on their classrooms that (while tax deductible, if I were that organized) we don’t get reimbursed for. And only last that year because the charming children who we care for destroy everything.
I thought I was the worst mom in the world for feeling this way about my kids’ school supply list. Turns out, I am far from being alone!
HAHAHAHA! LOVE IT!! This is Hilarious! You are not alone and you are NOT paranoid…Oh please send the birthing video “on accident” Thanks for the laughs and good luck with Mrs. X!!!
Hilarious!!! LOVE IT! I lucked out and was able to finish 75% of my kids’ lists at Target. Still have to finish both lists … somewhere.
Do they really ask in detail for items such as these? That is crazy! I too would have been excited about shopping for a school supply list but would have never thought of your crazy answers to this crazy teachers requests! I bow down to you!!
That’s was hilarious! Thanks for writing.
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The snark would be funnier if you knew “who from “whom.”