I Quit Grade 1 (Again)

Do you ever look at your child’s homework and feel a sudden, overwhelming urge to hand in your resignation as a parent-teacher? Because today, I officially quit Grade 1.

I remember my own time in Grade 1 quite fondly. I remember sitting on the carpet listening to stories. I remember the tactile joy of playdough and the immense satisfaction of building my favorite Little Mermaid puzzle. We learned our vowels, we read a few simple words, and then we went home to be kids.

But now? My seven-year-old is sitting at the kitchen table until he’s practically dying—not of thirst, but of pure, unadulterated boredom and exhaustion. He looks at me with those tired eyes and says he just isn’t in the mood anymore. Can I blame him?

We are currently navigating a curriculum that feels like it was designed for corporate burnout. We have reading long, complex words, preparing speeches, and the dreaded spelling tests—one every Friday for the entire semester! What happened to seven-year-olds just being seven?

Then there are the “Math Equations from Hell.” Some of these problems are so convoluted I’m not even sure how to answer them myself. And the counting! From 1 to 50, then back to 1. Even numbers, odd numbers, counting by 5s… front to back, back to front. It’s an endless loop of numerical fatigue.

I hear other moms talking about extra math classes and reading tutors for their children. It makes me wonder: are we pushing them too hard, or are we just outsourcing our patience? I sit with my son every single day, and frankly, I feel like quitting every single day. But where would that leave him? If I don’t sit with him, he’s too exhausted to play outside; he just collapses in front of the TV, his spirit dampened by the sheer weight of expectations.

Just when I thought we were doomed to a lifetime of kitchen table misery, the good news arrived: next week is a public holiday on both Monday and Friday. No school! No homework!

And then came the “but.”

“You have to prepare yet another speech,” the school announced. “This time, a dialogue with hand puppets.”

There went my weekend. Again.

As if the homework wasn’t enough, the internet gremlins have been working overtime, trying to hack my Facebook account almost every single day. I’ve changed the password so many times that I don’t even know what it is anymore. Look at me—I’ve accidentally created a security system so advanced that even I can’t get in! Now I have to go through the whole reset process just to reclaim my own digital identity.

To top it all off, the laundry mountain has grown into a tectonic plate. The rain, the cold, and the rumors of snow have kept the clouds twirling and the sun hiding. There is simply no room to wash anything, and nothing dries in this perpetual damp.

To top everything off, the car’s battery finally gave up the ghost this morning. Luckily, I wasn’t the one behind the wheel.

My husband took my son to school, and everything was fine, until my phone rang. My blood ran cold; I expected the worst. But the little voice in my head whispered, “the battery gave up.” We have been pushing the limits of this battery for a few weeks, hoping and praying every time we jumped in that the engine would turn. It worked, until today. I knew that when winter arrived, the battery would take its final rest in a recycle bin somewhere. Winter arrived a bit sooner than expected, and on a very chilly morning at only 11°C, it was time.

Our warm summer days turned instantly into cold fronts. There was no autumn—the weather didn’t even give the trees time to gradually turn yellow and lose their leaves. It happened instantly, almost as fast as cooking instant noodles. Everything is still very much green and beautiful, yes, but the skies turned grey and gloomy, and the wind is enough to turn any hot coffee into a freezochino in seconds.

Between the puppets, the passwords, and the persistent cold—which I despise, by the way—my hopes for a relaxing weekend are hovering somewhere near zero. I have a mile-long list of movies and books I’m dying to get to, but the house needs a decent scrub, and the mountains of laundry won’t fold themselves.

Maybe Monday will be a turning point. It’s a public holiday, so there’s no rush. I’m hoping for an early morning Zumba class to shake off the Grade 1 blues and get ready for the work week ahead.

But as for school? I’m done. I’ve already done my time, and I have no desire to study the vowels all over again. I’ll help where I can, of course, because that’s what we do. But it isn’t fun, and I’m pretty sure I’m officially failing the “parent-as-a-teacher” final exam. I hated school. I remember why. I hate homework. And I am stuck doing it again! I want my money back.

But today? I’m just going to stare at the pictures of hand puppets and pretend they’re the ones who have to do the spelling test.

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