What a Lesson on Clouds Taught Me About Growing Up

My sixth-grade teacher brought me comfort and stability in ways she’ll never know

Jacque Gorelick
Human Parts

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Photo: Witthaya Prasongsin/Getty Images

EEverything I need to know about clouds I learned at 11 years old, lying on my back, gazing at the sky on a warm spring afternoon. My sixth grade teacher led our class to the field after lunch and instructed us to form a circle. Thick blades of grass tickled my back as I took my place among the dandelions, in a pinwheel of lanky bodies and tween angst.

Observing the nuances in the milky bursts of cumulus overhead, my teacher’s voice surrounded us like a protective blanket of reassuring facts. Her words provided universal truths we could rely on, unlike our changing bodies and minds, which — with each new wispy underarm hair, erratic mood swing, and unwelcome eruption of acne — we’d learned could turn on us at any second. Captivated, we floated questions into the air.

“What makes thunder?”

“How do they change shape?”

“If we can’t see clouds, are they gone?”

Without making eye contact or seeing one another, we learned about a vastness that both dwarfed and connected us.

DDuring my years in elementary school, my parents divorced, my mother died of cancer, and my dad moved to…

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Jacque Gorelick
Human Parts

Writer. Mom. Caffeine Enthusiast. Believer in Kindness & Humor. Words in The New York Times, Washington Post, HuffPost, and more.