It began as small disruptions. Quiet moments I barely registered at first. Then one day I realized the rhythm of my work was defined by the interruptions I absorbed.
I once thought the bell marked the beginning and end of a lesson.
Then I realized the gaps, the questions, the unplanned moments became the true markers of my day.
Those uninvited fragments became the pulse I depended on to know where I was.
The day wasn’t measured by what I taught — it was measured by what I attended to.
Interruptions became the unwritten timeline of my work.
When the clock stopped being the guide
I used to plan hours in advance. Now, I check time only to realize I’ve lost it again.
Because a question from a student erupts before the sentence on the board is done. Because someone’s face needs more attention than the agenda allows.
The moment I thought I was following the schedule, something pulled me away from it.
Time became a suggestion — interruptions became the law.
How attention became the currency
I began to gauge success not by completed lessons, but by whether I addressed what emerged in the moment.
Not the planned objectives — the unforeseen emotions, the sudden needs, the unspoken cues.
So many moments that weren’t on the schedule took priority, not because they were urgent, but because they *were there.*
Interruptions didn’t interrupt the work — they became the work.
What was unscheduled began to define what mattered.
The quiet fatigue of constant shifts
When you measure a day by interruptions, the body never really settles.
There’s the preparation before, the moment itself, and the carryover that lingers after.
Even when I sat down, my mind was still shifting toward the next unplanned moment.
My energy became tied to responsiveness more than mastery of content.

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