Two Gifts for My Teacher

I can’t remember the occasion. Were we nearing winter break? Or did I merely want to show her my appreciation? This was before teacher appreciation day became the norm, at least at my school. However, I desperately wanted to give Mrs. Nafzger a gift.

Shopping around the house, I found a cheap gold velvet ring box and a hefty service station pen my dad brought home.  I loved that pen and it was the fanciest complimentary pen I ever saw.  It was burgundy with a gold pocket clip, the brand lettered in calligraphy.  It read Alexander with a large square-trimmed letter A at the bottom of the clip. Blue ink. Smooth.

Learning cursive, I practiced at home, feeling special. By the end of the year, we’d all reach a milestone: cursive handwriting, one of my favorite subjects. She had to have this pen. I imagined how she’d use it to write her perfectly looped and connected letters to write Nice Work! atop one of my spelling papers.

I had a pack of orange flavored Hubba-Bubba bubblegum, (when you blew bubbles with that gum, it didn’t stick to your face) and I stuffed two pieces into the box. Not a ring, but presentation is important.

I wrote her a note in my best cursive handwriting. The pen was Scotch-taped to the box. It didn’t stick well to the velvet box. She accepted it with a smile. Later, I felt embarrassed because it was a stupid gift. Who gives someone two pieces of bubble gum and a free pen from a gas station?

The next day, stopped at my desk and placed an envelope in front of me, my name was written in cursive on the front. I flipped it over and carefully tugged it open. On real stationery, I read a heartfelt handwritten note thanking me for the gift, telling me how orange was her favorite flavor and how she enjoyed using the pen.  It was the first thank you note I ever received, penned in her own beautiful cursive handwriting. I kept that note and read it often. 

Thank you, Mrs. Nafzger!

Friday, March 22, 2024

6 thoughts on “Two Gifts for My Teacher

  1. I adore childhood-you! Through your words, I can smell the Hubba Bubba, feel the velvet box, and see the beautiful cursive script. A lost art, I tell you. Or a secret code that students cannot decode.

    Like

    1. Thank you, Cindy. I may have to get a pack of gum to hang out with kid me, even if the flavor only lasts two minutes, lol! I’m so fortunate to know this secret code, although I have to remind myself to practice. I prefer to print, but when I do use cursive, my hand gets sore since it’s a different set of muscles. I don’t miss the callus on my middle finger though.

      Like

  2. It sounds like Mrs. Nafzger definitely deserved such sweet gifts! It’s a nice reminder as a teacher that even when we get gifts that might not be what we would wish for, it could be that in our student’s mind, they are the best gift one could give. Thanks for sharing such a sweet memory! Your vivid details have really brought this memory to life.

    Like

    1. Thank you Natasha. I was embarrassed at the time, but for me, it was the best I could offer. That experience reminded me to always accept any gift a student gave me and to always write a thank you note. I have students who held on to thank you notes well into the end of the year.

      Like

Leave a reply to Patricia J Holloway Cancel reply