They Moved In On My Retirement Day, So I Chose The Sea Instead-Teptep

The day I retired should have been quiet enough to hear the kettle click.

I had imagined that sound for years.

Not applause.

Image

Not speeches.

Not anyone making a fuss over me.

Just the kettle, a clean mug, the soft scrape of a chair, and the strange freedom of a morning that belonged to me.

After forty years of teaching, I had become used to bells ruling my body.

The school bell had trained my feet to move before my mind did.

Registration, first lesson, break duty, lunch duty, parent meetings, marking, reports, more meetings, more patience.

I had stood in classrooms with a smile when my knees ached and my throat was raw.

I had taken other people’s children seriously for most of my life.

By the time my retirement paperwork was completed, I thought I had earned the right to sit in my own living room and be unnecessary for a while.

The certificate lay in my lap that morning, neat and official, with its red cover glowing under the June light.

It should have felt like a prize.

Instead, it felt oddly weightless.

I was relieved, but there was an emptiness too, the kind that comes when a door you have leaned against for decades suddenly opens.

The curtains were half drawn.

Sunlight slipped through them in pale strips and rested on the coffee table, the carpet, and my hands.

In the kitchen, the kettle had boiled and gone quiet.

I had forgotten to pour the water.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *