Creating honest content, practical tools, and supportive spaces that reject perfection culture and empower teachers to build sustainable careers—and lives—without losing themselves in the process.
Being a go-to teacher sounds like a compliment. You’re dependable. You’re trusted. You get things done. But for many educators, being the go-to teacher is exactly what leads to burnout, resentment, and chronic overload —and it’s rarely talked about in professional development. This is the part of teaching no one explains out loud. What Is the " Go-To Teacher" Trap ? The go-to teacher trap happens when a teacher’s competence and effort quietly turns into unpaid, and (possibly)
For a long time, I believed that if behavior was escalating, I needed better strategies, stronger consequences, or more patience. I tried explaining more clearly. I tried being warmer. I tried staying calmer for longer stretches of time. And like many teachers, I ended most days exhausted, wondering why nothing seemed to stick. What I eventually realized was this: the problem wasn’t my intentions or my effort. It was my language. Not because I was saying the wrong things—but
There’s a version of teaching that exists on Pinterest where every pencil is color-coded, every desk sparkles, and no one ever loses a marker cap. This is not that post. This is about the things I actually use—the things that get shoved into my bag at 6:30 a.m., tossed onto my desk between lessons, and relied on when the day is loud, long, and emotionally heavier than expected. If you’re an unorganized teacher (or a formerly organized one who is tired), this list is for you.