Every school has one.
That one student.
The student whose attendance record deserves its own trophy, parade, and motivational TED Talk. Rain? Present. Fever? Present. Family vacation? Somehow still present. Three-day weekend? Back before the teachers.
And if you teach in a behavior classroom, you really know this student.
The child who enters your room every morning like a WWE wrestler making their grand entrance. The student whose voice can be heard from the parking lot. The one who keeps you fully hydrated because your stress level burns calories by 8:15 a.m.
So imagine my confusion when I looked at my roster one random Tuesday morning and saw… ABSENT.
I blinked.
I refreshed the attendance screen.
I checked again.
Still absent.
Now listen. Teachers love all their students. We care deeply. We worry when kids are gone.
But there is also a very specific feeling that comes over a behavior classroom when that student is absent.
Silence.
Beautiful, suspicious silence.
The room felt different immediately. The air was lighter. The fluorescent lights seemed less aggressive. Birds were probably chirping outside. I’m almost positive I heard soft jazz playing somewhere in the distance.
One student looked around and whispered, “Wait… where’s Marcus?”
Another student gasped like we had lost a soldier in battle.
Even the paraprofessionals were confused.
Nobody had flipped a chair yet. Nobody had argued with a pencil. Nobody had loudly announced they were “DONE WITH THIS SCHOOL” before first period.
We didn’t know how to act.
By 9:00 a.m., I had completed three tasks I normally wouldn’t finish until Thursday. My coffee was still hot. HOT. I actually got to drink it instead of reheating it seventeen times.
At one point, I accidentally sat down.
Voluntarily.
For several minutes.
A luxury.
The class was so calm that I started getting nervous. I’ve been in behavior classrooms long enough to know peace like this usually means something bad is coming.
It felt like when the house gets too quiet and you suddenly know your child is either asleep… or drawing on the wall with permanent marker.
Still, the day moved beautifully.
Transitions? Smooth. No emotional support walk needed? Incredible. No one yelling “THIS IS RACIST” because they lost a bingo game? Miraculous.
By lunchtime, the entire staff had heard the news.
“Oh wow, he’s absent today?” “Are y’all okay over there?” “How quiet is it?” “Did y’all check the moon phase?”
The funniest part? By the end of the day, we actually missed him.
Because behavior students — even the loud, dramatic, emotionally explosive ones — become part of your daily rhythm. They exhaust you, confuse you, test your patience, and somehow still make you laugh harder than anybody else.
That one student may turn your classroom upside down before 8:30 a.m., but they also give the best random compliments.
“Miss, your shoes look expensive.” “Miss, you smell like cookies.” “Miss, you’re my favorite teacher but don’t tell the others.”
And somehow that makes up for the fact they tried to escape the classroom twice last Thursday.
When the final bell rang, I packed my things in complete peace and thought, “Wow… what a calm day.”
Then I checked my email.
“Student returning tomorrow.”
Of course. Nature was healing.