While the rest of the world is firing up grills, heading to the lake, and posting “vacation mode activated” selfies, teachers are standing in the middle of their classrooms staring at a stack of unfinished paperwork, twenty-seven unnamed hoodies, and a Chromebook cart that suddenly has only twenty-six chargers.
Because the last holiday before summer isn’t really a holiday for teachers.
It’s halftime.
Parents are relaxing. Students are mentally gone already. Somewhere, someone without children in school is peacefully shopping at Target completely unaware that a teacher just spent forty-five minutes trying to figure out who left a banana in a desk sometime around Easter.
These final two and a half days of school are not for the weak.
This is the season of:
- “Can we watch a movie?”
- “Do we HAVE to do work?”
- “I lost my library book.”
- “Can I bring slime tomorrow?”
- “Are we doing anything fun?”
- and the classic… “Miss, he’s looking at me,” while the accused student is standing six feet away.
Teachers spend the last week balancing exhaustion, survival, and the desperate hope that nobody gets suspended with only thirty-six hours left in the school year.
And somehow… we still show up.
We still decorate doors.
We still hand out end-of-year treats.
We still hug the kids who drove us absolutely insane all year long.
We still tear up over the handwritten notes with crooked spelling and giant hearts.
Because underneath the countdowns, coffee runs, and tired jokes, teachers know these last days matter.
Some students are finishing a hard year.
Some are leaving a classroom where they finally felt safe.
Some are heading into summer excited.
Others are quietly dreading it.
Teachers notice all of it.
So while everyone else is enjoying the holiday weekend, teachers are:
- cleaning out cabinets they swore they’d organize in October,
- trying to remember where they hid the good pens,
- calculating grades with the focus of NASA engineers,
- and wondering if it’s socially acceptable to sleep for fourteen straight hours on the first day of summer.
Honestly, the final days of school deserve their own Olympic event.
There should be medals for:
- surviving field day,
- stopping eighth-grade relationship drama,
- finding missing AirPods,
- and making it through classroom cleanup without throwing away something important.
But despite the chaos, there’s something special about these last few days.
The classroom gets louder.
The rules get softer.
The laughter gets bigger.
And teachers start realizing they made it through another year that tested them in every possible way.
So if you’re a teacher reading this while holding an iced coffee and mentally preparing for the final countdown… I see you.
May your students stop asking for snacks.
May your classroom survive cleanup day.
And may your summer begin the second that final bell rings.
Before summer officially starts, take a little walk down memory lane and check out my favorite classroom and teacher survival finds in my Amazon favorites post through Boss Lady Blooms.
Check out all of the behind the scenes and in front of the camera footage for BLB —-> SNEAK PEEK


