My daughter kept talking about a teacher who embarrassed her in class. I didn’t think much of it until I saw the name running her school’s charity fair. The same woman who humiliated me years ago was back… and this time, she chose the wrong student.
School was the worst stretch of my life.
I tried so hard, but one teacher made sure I never left her class smiling. Even now, I don’t understand what she gained from embarrassing me in front of everyone.
Mrs. Mercer was the teacher.
She mocked my clothes. Called me “cheap” in front of everyone like it was a fact worth recording. And once, she looked right at me and said, “Girls like you grow up to be broke, bitter, and embarrassing!”
I was just 13.
I went home and didn’t eat dinner that day. I didn’t tell my parents because I was afraid Mrs. Mercer would give me an F in my English class.
And to make matters worse, some classmates were already teasing me for my braces.
I didn’t want to make it any bigger than it already was.
The day I graduated, I packed one bag and left that town. I told myself I was never going to think about Mrs. Mercer again.
So why, all these years later, was her name back in my life?
It started with Ava coming home quiet.
My daughter is 14, sharp as a tack, and she always has something to say about everything. So when she sat down at the dinner table and just pushed her food around, I knew something was wrong.
“What happened, sweetie?” I urged.
I set down my fork. Ava told me, in pieces, about a teacher at school who’d been picking at her in front of everyone.
Calling her “not very bright” and making her feel like a punchline.
“What’s her name?”
Ava shook her head. “I don’t know yet. She’s new.
Mom, please don’t go to school.” Her eyes widened. “The other kids will make fun of me. I can handle it.”
Ava couldn’t handle it.
I could see that just by looking at her.
I sat back. “Okay… not yet.”
But I was already certain of one thing: this felt too familiar. And I wasn’t going to sit still for long.
I decided to meet this teacher myself.
But the very next day, I was diagnosed with a bad respiratory infection and put on strict bed rest for two weeks. My mother drove up that same evening with a casserole and a look that told me not to argue.
She took over everything: Ava’s lunches, the school drop-offs, and the house. She was steady and warm in that way she always was, and I should’ve been grateful.