Dear Teachers,

Dear Teachers, how are you doing? 

“I can’t teach. I want to stop teaching. I am not going to teach again for the rest of my life.” Ms S is a young graduate who just started to serve as a primary school teacher for a year. She loaned from the government and hence has to serve the government for at least 5 years. She visited us few months ago, after starting to teach for just over half a year, with her parents and a sibling, being fearful, and with crying spells. Over the few months medication treatment she got just slightly better, still able to teach, but always having crying spells. The mother is very concerned and lost, as she doesn’t know what to do if the patient can’t handle her life and her profession, yet she will have to do it due to the bonding. The only time the patient got significantly better was during the long year end school break. Now that few days after the school starts, same thing is happening.

Ms S is not an odd case. I have a friend Ms M who yesterday just told me that she has stored up so much positive energy during the long school break, but just less than one week after the school began, she has used up almost 80% of her energy and feeling all exhausted and frustrated, and in need of a break again.

Few days ago there was another teacher who is a patient of the clinic since 1990s, came to the clinic to collect medicine, and requested for 3-days MC (medical certificate). The school has just started that week when she came, and she was already not looking forward to the year of teaching and is trying to avoid to go to school whenever possible.

This year another patient who has been teaching for over 20 years has also taken a year leave after discussing it with her husband and doctor. When this patient first came to us, we all thought that she was just overly-anxious (she called us almost every morning since her first visit, in need of a lot reassurance). But few months later she was found suicidal by a psychiatrist in Singapore. Since then, just like Ms S, she started to feel that she can’t teach, feeling fearful and anxious about it, and thus decided to take a gap year.

These are just a few examples. Recently we came across quite a numbers of patients who have teacher as their profession. Of course I’ve known some happy and dedicated teachers, but I wonder whether something is wrong with the society, school, teaching system, that put so many teachers in such massive pressure, and make those who can’t handle it so depressed, fearful, anxious, suicidal… getting unwell psychologically.

It’s definitely a well-respected profession, but perhaps they also need more attention, better/revised welfare, some help, monitoring and supervision.

1 thought on “Dear Teachers,

  1. I’m surprised at how many of these teachers actually seek professional help. But I’m not surprised at the number of teachers who feel that way. I’d love to explore a little more on this topic considering I have taught for two years, and am constantly engaged with new teachers and have a desire to elevate the teaching profession as a whole to make it at least the top 10 career choices graduates would consider and for the right reasons! Thank you so much for sharing!

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