When a Teacher Called Her a Faker, One Paramedic Exposed the Delay-hamyt - Chainityai

When a Teacher Called Her a Faker, One Paramedic Exposed the Delay-hamyt

For a few seconds, I thought I had gone blind.

Not completely.

Not in darkness.

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Just in pieces.

I could see the gray classroom tile under my cheek, the black rubber edge of a sneaker, the metal leg of a desk, and the frayed strap of someone’s backpack swinging a few inches from my face.

The room smelled like dry-erase marker, paper dust, and the faint cafeteria grease that always seemed to sneak down the hallway before lunch.

Somewhere above me, a pencil rolled off a desk and tapped the floor twice.

I heard that more clearly than I heard my own breathing.

I wanted to say I was awake.

I wanted to say I could hear them.

I wanted to say something was wrong inside my chest and that my hands would not listen to me.

But my mouth would not open.

My body had become a locked door, and I was trapped on the wrong side of it.

That morning had started like any other school day, which is the part people never understand when they hear a story like this later.

There was no warning music.

There was no dramatic sign taped to the classroom door.

There was just a hallway full of lockers banging shut, a school bus pulling away from the curb outside, and the little American flag clipped above Ms. Drenic’s whiteboard moving every time the heater kicked on.

I had been tired before first period even started.

Not sleepy tired.

Wrong tired.

My skin felt too warm, but my fingers were cold.

The lights over the desks had a hard white buzz, and every time I looked down at the worksheet, the words seemed to slide sideways.

Ms. Drenic had already decided what kind of student I was long before that morning.

To her, I was the girl who asked too many questions, who took too long to answer, who sometimes needed to go to the nurse, who made life complicated when the class was supposed to move neatly from bell to bell.

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