Beyond the Call of Duty Transcript

A note about this transcript: The Moth is true stories told live. We provide transcripts to make all of our stories keyword searchable and accessible to the hearing impaired, but highly recommend listening to the audio to hear the full breadth of the story. This transcript was computer-generated and subsequently corrected through The Moth StoryScribe.

Back to this story.

Maxie Jones - Beyond the Call of Duty

 

 

In February of 1978, I started the second semester of the 10th grade. That was on February 1st. On February 2nd, which would have been my second day of my second semester of the 10th grade, when I woke up to go to school, my mother didn't wake up that morning. Now, that following week, I missed school, of course, while we laid my mother to rest. When I came back to school about a week or two later, it was quite different for me. 

 

I remember that when I came back to school, I really didn't care much to be there at all. And it was a new semester, and my teachers didn't really know me very well. I had this one English teacher. His name is Mr. Goldberg. And Mr. Goldberg would ask the class a question, and he would call on people. When he called on me, he would say, “Maxie, do you know the answer?” He pretty much wake me up from wherever my mind would be. I would say, what? Excuse me? What was that? He would ask me the question again, and I would always have the correct answer. 

 

So, one day, he asked me to meet him after class. I met him after class, and he said, “I don't understand what's going on.” He said, “You always seem lost. You're always someplace else during the class, but you know all the answers. You did all your homework.” I just explained to him what was going on. I told him that the reason I came to school every day was because my mother made me come to school, and now my mother's not here to make me come to school, and I don't really feel the need to be here anymore. 

 

So, he said, “Well, just do me a favor.” He said, “Well, there are eight periods in a day. A teacher teaches five periods in a day, and there are three prep periods.” Usually, the teacher will use one of those prep periods for lunch and his other prep period, Mr. Goldberg said, “I want you to meet me in my office sixth period.” And so, I met him in the office sixth period, just to talk. And then, he said, “Meet me tomorrow, sixth period.” 

 

This went on and on. Every single day, he had me meet him sixth period during his prep period. I would help him grade papers, and we would talk and we would do whatever. When open school night came, I didn't have anyone to come with me. My mother always came with me to open school night. When open school night came, my sister, who had just graduated from that same school, came with me to open school night. My social studies teacher wouldn't talk to her. He said, “I know who you are. You just graduated from the school.” So, he thought we was trying to play some kind of game or something. 

 

So, when the teacher wouldn't talk to her, Mr. Goldberg was standing outside the room, and he came in and he said, “Wait a minute, wait a minute. Talk to her.” And he said, “I'll explain later.” So, the teacher talked to my sister, and told her about how I was doing in school and so on. And then, Mr. Goldberg, what he did after that was he went around to all my classes and talked to all my teachers and told them what was going on. He told them all, he said, “If you have any issue with Maxie Jones, come to me.” And so, that's what he did. And so, it went that way for the whole semester. Every day I met him at sixth period, and he checked on my classes and all that stuff. 

 

What ended up happening was that the next year, when I was a junior, he did the same thing. He had meet him every single day, and we talked and he talked to all my teachers about whatever was going on with me and he let them know, “Listen, if you got any problem with Maxie Jones, come and talk to me.” I didn't really realize that by the time I graduated from high school, I never missed a single day of school. Sorry. At my high school graduation, Mr. Goldberg was there. I asked him, I said, hey, Mr. Goldberg. How you doing? He said, “This feels funny.” He said, “I don't come to graduations.” And I said, why? He said, “Because I teach seniors.” No, he said, “Because I teach 10th graders.” And he said, “I don't teach seniors, so I never come to the graduation.” So, I said, well, why are you here? And he said, “Because I wouldn't miss seeing you graduate for anything in the world.” [audience laughter] [audience cheers and applause] 

 

I didn't realize then what he had done. It took me years before I finally realized that I graduated from high school with honors, and I was in the top 85 percentile of my class. I had a Regent scholarship, and a full ride to college and all that stuff. The truth is, I was really always academically capable of that. But it's one of those situations where all I really needed to do was to show up for it. 

 

At 15 years old, having lost my mother, not really seeing the value of an education, I was really in line to be a statistic, a high school dropout. Who knows what would have came of it. But the thing is, I showed up to school every single day, and I realized that the reason I showed up there was somebody there who was expecting to see me, and that was Mr. Goldberg. Thank you very much.