Mr. Funky Teacher (Nicholas Kleve)

This is Mr. Funky Teacher with BeAFunkyTeacher.com. I’m coming to you with another Be a Funky Teacher podcast. Welcome back, everyone. Today’s episode is called Intent Matters: Sharing Advocacy Without Losing the Mission. Over the past few weeks, I’ve been reflecting on advocacy. Not just advocacy itself, but how we share it with others. How we tell the stories, post the photos, and talk about the moments that come with showing up and speaking out. It’s easy to post. It’s harder to pause. Advocacy isn’t about chasing recognition. It’s about building connection. The difference between the two comes down to intent. Before we go any further, I want to share three things I’m thankful for. The first thing I’m thankful for is app-based parking meters. It’s a small convenience, but it removes unnecessary stress and allows focus to stay on the work that matters. Being able to add time without running out in the middle of an important moment made a difference. The second thing I’m thankful for is photos that capture moments. They freeze courage in time, not for likes, but as reminders of where we showed up for something that mattered. The third thing I’m thankful for is a loving and supportive family. Every advocate needs a foundation. My family keeps me grounded, cheering not for attention, but for purpose. Coming home to that support matters more than any post or comment. Let’s get into the main topic, sharing advocacy without losing the mission. Advocacy is hope in motion. It says things can get better. It isn’t complaining. It’s contributing. When teachers speak up, they give voice to those who can’t yet or aren’t able to. Silence allows others to control the story. Advocacy adds truth and balance. When I testified, I wasn’t there to represent perfection. I was there to represent perspective. Real teachers doing real work for real kids. That’s advocacy. Showing up, not showing off. After a big moment, it’s natural to want to share. But how we share shapes everything. Before posting, it helps to ask, does this shine light on the mission or on me? If it’s the mission, share it. If it’s about me, pause and rethink it. Intent shapes tone, and tone shapes trust. The words we choose can either draw people in or push them away. Keeping the story centered on students, schools, teachers, and the cause invites others into the work. Sharing with humility turns advocacy into a bridge rather than a spotlight. Intent is the anchor. People feel authenticity before they hear words. When intent is right, advocacy sounds like service, not self-promotion. Gratitude keeps ego grounded and reminds us why we speak in the first place. True advocacy always points beyond the speaker. Using language like we and us builds belonging. Gratitude becomes the guardrail between celebration and self-focus. The mission is bigger than the moment, and impact lasts longer when people see the cause, not just the contributor. Purpose-driven advocacy creates a ripple effect. It gives others permission to speak up. It encourages new teachers to stay and helps leaders listen differently. The real goal isn’t impressions. It’s inspiration. After the spotlight fades, the classroom still calls. Advocacy continues when the comments slow down and the feed moves on. Be remembered for presence, not performance. Advocacy isn’t a stage. It’s service. As I close, intent matters. Share because you believe in something bigger than your own story. Celebrate without centering yourself. Speak truth with humility. Let gratitude steady your voice. When your heart stays on mission, your message doesn’t feel like bragging. It feels like belief. If you found value in this episode, jump on over to Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen and leave a five-star review. As you go into your day, remember to inspire greatness in young people. And don’t forget to be a funky teacher. Bye now.