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 Teachers Need Grace Too: Permission to Be Human. This is a heart-level episode, not a head-level one. It’s for educators who give and give and give. Before we get into it, I want to share three things I’m thankful for today. The first thing I’m thankful for is useful tools. Whether it’s fixing something in the classroom, adjusting a shelf at home, or making a quick repair, the right tool can make the impossible feel manageable. The second thing I’m thankful for is my wife’s hugs. They are grounding, comforting, and always show up at the right time. A hug from someone you love can change the rhythm of an entire day. The third thing I’m thankful for is lightweight cloth bags. They are practical, reusable, easy to grab, and perfect for carrying everything from groceries to classroom supplies. Sometimes the little things really do make life smoother. Now let’s get into the main topic. Teachers need grace too. Teachers often hold themselves to higher standards than anyone else. Endless patience. Endless creativity. Endless compassion. Endless organization. Endless availability. And when those standards aren’t met, guilt takes over. Here’s the truth. Teachers are human. Humans have limits, emotions, families, and hard days. Grace isn’t optional. It’s survival. Perfection doesn’t exist. No matter how skilled you are, there will be days you lose patience, miss something, forget something, or misunderstand a student. Presence matters more than perfection. Grace opens the door to growth. Guilt slams it shut. When teachers respond to their own struggles with guilt, they shrink and second-guess themselves. When they respond with grace, they learn, reflect, and grow stronger. Students don’t need perfect adults. They need growing ones. Kids benefit when teachers model humanity. Owning mistakes. Naming hard days. Showing learning in real time. These moments teach emotional intelligence without ever calling it a lesson. Teacher identity suffers when expectations pile up and guilt becomes the default. Grace is the antidote. Grace reminds educators they are more than a hard day, more than a checklist, and more than a single mistake. Grace does not lower standards. It preserves strength. Grace allows rest, restoration, refocus, and resilience. It protects hearts in a profession that demands so much. So here are a few reminders, educator to educator. You are doing more than you realize. You matter more than you know. You are human, and that is a strength. You deserve rest, compassion, and kindness toward yourself. The world is better because you show up. Teaching is sacred work. Sacred does not mean perfect. It means showing up with heart, trying again, and offering yourself the same compassion you give your students. You are allowed to be human. You are allowed to rest. You are allowed to grow. You are allowed to give yourself grace. Teachers who grant themselves grace do more than survive. They thrive. And thriving teachers change lives. Remember to inspire greatness in young people. And don’t forget to be a funky teacher. Bye now.