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 When You Are Tired but Still Show Up. And I want to start by naming something that doesn't get said enough in education. A lot of teachers aren't burned out. They are just tired. Not the kind of tired that means you don't care. Not the kind of tired that means you want to quit. It's the kind of tired that comes from caring deeply for a long time without much pause. Today I want to talk about that kind of tired. What it looks like, what it costs, and why showing up anyway still matters. Before we get into it, I want to ground myself in gratitude. First, I'm thankful for teachers who show up even when their energy is low. Not because they are superheroes, but because they are committed. Second, I'm thankful for days when consistency matters more than enthusiasm. Days when presence is enough. And the third thing that I'm thankful for is for students who don't need us at one hundred percent to feel cared for. Sometimes they just need us there. So let's go over the main topic again. This episode is called When You Are Tired but Still Show Up. Tired is not the same as burned out. We have to make sure that is extremely clear. Being tired doesn't mean you're failing. It doesn't mean you've lost your passion, and it doesn't mean you don't belong in this profession. It means you've given a lot. You've been steady for a long time, and you haven't had much space to refill. There's a difference between wanting to quit and just needing rest. Too many teachers confuse the two. They get them mixed up and then judge themselves for it. Let me take you into a morning. The alarm goes off. Nothing dramatic happened the night before. No crisis. No emergency. You are just tired. You lie there a little bit longer than usual. Not because you're avoiding the day, but because you're budgeting energy. You're sorting through what actually needs your best today. What can be good enough. And what can wait. You get dressed. You drive to school. You unlock your classroom door. And before the first student arrives, you already know that today is going to require intention. That's not laziness. That's awareness. Showing up while tired still has impact. This is something that has surprised me over the years. Even on tired days, kids still feel your presence. You might not be your most energetic self. You might not be your funniest self. You might not even be your most creative self. But they still feel your consistency. They still take in your calmness. They still receive your care. Showing up tired isn't about pretending you're fine. It's about choosing steadiness over absence. And that choice carries more than you think. Let me share a classroom moment that changed my thinking. It's later in the day. Not chaos. Just a slow unraveling of energy. A student starts pushing back. Not loudly. Not even enough to be dramatic. Just enough. An old version of me would have powered through, corrected quickly, tightened control, and finished the lesson. But that particular day, I didn't have extra energy to perform authority. The energy just wasn't there to perform it. So instead, I paused. I looked at the student and said, hey, I can tell today has been a lot. Let's just reset. The room shifted. Not dramatically, but noticeably. Later I realized something important. That moment worked because I didn't try to be more than I was. I just stayed present. Let me talk about what tired teaching used to cost me. When I ignored my tiredness, it showed up anyway. I was shorter. I was more on edge. I was less patient. I was more rigid. Not because I didn't care. But because I was running on empty and pretending I wasn't. That pretending cost me energy. It cost me joy. It cost me longevity. I still have moments where I slip into that. I still have to remind myself that it is okay to be tired and not judge myself for it. Once I stopped criticizing myself for being tired, I started teaching in a way that was actually sustainable. Sustainable teaching honors limits. If teaching only works when you're at full energy, it's not sustainable. Longevity comes from knowing when to simplify. Knowing when to slow down. Knowing when enough is enough. Showing up tired doesn't mean you are weak. Write that down. It's going to be on the test. Showing up tired doesn't mean you are weak. It means you are human and still committed. As I close, if you're tired right now, not done, not checked out, just tired, that doesn't mean you're doing this wrong. It just means you've been showing up. And showing up tired still matters. If you found value in this episode, head on over to Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen and leave a five star review. It helps more teachers find this space. And remember to inspire greatness in young people. And don't forget to be a funky teacher. Bye now.