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 Before the Testimony: The Power of Using Your Teacher Voice. I’m sitting here in my car outside the Nebraska State Capitol. In just a few minutes, I’ll walk inside and share my story with a panel of Nebraska state senators for LR 204, a resolution focused on teacher burnout and retention in our state. There’s something surreal about the quiet before a moment like this. After more than twenty years in the classroom, this feels different. I’m not walking into my room to teach today. I’m walking into the system that shapes it. Before we go any further, I want to share three things I’m thankful for. The first thing I’m thankful for is the colorful leaves of autumn. They remind me that change is natural and sometimes necessary. Just like trees shedding what’s old, education may be ready for renewal. The second thing I’m thankful for is wide open roads. The long drive to Lincoln gave me time to think, to pray, and to focus. Advocacy starts with movement. Every mile feels like momentum. The third thing I’m thankful for is a calm blue sky morning with the sunrise. That early light brings perspective. Even in moments of stress, hope still rises. Let’s get into the main topic, before the testimony and the power of using your teacher voice. Advocacy matters because policy shapes our classrooms, and those policies are often written by people who have never taught in one. Teachers don’t speak up for attention. We speak up for accuracy and accountability. Advocacy isn’t politics. It’s stewardship of our profession. Teacher voice is teacher leadership. Every teacher leads, title or not. Leadership shows up in how we greet students, guide learning, and support colleagues. Speaking beyond the classroom is an extension of that same leadership, courage mixed with care. Too often, education is written about teachers instead of by them. Headlines and hearings shape narratives that miss the humanity of teaching. When teachers are reduced to scores and scripts, identity erosion begins. Parents hear myths. Policymakers see percentages instead of people. Teachers slowly disappear from their own story. Accuracy shapes policy. If the only story told is that test scores are down, the solution will always be test-based. But when the story includes trust, relationships, and belonging, policy becomes more human. Teacher voice matters not for control, but for truth. Authentic voice redefines leadership. Leadership is relational, not positional. Teachers cultivate curiosity, design belonging, and nurture resilience every day. That ripple effect is why I’m testifying today. Not because I believe my words alone will change policy, but because silence never will. Burnout isn’t only exhaustion. It’s the disconnect between who teachers are and what they’re allowed to be. You can sleep off fatigue, but you can’t rest away identity loss. Restoration requires trust, autonomy, and purpose. Advocacy requires courage over comfort. Comfort never changed a system. Courage is consistent. It’s telling the truth even when your voice shakes. Every empty classroom represents one less stable adult in a child’s life. Teacher retention isn’t about perks alone. It’s about purpose. Today, I’m not walking in for myself. I’m carrying the voices of teachers who wish someone would listen, students who need consistency, and colleagues who still believe their work matters. As I watch the Capitol doors, I feel both small and significant. Change doesn’t start with titles. It starts with teachers willing to tell the truth. 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.