This isn’t so much a story about my mom, as it is a story about the impressions she left on people - impressions they carried with them for years.
Back in 1993, I was starting my senior year at Monte Vista High. To say I was an average student would be generous. I never really took school seriously, and it showed - in both my grades and my attitude. 🙂
I had saved my last foreign language requirement for senior year and got assigned to a teacher named Señor Leboux (not sure if I’m spelling that right, but close enough). From day one, I couldn’t stand him. He was the kind of teacher who played favorites, who you knew was there for the paycheck, not because he cared about teaching. He only put effort into the kids who were easy to teach - and I was not one of them.
About three weeks in, I stuck around after class with a question while he was talking to another student. When he noticed me waiting, he stopped mid-conversation, took off his glasses slowly, and looked me up and down. I happened to be wearing a Stanford sweatshirt that day, and he said:
- “JP, what are you doing here? You couldn’t possibly have a question for me. Let’s be honest - you’re not going to Stanford, you’re not going to Harvard, you’ll be lucky if you pass this class or even graduate. So what on earth could I possibly help you with?”
I didn’t say a word. I just turned around, walked out of his classroom, and headed straight to the principal’s office. I asked if there was any way I could transfer into another Spanish class, and it turned out there was one opening - with a teacher named Señor Galton.
So I walked into Mr. Galton’s classroom and explained I wanted to transfer out of Leboux’s class because of our “poor relationship.” His response was blunt:
- “Now, why would I want to transfer you into my classroom when you’re obviously having issues with a colleague I respect?”
But then he glanced at my transfer papers and noticed my last name.
- “Wait a minute - your mom wouldn’t be Yvonne Given, would she?”
I told him yes, that was my mom. His whole tone changed. He leaned back, smiled, and asked how she was doing. Turns out, my mom had been his and his wife’s real estate agent when they bought their very first home almost 20 years earlier - the same home they were still living in. He remembered her fondly and said she had made such a lasting impression on them. If I was her son, he said, I couldn’t possibly be the problem Leboux thought I was.
And just like that, he signed the papers. I transferred into his class, and I ended up having a great time in Spanish that year.
If my mom hadn’t been his real estate agent all those years ago, I probably would have had a miserable senior year fighting an uphill battle with Leboux. Instead, I landed in a classroom where I could actually learn - and feel respected.
Thanks for being an awesome real estate agent, Mom.