I Went to 11 Schools as a Kid. My Son Shouldn’t Have To.

By never knowing stability, I learned its immeasurable value

Chris L. Robinson
LEVEL

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Photo: Mike Kemp/Getty Images

II was born in Chicago, and I’ve spent most of my life there. I’m writing these words there. But if there’s anything that ever makes me want to pack up and leave my hometown, it’s the weather.

I’m sick of the cold. The snow. The ice. All of it. At this point in my life, I want to live where people have no concept of “wind chill.” I want monotonously good weather. I want to go where I keep a jacket in the car just in case the temperature drops below 60 degrees. I want to visit the snow the same way I visit the sun now.

For lots of reasons, my family isn’t ready to move. Some days, though, I feel irrational enough to tell my wife that we should chuck it all and run, that we’ll figure out the details later. When we’re both grumbling about Chicago living at the same time, I think I could almost convince her.

I know what you’re thinking: “Isn’t keeping your child in the same school a pretty low bar?” And I don’t disagree.

But I know we can’t. Not yet, at least. My fifth-grade son has attended the same school since kindergarten, something I consider to be one of my greatest…

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Chris L. Robinson
LEVEL

Top Writer in Parenting, and Food. I write about masculinity, fatherhood, family, and relationships.