The other day, while teaching my English 101 class (all freshmen), I said, referring to an author's authority in an essay, "What the hell does he know?" I afterward heard several gasps and snickers of disbelief. I found this quite humorous myself, especially since I know several colleagues who aren't shy about throwing around ****s and ****s as they please.
I find it funny that people in some professions (well, really, any profession) are expected to uphold certain behavioral standards. The physical labor worker--rude and crude; the office worker--the normal Everyman; the scientist--straight-laced and nerdy; the teacher--proper and demure. Many find it surprising when people break these assumptions outside or in the work place, sometimes even becoming fiction tropes (the worldly, wise, and cultured janitor comes to mind). I find the surprise amusing.
When it comes to myself, I've found that me being a teacher makes people surprised by how I act out of class--cursing, political incorrectness, etc. Most people don't expect it--they either are surprised by my actions having known I'm a teacher beforehand, or knowing me and then finding out I'm a teacher. I've also found that authority figures, whoever they may be, hold me to a different, higher, behavioral standard than other people (and I mean outside of the classroom) which is just downright odd.
I'm curious if anyone else has experienced this sort of thing--other thinking your behavior just doesn't match your profession.




"Their teacher has sex!!!"). 

