September, Three Collections at Once, and a Snail Named Gary
A true story from back-to-school week - three class collections, 60 unread messages by 6:58am, one Venmo for $4.99 with no note, and a treasurer doing math at 11:40pm.
Tuesday of back-to-school week, 6:58am. I'm not even out of bed yet and the class group chat has 60 unread messages.
I open it with one eye. The other one already knows better.
Three collections, one week, zero actual due dates
By breakfast, we had launched three separate collections at once: the supply kit, the class party fund, and the PTO dues. All of them "due by Friday." Which Friday? Unclear. What Friday even is, in a spiritual sense? Also unclear.
Every message landed like a golden retriever hitting a screen door. Here is the chat, in the exact order it appeared:
- What is this actually for?
The list has been pinned since Monday. It has a little pin icon and everything.
- Can I split it into two payments?
- Already paid :)
They had not paid. I checked. I check everything. This is a personality flaw.
Then a photo of a snail somebody's kid found during PE. Fourteen thumbs-up under the snail. Zero thumbs-up under the actual sign-up sheet, which I had lovingly formatted like it was going to a museum.
The 4-minute-51-second voice memo from a dad nobody has met
At 7:14am, a voice memo arrived. Four minutes and fifty-one seconds. From a number saved in nobody's phone. I listened to the whole thing at 1.5x speed, twice, and I can report with confidence that it was about either the field trip or a lawnmower. Possibly both.
Meanwhile the Venmo requests started trickling in, and this is where the detective work begins, because half the class pays digitally and the other half sends cash in an envelope riding home in a 7-year-old's backpack like a diplomatic pouch. Somewhere in Room 4 there is currently $30 in unmarked bills wedged next to a granola bar, and it is my job to find it.
One transfer came in for $4.99. Not $5. Four ninety-nine. Note field: "fee." Which collection? Which fee? Whose? The transfer knew, but the transfer wasn't telling.
The 11:40pm spreadsheet, and a brief word on meerkats
So there I am at 11:40pm, matching amounts to names in a spreadsheet named dues_2026_FINAL_v3_fixed(2).xlsx, which is less a file name and more a distress signal. And the column would not add up. It was off by exactly $4.99, because of course it was.
I covered it out of my own pocket. Not because I'm a hero. Because I physically cannot go to sleep next to a column that doesn't balance. I'd rather eat the five bucks than let the total sit there being wrong at me.
Did you know meerkats make group decisions by quorum? A few of them start moving toward the good foraging spot, and once enough agree, the whole mob commits, no arguing, no voice memos. I read that at midnight instead of sleeping. It felt relevant. A functioning group chat, is what I'm saying.
Anyway. Back to the dues.
How it ended, which was not with a moral
Yeah, at some point we got tired enough of this that we built an app for it. Parents pay by tapping a link, no downloads, everyone can see what they owe, the reminders send themselves, and the treasurer just watches the column add up on its own. Anyway.
The kid who found the snail named it Gary. There was a vote. Gary stays. He lives in a cup on the windowsill now, fully funded, zero collections required.
The supply kit money still isn't all in. But for the next fifteen minutes, at least, nobody is asking what it's for.