At the close of each academic year, I give my 8th-grade students the chance to participate in a “Mrs. Morris roast,” where they unleash their unfiltered honesty. The results are often a mix of brutal honesty and humor, laced with a painful dose of truth.
Middle school teacher Mr. Frakes understands this experience all too well. With over 13 years in the classroom, he sought methods to help students reconnect with him and with one another after the pandemic. âI began posing random questions to encourage communication and deepen my understanding of them,â he shared with We Are Teachers. âWe shared plenty of laughs, and one student suggested I should post their responses on TikTok.â Recently, he sought honest feedback from his 7th graders, and their replies were as impactful as a jolt from a seatbelt after a hard stop. While he assumed his audience would be limited to friends and family, the internet had other ideas.
This teacher asked his students what people in their 40s do for fun, and the responses are incredible.
As adults in their 30s and 40s chuckle in the comments, they canât help but shift in their ergonomic office chairs, thinking, âAlright… but whereâs the lie?â
Hereâs a rundown of his studentsâ responses, complete with sticky note illustrations.
âPlay Wordle (trust me)â

Itâs giving âTrust me, bro.â Haha!
âThey like to watch TV in black and whiteâ

Itâs called The Elderly Filter.
âGo gamble!â

I actually donât know of any 40-year-old coworkers who partake in this, but perhaps itâs more common where casinos are prevalent! Ha!
âSpoil all their grandchildren, nieces, or nephewsâ

Is there a consensus that 40-year-olds are prime candidates for grandparenting?
âPlay pickleballâa sport that doesnât move as muchâ

Okay, I beg to differ. Thereâs quite a bit of movement I struggle to keep up with in pickleball!
âCount couponsâ

Buddy, itâs called CLIPPING coupons! If youâre going to roast us, at least get it right!
âGo on Facebookâ

100%.
âGo and buy home decorâ

How dare you disgrace the name of our temple.
âGrill food on Sundaysâ

Yes, we grill on Sundays. Yes, our backs hurt!
âSay no to everything I ask forâ

Maybe if you didnât pose so many SILLY QUESTIONS, CHILDREN!
âBingo!â

Jokeâs on you, kids: Bingo rules!
âTake their medicine (or go to the casino)â

Honorable mention: casino.
âKnittingâ

Yes, 7th grader, but have you ever given knitting a chance?
âPlay golfâ

The âMy back!â speech bubble really got me.
âSit in a chair on the patio and yell, âGet off my lawn!’â

Hey, weâre in a cost of living crisisâlawn care is expensive!
âSit there slowly sipping their coffee, regretting their life decisionsâ

Ouch, buddy!
âTalk about âBack in my day’â

Cue my mom, âBack in my day, we had to go to the nonfiction section of the library to find information. We didnât have Google!â Is anyone else familiar with that specific âback in my dayâ?
Indeed, the kids roasted usâand yes, they had a point. Perhaps we do have a bit of an obsession with HomeGoods. Maybe we are powered by caffeine and mild regret. But thatâs part of the beauty of being in your 40s (or nearing it): weâve earned the right to chuckle at ourselves. If surviving middle school once wasnât enough, weâre doing it all again from the other side of the deskâwith aching backs, full hearts, and carts brimming with seasonal throw pillows. People in their 40s, unite!

