There are paintings that do not simply hang on a wall so much as settle into the body, carrying weight the way a held breath does. Falling Star is such a work. The figure does not resist the descent. There is no spectacle of panic or drama of flailing limbs. Instead, there is gravity: quiet, inevitable, intimate. Light arrives not as guidance but as impact. The star falls, and in falling, it wounds. What is illuminated is not the sky, but the cost of proximity to it.
Falling has always been a moral image before it is a physical one. It names the moment when aspiration meets limit, when desire outruns endurance. The mythic imagination returns to this image not to scold longing, but to warn against mistaking elevation for legitimacy. The story that holds me most tightly here is that of the chariot. Phaethon does not ask for power. He asks for proof. He wants the world to acknowledge what he already knows in his bones. It wants it to acknowledge that he belongs, that his lineage is real, that his identity is not an illusion sustained by kindness. His tragedy is not arrogance; it is misplacement. He seeks affirmation from a vehicle that cannot respond to need, only to mastery.
I did not fall from the sky.
I fell in a conversation.
The meeting was framed as mentorship. As advice offered generously, even kindly. I had applying for administrative positions and wanted guidance on preparing for the interviews I hoped to receive. What emerged instead was a definition of ambition that felt both precise and foreign. The administrator explained that they were not looking for someone who wanted the job they were applying for. They wanted someone who wanted their job. Someone who already saw themselves as a future principal, perhaps a superintendent. To be content, or even fulfilled, in an assistant principal role, the so-called entry point into educational leadership, was framed as a lack. Not of experience, but of vision.
As I listened, I felt the internal shift. I felt the moment when what I value slipped out of alignment with what was being named as seriousness and readiness. I am not ambitious in that way. I have worked in the same role for nearly twenty years. I have applied selectively, deliberately, often after long periods of reflection. I have turned down administrative positions when they did not feel like a good fit, even after being offered them. This has never felt like complacency to me. It has felt like discernment. But in that room, discernment read as insufficiency.
What I realized, with some force, was that I am not who this administrator is looking for. And more unsettling still, I am not sure I want to become that person.
I do not believe administrators reach more people than teachers. I believe they reach fewer, and often in ways that are less intimate, less formative, and less enduring. Administration is not education in the immediate sense; it is management. It is support. It is infrastructure. At its best, it creates conditions for learning rather than enacts learning itself. Could I do that work well? I believe I could. I understand systems. I understand students on the margins. I understand how policy collides with lived reality. I know how to support both students and adults doing difficult work. But when I imagine my vocation, I do not imagine myself primarily as the manager of a building. My orientation remains relational, pedagogical, and close to the work.
This is where the idea of bona fides presses in. At its root, the term means “good faith.” Historically, legitimacy was not something conferred by title or attire, but something demonstrated through conduct, consistency, and trust. Over time, institutions shifted that meaning. Good faith became something that could be documented, credentialed, worn. Titles began to stand in for trust. Appearance began to function as evidence of seriousness. In contemporary professional life, bonafides answer a single, brutal question: By what authority do you speak?
For me, the draw toward administration is not ambition for its own sake. It is legitimacy. It is the desire to have what I already am finally count in a system that struggles to see it otherwise. Like Phaethon, I am not asking to scorch the earth. I am asking to be believed.
Another moment in the conversation sharpened this realization. The administrator spoke about appearance. They spoke about the expectation that a serious candidate wears a tie and sport coat. I understood clearly that without these markers, I would not be read as professional, committed, or ready. This was not about comfort or decorum. It was about legibility. To dress otherwise was to risk being dismissed before speaking at all.
What struck me was how quickly professionalism became aesthetic. The body was required to perform seriousness before the mind could be assessed. This is not a neutral expectation. It is a ritual of control, a way of marking separation between the management class and everyone else. The administrator described themselves as “old school.” I did not hear tradition in that phrase. I heard hierarchy. I heard the quiet enforcement of distance. Dress, in this context, was not about respect, it was about boundary.
This is where my training in leadership theory collided with the reality in front of me. Contemporary models emphasize distributed leadership, relational authority, and authenticity precisely because rigid managerial hierarchies have failed complex human systems like schools. What I encountered instead was a reassertion of an older paradigm. One that equates authority with elevation and legitimacy with display. Compliance becomes proof of seriousness. Resistance, even unspoken, becomes suspect.
The discomfort I felt was not rebellion. It was incongruence. It was the recognition that acceptance was being offered conditionally: be yourself, but only after you prove you can be someone else first. Authenticity, it seemed, was something one earned only after demonstrating sufficient conformity. The tie and jacket were not the issue. The issue was what they were being asked to symbolize: a willingness to subordinate one’s own judgment to the script of leadership as it has already been written.
Here, Falling Star returns with force. In Pruszkowski’s painting, illumination does not save the figure; it destabilizes him. The fall is not punishment. It is consequence. Falling becomes the moment when one understands that ascent would require misalignment with one’s values, one’s vocation, one’s sense of self. Like Phaethon, the tragedy is not that the chariot is dangerous. It is that the chariot cannot give what is being asked of it.
I do not read this fall as despair. There is tenderness in Pruszkowski’s figure, a quiet curvature inward, as though protecting something essential even as descent begins. My own fall feels similar. It is not the loss of ambition, but the refusal to confuse elevation with meaning. It is the recognition that legitimacy rooted in proximity, trust, and teaching may never be fully legible to systems organized around management and control.
If I step into administration, it will not be because I want to ascend endlessly. It will be because the role can expand to hold who I already am, rather than require me to defer that self indefinitely. If it cannot, then the fall, however uncomfortable, may be an ethical correction rather than a failure.
The star falls not because it lacks light, but because it refuses an orbit that would pull it too far from the ground. In falling, it does not disappear. It moves closer to those it was meant to warm.