When I
think back on all the crap I learned in high school
It's a wonder I can think at all
And though my lack of education hasn't hurt me
none
I can read the writing on the wall
Paul Simon
I was just 17, and you know what I mean; an indestructible non-descript, hippy-sporto-weirdo,
with good friends, a car, a gal, good grades, and nothing to worry about except
where the next party would be. I hadn’t
had it so good since the day before they taught me to tie my own shoes (left
over right, right over left), cross the street alone (look both ways – twice),
or go to kindergarten (skipping thru duck – duck - goose) - opening up a new
world of responsibility and mystery. I
had settled into an easy coexistence within the all-male, prep school I endured,
full of overachieving Catholic, New York Irish and Italian Wise Guys, where
humor ruled and nobody took themselves too seriously.
Sitting in a sleepy, sunny, afternoon Religion - Philosophy class that
had, here-to-fore, been composed of warnings of the dangers of hard liquor,
refer madness and masturbation, gay Brother Gravitas gave us a book.
by a Jewish guy named Victor Frankel, called Mans Search for Meaning. It was about Vic
surviving Hitlers concentration camps by finding the smallest reasons to live
there and translating it to a life of meaning and worth. Fair enough we thought, good for you. But that only led to a discussion on
Existentialism where life itself had no real meaning and it was up to us to
fill the Existential Vacuum with things like family, friends and Jesus. Seriously. I’m at the top of my game and you
have to teach us this depressing dribble, now? I looked at the omnipresent crucifix and cursed my fate.
My next class was on Classical Music where the squirrely teacher,
Mr. Cassata - Stone revived my spirits by playing Beethoven's 'Ode to Joy' real loud on 11, on his killer quadrophonic
stereo, exalting my human spirit. English
followed where the imposing Sister Harmonica Uptalk taught us to find the
Christ figure in Beowulf and Moby Dick and then memorize a plethora of pretentiously haughty
vocabulary words nobody ever uses. It
was good practice for the SATs, so we could get into good schools we couldn’t
afford but our supercilious parents would be proud to advertise on the back of
their cars. We all just just wanted to
go to the bacchanalian, party schools. After that I shuffled off to Calculus where Mr.
Huey Newton talked about change and the change in the change. Why cant things stay the same we wondered,
what’s wrong with now, living in the present.
Finally in my ninth period Physics class Ms. Casavas - Mellon taught us the concept of Entropy where everything in the universe tends to move to a state of randomness and disorder. Christ, I thought, they are ganging up on us and now they have gone too far. My adolescent naïveté was shattered in one irresponsible afternoon. We could have learned about Socrates and the Unit Circle, or an infinite weight on a frictionless plane, but they chose to smash our juvenile complacency and expectations for a crushingly oblivious, manic and mindless future. Thanks for nothing. At wrestling practice coach Rotundy told us all to loose more weight but not to get our hopes up for the upcoming tournament, and that everyone but one person in our weight group will finish with a victory. What does that make the rest of us, losers?
For the icing on the cake, we followed this up with a film by the Ohio State Troopers, for Brother Ormondo’s Drivers Ed, of drunk drivers crashing their cars and screaming in pain at the side of the road. Steven Hemorrhaging was quietly sitting next to me in the back of the carpeted room when he fell to the floor and started convulsing and doing the horizontal bop, tuna flop. I slid down next to him as he foamed at the mouth and his eyes rolled back in his head and I held him quietly. As soon as it started, it stopped, and he sat up straight and slinked surreptitiously into his seat. 'Don’t tell anyone' he said, 'they wont give me a license'. I wasn’t sure I wanted a license at that point.
Finally, before our first spring break in Florida, in Coach
Drugalonski’s Health Class, they showed us graphic films of women having babies; complete with crowning heads an afterbirth on toast. 'Holy crap', we thought, and it put us off
women for about 17 minutes. What’s next
– no Santa Claus, Easter Bunny or the tooth fairy. Our world was shattered and the only thing to
do now was to get a lousy summer job for $2 an hour, apply to a trophy college and leave
home forever. Then get a job, house, kid
and dog and become somnambulist sycophant, succubus
succulent with a good vocabulary. My God, what have they done.
But I am happy to say that I am in a permanent state of
arrested development from the day before this entangling enlightenment; where I
choose to live in the present and simplify with moderation but not
mediocrity. I try not to change who I am intrinsically, or become random or disorderly, over-procreate or crash my car too
much, chase conspicuous consumption or excessive self-entertainment, but find
meaning in nature and the little things, the people we love and the places we
live and visit. I let life’s meaning
come to me, every day. I don’t even tie
my own shoes anymore.
PS. It
was great to see the Type C chill, full bodied, underachievers take over the
Olympics from the Type A anorexic, pressurized, overachievers. That is almost as good as watching the
defensive, physical USA hockey players beat the high skill, high speed
Canadiens after getting their teeth knocked out. I think this could be a pivot point for our
country, as it was in 1980 when we won our last hockey gold. Earned evolution instead of entitled
existentialism, intrinsic enlightenment instead of enchanted essence,
relentlessly relevant revenants.
Matthew Lindon, PE
Hydrologist
Snyderville Utah 2026
Waterandwhatever.blogspot.com
1000 words
