27. Breast Cancer Awareness Month

I’ve become acquainted with a nice old custodian who works at the school at which I’m student teaching. It was quite a surprise to run into him a week or two ago and discover that his beard had turned a shocking shade of neon pink.

He told me he colored his beard because October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month and he wanted to show support. He hasn’t been the only person at the school to sport pink hair this month. A number of students have added pink highlights or extensions to their hair, and one of my MEC students colored his Mohawk pink.

It’s been touching to see the support for the fight against breast cancer. It’s also been a little jading. Dyeing hair pink or wearing I Boobies bracelets doesn’t do much to help cancer victims—at least not directly. Rocking the bracelets and pink hair does raise awareness of the problem, and awareness of the problem brings us a little closer to solving it.

Since I’m only a few days away from finishing student teaching—and consequently busy and exhausted—I’m going to wrap up this post with a short cartoon from JKR over at Fredthemonkey.com.

(For the record, Fred is no relation to any of my monkeys.)

The cartoon, aptly titled The Important Things, presents its protagonist with several dilemmas. How can he scrounge up the money for a new Nintendo DS game? (The game he mentions is awesome, by the way.) Can he get his true love to go on a date with him? And could there possibly be more important things than buying a new video game?

Enjoy the cartoon here!

26. A Lesson from My Students

My monkeys and I now have a Twitter account. I suppose it was only a matter of time. Is it possible to tweet using typewriters?

I’m just a week away from finishing student teaching. I still have a few weeks of paperwork and seminars and whatnot, but seven days from this moment I’ll have finished my work in the classroom. The last ten weeks have been stressful, rewarding, exhausting and interesting.

Especially interesting has been my time with the MEC students, kids whom the school considers at-risk—in danger of dropping out of classes due to misbehavior or failing grades. I felt rather apprehensive about working with at-risk kids, but some of them turned out to be pretty awesome. Granted, others turned out not to be awesome at all. Most of them fell somewhere in between, alternating between diligence and laziness, respect and disrespect, cooperation and insubordination.

Friday was my last day in the MEC classroom; in the week to come I’ll be phasing out of my other classes. I was reflecting upon my time with the MEC students, and it occurred to me that working with at-risk students presented two major frustrations.

First was when the MEC students refused to accept the consequences of their actions. They would break a rule half a dozen times, ignoring all warnings, and whine about the unfairness of it all when they finally received the penalty for their misbehavior.

Second was when the MEC students complained about school: it was boring to read a short story, stupid to learn vocabulary instead of playing games on the computer, impossible to sit and work quietly for forty-five minutes. No matter how often we tried to explain that school is not pointless, that they need a high school diploma to qualify for most jobs, that they can’t spend the rest of their lives living with their parents and playing video games—in short, that school is actually meant to help them—they wouldn’t listen.

It would be pretty easy to judge the MEC students, except for one little point. It occurred to me a day or two ago that I do the exact same thing.

If I have a bad day, I tend to feel put upon. I wonder grumpily why God lets unpleasant things happen to me. What I forget is that many of those unpleasant things are the consequences of my own mistakes, and many more of those unpleasant things are actually helping me in the long run. Yes, I might feel tired and unfocused all day, but it’s because I was up so late the night before watching trailers on YouTube. True, I might be totally worn out by a rough day of student teaching, but it’s teaching me to handle the responsibilities of being an English teacher.

Not all bad things are the result of my own mistakes, but some are. Not all bad things are part of the painful process by which God makes me a better person, but some are. Instead of grumbling and groaning and griping, I need to endure patiently.

That’s a lesson from my at-risk students, and a lesson I hope they can learn too.

25. Beards

I recently attended a production of “The Hobbit” by the Bethel College Theatre Department. It was a fine performance, despite the fact that most of the dwarves were played by women. Not enough actors tried out, so all but three of the dwarves were actresses in beards. Gandalf also had a beard. Almost everyone in the production had a beard. As much as I enjoyed “The Hobbit,” it was a painful reminder of a grave personal shortcoming: my lamentable inability to grow facial hair.

Oh, you may laugh. You may scoff at my woes and call them absurd. (You’d be absolutely right, but that’s not the point.) I wish I could grow a beard. Granted, facial hair hasn’t always been a good thing. Beards and mustaches have been the distinguishing marks of men whose ideas we hold in contempt or suspicion. Take Hitler and that silly excuse for a ’stache. Take Marx or Nietzsche or any of the other Dead European Thinkers With Strange Ideas And Facial Hair. Beards and mustaches clearly do not a virtuous man make.

All the same, I wish I could grow a beard.

Virtuous men sometimes have beards. Jesus had a beard. What, you don’t believe me? I have it on good authority. In a passage most commentators interpret as a prophecy about the Lord Jesus Christ, Isaiah clearly indicated that God’s Servant would have facial hair: “I offered my back to those who beat me, my cheeks to those who pulled out my beard; I did not hide my face from mocking and spitting” (Is. 50:6). Brethren, if we cannot trust Isaiah on the matter of the Servant’s beard, how can we trust him on any other matter?

(For the record, Jesus is the Son of God whether he had a beard or not.)

I suppose I should reserve my theological speculations for more important matters, such as the degree to which our salvation is predestined or whether people with spiky hair are holier than people without spiky hair.

No-Shave November is coming soon. I’m tempted to stop shaving my lack of facial hair and see what happens, but I’ll probably decide not to participate. I’ll leave No-Shave November to the pros. Perhaps some day I’ll be able to join them. We’ll see.

22. Autumn

People talk about how much they love the autumn season, with its pumpkins and colored leaves and frosty mornings. I stare at them with horrified incredulity. Everything dies in autumn. The trees lose their beautiful leaves and become skeletons. The temperature plunges from pleasantly warm to icy cold. There are many things I’ll never understand in this life—the precise theological nature of the Trinity, the popularity of the Twilight novels, trigonometry—and why people like autumn is one of them.

When I first came to Indiana, I knew autumn was coming. I expected the leaves to turn bright colors and fall from the trees. What I didn’t expect was for all green to vanish, leaving behind murky browns and grays.

“I love autumn,” said someone during my first semester of college.

It seemed like a good time to share my observations about the season. “Everything is dying,” I pointed out.

“That’s normal.”

“You clearly don’t understand,” I replied, speaking very slowly. “Everything is dying. The grass and the trees. Dying. There’s frost every morning. It’s really, really cold. And people put up hideous Halloween decorations.”

“It’s autumn, Adam. It happens every year.”

“And you like autumn?”

He nodded, and I was left to shake my head and wonder.

Autumn isn’t all bad. It’s fun to see carved pumpkins on front porches. The sudden ubiquity of pumpkin pie is wonderful. Autumn is the season of Thanksgiving, and the Christmas season draws steadily nearer. I’m willing to concede that autumn has its blessings. I just don’t like the cold, or the tawdry Halloween decorations, or the tendency of beautiful green things to die.

Are you an autumn person? If so, maybe you can bring me a little closer to unraveling the inexplicable mystery of why people actually like the autumn season.

16. Voice Acting

I have a lot of odd obsessions, such as my fascination for video game music and love of British literature. One of my peculiar passions is voice acting.

For those unfamiliar with this noble profession, voice acting is the art of playing a role through the voice and the voice alone. A voice actor can’t rely on her own expression or body language; every nuance of her character must be represented by her voice.

The fun thing about voice acting is that a really good voice actor can make himself sound like pretty much anybody. Listening for familiar voice actors in movies and television shows is sort of like playing an audio version of Where’s Waldo? Familiar voice actors turn up in the most unexpected places, and there’s a thrill in hearing the voice of, say, Howl in Howl’s Moving Castle and crying out, “Aha! That’s the guy who plays Batman!”

There was a time in my life when my ambition was to become a professional voice actor. This glorious dream lasted about two weeks before it was brutally crushed by two realizations.

First was the fact that voice acting is a difficult field that’s already full to bursting with talented people. Second was the sad truth that most voice actors can’t pick and choose their projects. If I became a voice actor and could actually find work, I’d probably end up playing a minor character on some cartoon about talking ponies or—if I were truly fortunate—a dub of some obscure anime.

So in the end I exchanged my dream of voice acting for a sensible plan to teach English and write novels.

All the same, I sometimes wonder what might have been.

13. That Time I Was a Blacksmith

It’s been an introspective week here at TMTF. The last few days have been full of insights and epiphanies and moments when I threw up my hands and shouted “Eureka!”

Although I had initially planned to post another reflection about faith today, I decided against it because spiritual meditations are best taken a little at a time. Rather than overwhelm my dear readers with too much introspection, I’ve decided instead to save it for another day and write about That Time I Was a Blacksmith.

As the spring 2010 semester drew to a close at Bethel College, I made plans to work as a painter for the college’s maintenance department over the summer. I’d worked there during the previous two summers and felt confident I’d be hired. I was wrong. The maintenance department didn’t hire any student workers due to budget issues. I had four months before me and no job, no salary and no plans.

Then my sister-in-law’s parents contacted me. Her father is a blacksmith—a genuine, honest-to-goodness professional blacksmith, one of those mighty men who craft things out of iron and steel. They had heard from their daughter that I was looking for a job. Would I be interested in working for them over the summer?

Heck yeah.

I packed up my things and moved into their home for about two and half months. (I spent the last month of that summer teaching English in South Korea, but that’s another story for another post.) When I went to stay with my sister-in-law’s parents, I didn’t know much about blacksmithing. Here are a few of the things I learned.

Blacksmithing is tough

Blacksmithing requires considerable physical fitness and strength. Whatever else I may be, I’m not physically fit or strong. I generally used the smallest hammer in the shop. My brother calls it “the girly hammer” because it was the tool his wife and her sisters used when they worked as blacksmiths. It’s a little embarrassing to admit, but they were all much better blacksmiths than me.

Making swords is very, very difficult

When I began working as a blacksmith, I had great ambitions to make an epic sword. It didn’t have to be a Buster Sword or even an Andúril. I simply happen to have a passion for sharp objects and wanted to make a sword that was uniquely mine. I was disappointed to learn that crafting swords is a career of its own. Which brings us to the next thing I learned.

There are different kinds of blacksmiths

I had just assumed blacksmiths made everything. Only after I began working did I realize there are knifesmiths, who make knives; swordsmiths, who make swords; farriers, who make horseshoes; and standard blacksmiths, who make miscellaneous items such as candlesticks and tent pegs and barbecue grills. My boss fit into the last category.

Blacksmithing requires a ton of mathematics

I would never have guessed it, but there’s much more to being a blacksmith than whacking things with hammers. A blacksmith must figure out how many two-and-three-quarter-inch lengths can be cut from a twenty-foot steel rod, and how many corresponding one-and-a-half inch lengths must be cut from a fifteen-foot steel bar. There are angles to be calculated and numbers to be added. This was a problem for me. I’m an English major, you see. Having assumed the math skills I picked up in high school were mostly useless, it was quite a shock to realize mathematics does have practical applications after all.

Many modern blacksmiths use machines

In the movies you see old-fashioned smiths banging away with hammers and pumping air into coal fires. In these high-tech days blacksmiths use propane-fueled forges, power hammers and electric saws. It was quite a surprise to walk into the shop and find antique anvils (my boss has anvils that are centuries old) sharing space with heavy machinery.

Apart from working in the shop, I also had the opportunity to accompany my boss to several rendezvous—reenactments of early nineteenth-century America. We set up a tent full of merchandise and spent whole weekends forging and selling items. My boss did the forging, hammering red-hot metal in front of a blazing coal fire in the summer heat for hours on end. It never seemed to bother him. I had the easy job of sitting on a stool and taking our customers’ money, and I still felt tired at the end of the day.

I met a lot of neat people at those rendezvous. A man who looked like a homeless person with a greasy beard and stained T-shirt turned out to be a professional swordsmith with multiple university degrees. Another man was the exact image of Benjamin Franklin. And at my first rendezvous, my boss and I stood in line for supper with folks dressed like people from different epochs of Earth’s history: ancient Romans, medieval knights, French noblemen and American colonialists. We did not merely stand in a line that night. We stood in a timeline.

I don’t plan on ever becoming a blacksmith again, but it was a very good experience. My boss and his wife were ridiculously kind, generous and hospitable. My boss was also very patient. A lesser man would probably have lost his temper and bashed in my head with a hammer, but he was always tolerant of my mistakes.

My only real regret is that I wasn’t able to make that sword.

10. Squirrels

It was fun to grow up in Ecuador for many reasons, but one of them was the way visitors to the country reacted in awe and amazement to everyday things. A missions team would come to Quito from the US and gape in wonder at llamas or street performers or the Andes Mountains, and I would feel a smug sense of pride at considering these miraculous wonders a normal part of my missionary kid life.

Then I came to Indiana and began doing the same thing as those visitors, except my awe and amazement were reserved for squirrels.

In my fourteen or so years in Ecuador, I only ever saw two squirrels. One was kept in a cage as an exotic animal at a beach resort. The other crossed my path while I was visiting a cloud forest with my high school biology class. Cloud forests are basically high-altitude rainforests, and the location we were visiting was renowned worldwide for its vast variety of bird species. My class was given the option of taking an early-morning bird-watching tour. Most of us agreed to try it.

So at about six o’clock in the morning we found ourselves stumbling along a jungle path, bereft of breakfast or coffee, clutching our binoculars and trying to stay awake as our guide pointed out toucans and parrots that were so far away they all looked alike. I was almost asleep on my feet when someone gave a sharp, sudden cry.

“Squirrel!”

We immediately abandoned whatever tropical bird our guide was pointing out and looked around eagerly for the squirrel. There it was! A squirrel! Running across our path just thirty feet away! We were fascinated. In the end, the most remarkable and memorable thing about that whole bird-watching tour was the squirrel.

Then I came to Indiana to attend college and realized there are squirrels everywhere. I immediately pointed this out to people.

“Squirrels!” I exclaimed. “Right there! Cute fuzzy furry squirrels!

People began giving me odd looks.

Squirrels are adorable. I don’t understand why people aren’t more excited about them.

7. The Death Cupboard

Nobody takes my tea without my permission and lives.

That’s not to say I won’t share. I love sharing tea with friends, but woe to the fool who takes my tea without my consent!

All right, I’m exaggerating a little. I may not summon the full force of my mighty wrath if you take my tea, but I’ll certainly be a little irritated.

It’s not that I mind people drinking my tea. To be honest, I’m secretly pleased when people ask for tea; it’s always a pleasure to serve a fellow tea-drinker. It’s that I feel vaguely insecure when my possessions vanish without warning.

At the beginning of my sophomore year of college, I moved into a house with seven other young men and immediately realized my tea was in danger of falling into the wrong hands—by which I mean any hands that weren’t mine. I also had baking supplies and coffee and an emergency stash of ramen noodles, all of which would become public property unless I did something to defend them.

I promptly annexed a kitchen cupboard and filled it with my eatables and drinkables. But what was to keep bandits from raiding my cupboard and carrying off my cherished tea? I gave the problem considerable thought and devised an ingenious solution.

I put up a sign.

Well, that was a mistake.

Several of my housemates and a number of visitors made a point of opening my cupboard just to annoy me. It became known as the Death Cupboard. However, even though the cupboard was opened regularly, my plan was sort of a success. No one took my tea without asking permission.

Since death apparently wasn’t a convincing enough penalty to keep people from opening my cupboard, I later revised the sign to read, Adam’s Cupboard. You open it, Adam unfriends you on Facebook. –The Management.

Well, that didn’t work either. People continued to open the Death Cupboard and I never had the heart to unfriend them. No one took my tea, though, so I guess I can’t complain.

The people who opened the Death Cupboard were quick to point out they didn’t die. Little do they know the day of their doom is coming. They opened Adam’s Cupboard, and they will die.

Eventually. You know, in sixty or seventy years.

When that day comes, I’ll shake my old gray head and mutter, “Ah, if they hadn’t opened the Death Cupboard back in the fall of ’09 they might still be alive today.”

1. That Time I Was Attacked by a Tomato

The inaugural post of a blog is a great and sacred thing. It sets the standards and expectations for all of the posts to come. I gave considerable thought to this all-important first post. Perhaps, I mused, I should share some beautiful spiritual reflection, or a profound literary insight, or some glorious commentary on the meaning of life.

I decided instead to write about That Time I Was Attacked by a Tomato.

To be fair, the attack wasn’t unprovoked. I suppose it could even be called self-defense. During my time at Bethel College in Indiana, I’ve worked at a sandwich restaurant called the Acorn. It was my morning shift and I was slicing tomatoes without any suspicion that one of them might resist.

Workers at the Acorn use a slicer that shoves tomatoes through a frame of razor-sharp blades. The blades divide the tomatoes into even slices, which are stored in plastic containers and eventually put on sandwiches. Every now and then a tomato will be too mushy to be sliced neatly by the blades. Such tomatoes generally split open and send forth little jets of juice.

On the day of the incident, I tried to slice a tomato and it exploded.

I wasn’t expecting any of the tomatoes to go off like grenades, so I was rather stunned. One of my fellow workers described the scene thus: “I looked over at you, and there was juice and seeds dripping from your face!” Another worker just hopped up and down and exclaimed, “Eww! Eww! Eww!”

Tomatoes aren’t the only things that have attacked me at the Acorn. I never considered making sandwiches a dangerous job, yet my time at the Acorn has been fraught with violence.

For example, a friend whom I’ll call Socrates made a point of pretending to tear out my heart every time we worked together. He would then pretend either to take a bite out of the still-beating heart or to squeeze it into his drink.

Socrates once recruited another worker to assault me with crumpled-up papers as I was taking my supper break. A volley of paper balls pelted me as I sat innocently eating a sandwich, and I looked up to see Socrates and his accomplice preparing the next barrage of artillery. With only the table for cover, there wasn’t much I could do to defend myself.

I was also jumped by a raccoon. When I say jumped, I mean it both literally and figuratively. I was taking a stack of cardboard out to the recyclables dumpster when something like a furry gray basketball launched itself at me from an open hatch in the dumpster’s side. It landed at my feet and I realized it was a raccoon. It paused for a moment, peering up at me and presumably wondering whether I was worth the trouble of biting, and then sauntered away.

Why do things attack me at the Acorn? Why is making sandwiches so perilous?

I have no idea.