Sunday, October 7, 2007

Observational/Reflectional Essay

In some states, you can get pulled over and ticketed for driving while talking on your cell phone. They say you’re not even supposed to eat, change the CD, or shave while in the driver’s seat. I’ve always considered myself a daredevil and pushed those negative standards a little farther by skillfully maneuvering through rush hour traffic while creating the most elaborate text messages to my BFF Rose.

Today, however, due to the eccentricity of the task I wish to tackle, I will put those undertakings to shame. I will actively take notes of the events and observations of my expedition to my hometown, and start the foundation of my essay while driving down the interstate for four hours. I will also videotape myself during my observations. Throughout the course of the assignment, I will try to discuss, evaluate, and eventually hope to understand some of the ponderables of life that I encounter on the way home. I know and accept the fact that writing a paper while driving is extremely dangerous to me, my passenger, (for her protection and anonymity, we shall refer to her as Ajax 314), and anyone else that may happen to be on or within an 8 mile radius of the road at the time of my travels. I will disregard all of this danger in the pursuit of knowledge, fame, and a possible cure for world hunger. An additional factor is the fact that my professor said I needed to take active real-time notes of the event that I am observing, and I can’t really take real-time notes of me driving home if I am not, in fact, driving home while taking notes. So there, my children, is the paradox of my assignment and the reason why we are all here, in a physical and metaphysical sense. Take that to your neighborhood rabbi.


THE DRIVE BY

Ajax 314 and I began our trip, as all great adventurers throughout time have (including Marco Polo, Columbus, Gandhi, and like Harold and Kumar should have), by driving through to get something to eat at McDonald’s. The impersonal voice that seemed to come out of a picture of a McGreasy on the menu board asked me what I wanted. I was in a very agreeable mood due to the fact that I was hanging with Ajax 314, so I related my order to the McGreasy in my nicest, home grown, tone. I pulled around to the second window, and what do ya know, the fries weren’t ready. Some kind of terrible grease accident in back. We were moving nowhere fast, so I began a friendly conversation with the newly discovered true identity of the McGreasy. (Rather than a luscious, fattening, grease smothered one of a million burger, I saw what at first sight was an peculiar, plump, and slightly sweaty middle aged woman.)

In our five minutes of verbal contact, the McGreasy, who I learned also went by the alias of ‘Janice,’ began shooting the shit with me about everything from the terrible manager she was working under, to the road construction on I-80, to the ‘D’ that her daughter brought home from school the day before. Janice’s humanity blindsided me like that bullet did Tupac. I found myself holding sympathy for this single mother trying to make her way through the world, trying to slice out her piece of the American Dream. The sympathy soon turned to admiration as I realized through our conversation that my sympathy was not welcome at her window. This woman had strength; she felt that she needed no special treatment, and she was going to get where she was going on her own two feet. Her work was humble, but her resolve to do it the best way she knew was not. She wore a smile for the entire five minutes of our collision in space and time, and then, as abruptly as our interaction began, my fries were done, and it ended.


THE NOSTOLGIC

With our bellies full and a smile upon our face, we set of into the Great Known of western Nebraska. If you‘ve ever traveled I-80, you know that the scenery isn‘t that amazing; Rolling hills, windmills, corn, cows, run down towns, corn, the occasional bird splattered across the window. This isn’t the kind of place you shoot a movie. This is the kind of place people go to die when they can’t afford to retire in Florida. In the defense of the tedious landscape, it is an impeccable opportunity to dose off into thought, another driving activity that brings safety to the masses.

Somewhere about 80 miles outside of Lincoln’s insanity, I stumbled on to a paradox that I share with what is probably every college student at one time or another. While in high school, I couldn’t wait to get the hell out of that town, and the further away I could get, the better. Yet now, on the verge of returning to everything that I had once known familiar, I had butterflies of excitement and anxiety in my gut. I was looking forward to seeing the people I had once been sick of, the streets I was once bored with, and sitting on the back porch with my father, which I had rarely made time to do while in high school.

I’ve hypothesized for a time that I am a paramour of change. Yet; I was bitter for years when my parents forced me to move from my hometown when I was 11, I felt like my world may have been over on the day of my graduation, and in the present, the last thing on my list of desires right after the death of a family member, is the negative change in my status of relationship with Ajax 314.
I, along with the youth of middle America, fear change, yet love it. For you mathematicians, I <3 change="Fear.">
THE MENTAL EMANCIPATION

The byproduct highlight of our venture home, in my opinion, was the football game that we were going to stop by. The event pitted my old high school team that I had once played with in greatness, and later lead to mediocrity, against one of the five teams that had spoiled my hopes of an undefeated season last year. The prognosis was gloomy, but my hopes of seeing a spark, or at least a glint in their play were high.
For the first half of the game, the fulfillment of my hopes was hollow. The process of sucking had begun the year before. For seven years before that year, we had been nearly untouchable. We had run up seven consecutive district titles, one state championship, and averaged just a little more than one loss per year. Until last year, my personal record in games that I had played was 20-3. In my junior year, we had out scored our opponents by a total of around 340 to 45. Then, my senior year, bad things started to happen. We tripped once, then again. Eventually, we had a regular season record of 4-4, the worst in memory. Then we graduated, and the world went on.

This year, however, things were worse, and the game that I watched that Friday night showed no mercy in proving that. The kids I had tried to encourage for those years had lost all hope and passion. There used to be an intensity in our games that you could only find in movies like Braveheart and Troy; now it looked less robust than a scene of Bingo at the local nursing home. The seniors out there paid no attention to form, couldn’t remember their plays, and didn’t even want to be out there. Time after time I watched their opponents use the simplest dive plays to cut through our lines like an Elizabeth Taylor through husbands. After 12 minutes of play, it was 20-0, and not in our favor.

It seemed odd that the cheerleaders were so peppy. They actually seemed excited to be there, unlike the football, players. According to the look in their eyes, they took especial pride in the fact that they could spell the word POWER, even when the other team was mopping up the field with our metaphorical corpses. There was also a plethora of grade school kids around having the time of their lives. When the local newsman came around with his camera, they would hold up their index finger and yell senseless things at the top of their lungs. The reality of the fact was not that we were number one, but had only won one game that season. They didn’t care, or really know what was going on. Ignorance is bliss… Why do we put so much work in to disposing of it?

I could have never imagined what happened next to save me from the torture of watching my alma mater get spanked. A young man walked up to where I was sitting, sat down, and gave me the long missed greeting I hadn’t heard since I left high school: “‘Sup Whitey?” I didn’t recognize him at first, but after a bit I realized that this was a now 8th grade kid that I had hated a year earlier. There’s something about 7th graders that just annoys the hell out of me. The squeaky voices, the constant deer-in-the-headlights look in their eyes, the lack of hygiene, I don’t know. All I know is that I can half-jokingly say that the only good 7th grader is a dead 7th grader.

Something had changed this year though. Physically, he looked like he had grown 3 or 4 years, but mentally, I could have sworn the kid was 10 years older. He talked to me like he realized that there was a world outside of his head, and like he knew that someday, he was going to have to carry some responsibility in something. He really drew a smile on my face when he told me he was the quarterback of the Junior High football team, and that that week, he had put up 200 passing yards and 180 rushing yards against a school that was a class above us.

This kept my mind off of the game long enough for the coaches to put in the Sophomores and Freshmen. My spirits were lifted even higher when I saw our Freshmen start manhandling theirs. In the past, we had been great. In the future, we would be great. Taking a few years off isn’t so bad I guess.

The game ended 41-7. But after my conversation with that young man, I was able to walk away with a serene grin on my face, imagining things in the future; change in the future. That night, my worrying mind let go of its paternal attachment of that team. Now I’ll sit back and watch it grow. It feels great.


THE FINALE

After the game, we picked up some passengers and continued on with the last leg of the journey home. The passengers in danger now included Ajax 314, her sister, and my second cousin. This was a common group of friends this summer, so it was kind of just like old times, except not. I don’t really miss my former life, but am somewhat content with what it has grown into. I believe the boy I once was and the old man I will one day be would and will be ok with this day. Who knew that a drive home could stimulate so much thought? We should really avoid that from now on…

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Disclaimer: I don’t hate Nebraska, the first song that I will mention just really sucked. I also wanted to use the ‘Free Hugs’ video but I think like eighty million people did that, so my anti-conformist mind won’t let me do the same.
That being said, here’s the situation, the problem, if you will. First, a twangy country singer named GINGER ten Bensel (never trust a ginger) was allowed to record a song and video and deliver it to the public. You may want to listen to the song before you continue reading. Don’t get me wrong, country is cool in the right time and place, unless it sounds like it’s being sang by someone with strep throat, a clothespin on their nose, and one of crazy horse’s arrows in their arse. Second, the song was written, without my consent, as a spokes-song for people every where in Nebraska. This is not the image I want people in Virginia to develop about us! Our image is bad enough already: A friend of mine went to Washington DC last summer, and in a passing conversation with a decently educated teen from New York, was asked, in all seriousness, if he had ever been attacked by Indians, and if he had ever driven a car. This woman isn’t helping our interpreted persona! The answer? Death sentence to Ginger… but that might be taken as a little to harsh, so this video was released by the honorable Thomas Irvin.
It just takes a little more realistic and modern look on the wonderful aspects of our lovely state. Maybe if people see this parody, they will realize that the state isn’t stuck in the 19th century and that we have, in fact, come to peace and even become one with our pleasant native population. Until next time, hoorah for Nebraska and go big red…. Nice job in not losing to Ball State last Saturday.

Sunday, September 16, 2007

Memorial Stadium is a pretty big deal in Nebraska. It's kind of like the temple was to the Jews in ancient Israel. However, I figured that that topic has had the hell beaten out of it, so I'm going to write on something a little smaller and lesser known, but definitely just as cool; Mo Java, our neighborhood coffee shop.
My photography is pathetic, but my lowly 320 x 240 pixel camera phone and I tried our best to show you the simple elegance and hominess of this laid back, old school style establishment. Hopefully I will have no problem painting a clear visual picture of the environment for you, as I am currently working from inside the doors of our institution of the hour.
I have no idea when and why this building was originally built, and neither you or I care. It has an stimulating combination of rough furnishing and stylish décor. There is an array of invigorating colors masking the walls and enough brilliant smells to make even the most disconcerted nose smile a bit. The floor made me laugh a bit when I saw it; it was the same cracked up, slightly painted cement that was in my dad’s mechanic shop when I was a kid. Talk about a taste of home. The walls, however, are filled, yet not cluttered, with charming art prints. My server, Nikki I think, was delightfully kooky; she asked me what it would be, I said surprise me. She gave me a quirky look and chirp, and a couple of minutes later I got a lovely mixture of coffee, cocoa, cream, sugar, and even a splash of mint, all for the nice price of $3.25.
This place is pretty much perfect for studying, hanging out, and they even have live bands on friday nights, such as Little Brown Jug next week. The entire dining area reminds me of Christmas for some odd reason. It seems like the kind of place you would hang out with relatives around a fire. There are crazy comfy chairs, couches, and those nice coffee tables that only old people like your grandparents have in their living rooms. Nevertheless, I believe this is the time that I have to leave you, for my cup is empty, my writing quota is filled, and Nikki just called out that Mo Java is closing in five minutes. So until next time, bon voyage.

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

The Ill fate of Professor Belot

Ok, if you’re reading this essay, which you obviously are, we first have to set up some ground rules. I’ll agree not to get mad when I’m writing this if you agree not to consider this piece an angry rant. It’s not a rant, it’s just a ‘hey, come on now.’ Now that that’s clear, on to the fun stuff. For this entry, I read a story from the Omaha World Herald about a UNL professor who ‘agreed to resign’ because of an incident that occurred involving some explosives that got passed around class one day. At first thought, you may be thinking, “Uh, duh? He could have like blown up UNL with those things. He better have gotten canned.” But I dare to take the opposite position. I believe this story falls into the rapidly expanding category of “little things that got blown out of proportion and extreme action was taken to save the big man’s buttocks.” This is the kind of category where a third grader gets expelled for carrying a finger nail clipper in their back pack or parents press sexual assault charges against a kindergartener who kissed his classmate. Back to the story about the professor… Let’s think of this logically.
Professor John Belot Jr. was a Professor of Chemistry at a major university. That means he had a pretty good amount of Education under his belt. A lot of teachers pass around visuals in class; it keeps the interest of the students. If professor Belot was sober when he made his judgment that the explosives were not volatile enough to be dangerous to decently cautious students. The story never actually said what the explosives were, and many are not actually dangerous unless put under extreme conditions. One example of this is nitrogen, a substance that can usually be put through a tractor to fertilize crops without exploding, yet if put under extremely high temperatures and pressure can result in explosions such as the one that produce the Oklahoma City bombing. Professor Belot should have been able to tell the difference between a volatile and nonvolatile explosive.

Sunday, September 9, 2007

A Visit to the National Museum of Roller Skating

I've always had a passionate hatred for roller skating. Maybe it's because my ankles always hurt after a bout of skating, or maybe it's because I just really suck at it, I don’t know. Regardless, for reasons out of my control, I was sitting at the international museum of roller skating this last Thursday. I was staring at 190 years of the most boring history imaginable, that is, other than the history of spoons as a musical instrument. But I’ll suck up the bitterness and try to tell you about my monotonously educational roller skating experience.
Our lovely local skating museum (also some kind of competitive skating office or something of that sort…) is full of surprises. The first exhibit one sees when he walks in is a shelf filled with the most eccentric rolling contraptions I’ve ever seen. I’ve found some online examples that you can find here. In my opinion, most look like spoons tied to wooden balls by leather straps. But I guess, according to the exhibitions at the museum, they were quite the fashion item in their day. Social skating was up there in the glamorous categories of operas and ball room dancing. Personally, I have no idea why, but old people will be old people.
The museum also had a large collection of skating history. The walls were covered in posters of skating legends, and I do use that word loosely… Trophy cases were overfilled with golden mementos of tournaments won. The trophies and posters are from local, state, regional, national, and even international events. I never knew that this activity had such a following.
The competitive events that are based on roller skating are similar to several winter sports such as ice skating and skiing. There are competitions in figure skating, speed skating, off road skating, and several more which I don‘t care to mention here. However, if you would wish to find out more, you can visit the National Museum of Roller Skating. Not feeling ambitious but still yearn for more skating knowledge? Check out this link to Encarta for more skating information.