A Moment of Growth and an Accidental Bubble
It was third grade. A boy named James who resembled Beaker
from the Muppets had thrown up big orange chunks two rows over and two desks in
front of me. A boy with a weird cowboy accent had moved to “the big city” of
Long Island, New York and we all asked him to repeat everything he said. It was
the first year I heard Martin Luther King’s I Have a Dream speech in its
entirety and listened to the words and looked at the solemn and inspired faces
of my black classmates and wished with all my heart I too was black. It was the
year my teacher drank Tab and ate a Krackel chocolate bar everyday. And it was
the year I learned that you find kindness in the strangest places.
I don’t even remember his name, really, but I think it
started with an L. He was taller than the rest of us. And bigger. And for those
reasons alone, we were all scared of him.
He had street smarts and was always whispering things to us we shouldn’t
know. Even my twitchy, nervous teacher seemed twitchier and more nervous when
she addressed his behavior.
Anyway, this kid would rat you out in a heartbeat, maybe for
the pleasure to see somebody other than himself in trouble. And he could turn
the class on you in a minute. I saw the way he shook his head in disgust at
poor James as he walked the walk of shame to the nurse’s office, covered in
vomit, and how the rest of us quickly followed suit. I saw how our class
cowboy’s accent went from a novelty to a total joke each time L asked him to
say something and then shook his head and offered a Grinch-like snicker when he
did.
So, it was no wonder why in the brief seconds of a winter
day, I saw my third grade life pass before my eyes. It was cold. It was gloomy. It was wet. And I
was sick.
I was in my reading group with about five others and all of
their eyes were on the page. Everyone else in the class sat at their desks,
occupied with a worksheet of some sort. It
was the kind of moment everyone is doing what they are supposed to be doing and you look around and time almost seems to
stop. That’s when it happened. I sneezed.
And the most perfect bubble came out of my nose. It was large, so large
I could actually see it looming in front of me. If it wasn’t so gross, it would have been
beautiful, the way it glistened. But
nobody saw what happened.
Nobody but L.
I saw the Grinch-like grin spread across his face. I saw the
hint of disbelief in his eyes. I waited for him to point, for him to laugh, for
him to draw everyone’s attention to the grotesque, glistening mucus bubble
hanging from my nose. I was paralyzed. I waited for the inevitable.
And then it popped.
And L shook his head, offered me a disgusted but crooked
smile, and looked back down at his paper.
Maybe he thought no one would believe him. Maybe he had once
been the victim of a booger bubble and knew its hardships. Or maybe he was just
very impressed. In any case, he never
said a thing.
And it was one of the first times I realized, sometimes even
those we think are the worst, those we fear the most, can be merciful and kind.
I stopped thinking of L as just a horrible person and instead realized there
are many sides to all of us. It’s a
lesson I carry to this day, and most likely, one of the biggest ones I’ve ever
learned.
I love this story--the biggest lessons can sometimes spring from such small events...
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