Tuesday, May 19, 2015

If You Don't Stay in School You're Going to End up With a Crap Job

Two years earlier, the Principal explained to my dad he couldn’t do anything until there was an actual fight. My broken spirit and glasses didn’t matter. There was nothing he could do. On the ride home Dad never looked away from the road. He said he had taught me what to do my entire life and it was time to do it. You don’t always know what you are going to get when you let the dog off the chain.  
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Early Thursday morning, Dad dropped me off. He wouldn’t be back until Monday night. I wouldn’t go back to school until Tuesday. This is great, I thought. Old Man Billy’s farm was all the fun a teenage boy could create. Would I drive the tractor? Cut up trees with a chainsaw? Work in the wood shop? Ride horses along the fence line? See how stocked the feed pond was and do some fishing?
Nope, apparently getting kicked out of school for the third time was not cause for a vacation. Billy walked me out to the chicken coop. This was a commercial coop and it was 66’ X 600.’ The top had been taken off and there was about 4” of chicken poop covering the entire slab. He handed me a flat headed shovel and told me to grab a wheelbarrow from the other barn. After I got back, he pointed up the hill about 75 yards to his “garden,” an area about one and a half times bigger than the chicken coop. Fill the wheelbarrow and spread it evenly across the entire patch. Too much in one area burns the plants, he said.
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Mike and I didn't get along. No particular reason, we just didn’t. Generally, after a fight, respect is earned and friendships are formed. Not with Mike and me. We had fought four times and the tension was always there. Always simmering and ready to boil over at the slightest provocation. So far he had beaten the snot out of me three times. I had won once. Neither of us would back down.
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I shoveled shit and pushed it up the hill. I learned to turn my feet sideways up the hill or I’d slip and fall between the handles of the wheelbarrow, dumping it backwards and its contents down the back of my shirt. After two or three hours of being bathed in crap, you barely notice the smell any more. I learned not to over fill the wheelbarrow. It made everything a hot mess.
When the sun got low, Billy came and inspected my work. He stuck his thumbs in his overalls and nodded his head at my progress. “Ma made us supper. I guess you can knock off for the day. Before you come in you gotta hose off.”
Me: “Like take a shower?”
Billy wrinkling up his face. “Naw. You can’t come in the house like that. Hose off with an actual hose.”
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Me: “I wouldn’t call me that again.”
Mike: “Why? You’re a pizza face.”
Me: “That’s two.”
Mike: “What are you going to do about it, pizza face?”
Me: “That’s three. I don’t have to warn you again.”
Mike, making a song: “Pizza, pizza, pizzzzzza, pizzaface.”
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Billy’s & Margaret seven children had grown and left the farm years ago. But Margaret still cooked for nine. Billy might have worked me like a slave, but as a growing 13 year old I was about to even the score. I could eat. Billy nodded his head again after dinner, “Well Ma, I think it’s the first time in years we won’t be eating leftovers tomorrow. Boy, you better clean that slab off as clean as the plate.”
They didn’t watch TV. I don’t think they owned a TV. My entertainment options after supper were bed or bed. I chose to go to bed.
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Me: “OK. I’m kicking your ass.”
I said it with the same enthusiasm I felt when I was told by Mom that I had to stop watching TV to do the dishes.
I slid my chair back and walked back three desks quickly.
I’m sure he thought nothing would happen and I was going to challenge him to a fight after school. But Mr. Stahlman had left the class unattended.
I took my glasses off and put them on the desk behind me and told him to stand up.  
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Sunrise Friday. Shovel, push uphill, spread. Repeat.  
Try to eat every last bit of food in their house.
After dinner I boasted I was going to eat all their food.
Billy took me out to the carport. It had three chest freezers. He showed me the first one. It was basically full of pork to the top. The second one contained beef to the brim. The third one had chicken and everything else that needed to be frozen.
I, in fact, had no chance of eating all his food. But I was going to try.
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He laughed and said “Pizza Face” again.
I pushed him out of his desk. As he stood up we started throwing punches with the desk between us.
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Sunrise Saturday & Sunday.
Shovel, push uphill, spread. Repeat.
Eat all the food.
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Our other fights involved some sort of strategy. Not today. We both just stood there in the middle of class winging punches. He fell backwards and I jumped over the desk to finish.
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Finally, Monday I finished clearing off the slab. We spent the afternoon walking around the farm and exploring the barns, looking at all his antique equipment, cars, and motorcycles.
I asked him what he does when he turns over a brood of chickens and I’m not here to clean off the slab.
Billy: “Well, we fire up the bobcat over there and scrape it off and put it in a trailer. Takes about 15 minutes.”
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Five days of shoveling shit put the chain back on the dog and convinced me that getting kicked out of school again was not an option for years.

Wednesday, May 06, 2015

Change Your Shirt

Adam and I were lying on the floor watching GI Joe after getting home from middle school.


There was a knock at the door and Mom answered, “Yes, he’s here.”
“Oh really.”
“OK.”
“Jake you need to go change your shirt.”

“How come?” I asked.

And Mom replied, “Some kid wants to fight.”
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There were probably eight of us playing baseball at the park. I was playing shortstop and had let at least two balls skip right past me. And by skip right past me, I mean, I threw my arms over my head and turned around like I was scared of being hit by the ball. I did it because...I was scared of being hit by the ball. I never learned to catch.


Adam was at bat for the last debacle. And he let me know.


Adam: “What are you, a girl? No, you can’t be a girl. Girls can actually catch. Do we have any ladies in the park? We need a sub who can play.”


Little brothers don’t get to talk trash to big brothers. I charged the plate. When I got close he swung the bat at me. Not a little swing -- a full powered, only one hand left on the bat swing. He missed and started to run around the ball field, randomly swinging the bat as I stalked after him.


In a last ditch effort, Adam threw the bat. I turned slightly to let it bounce off my shoulder. Now I could charge.


Reaching out, I almost had my fingertips on him and some kid came flying out of nowhere with a movie style flying karate kick and leveled me. I came up swinging at the air out of instinct. We moved around, with neither of us hitting the other. He finally walked off and said he was going home to get his big brother.


I said, “Great. Go get your big brother. When I’m done with him I’m coming back after you.”
He ran home and I grabbed my bike and went the opposite direction to my house.


-----


Well, what do you know. The big brother showed up. And at my house. Strong move.
I came outside in my changed shirt. The older brother, David, was there with about ten of his buddies and his little brother. They were all standing around laughing. David was in the 8th grade. Technically one grade my senior. But he had been held back at least once. I was basically a bag of bones and he was a young man.


My dad came out in his three piece suit and sat down on the porch with his newspaper. All the kids stopped laughing and joking. He looked at them and said, “I’m just here to watch a fight,” and tilted his head back to look down his bifocals to read the paper.


David: “Are we going to do this?”
Me: “You came all this way. And you brought an audience.”
David: “Your parents aren't going to stop us?”
I slowly shook my head.
I guess he was planning a show of force without actually having to fight. Oops.
Me: “You ready?”
David: “Yeah. I guess.”
Me: “OK. You gonna pick your hands up?”


I was only allowed to fight under three circumstances:
  1. My dad required three clear warnings of impending violence.
  2. To protect someone else, no warning was required.
  3. I was told to fight.


My dad looked up from his paper and quietly gave the command, “Fight.”


I lunged forward twice with my hands up. David flinched. I giggled. He took a big haymaker of a swing. The arrogance of size. He thought I was just going to stand there and let him hit me. Nope. I slipped back and then came forward at the same speed of his arm as it passed me. I hit him, taptaptaptap, four times. The punches were as quick as a woodpecker’s tap and about as powerful, but my hands were bony and the blows still sting.


David jumped back. He came forward with another big looping haymaker. In the end, habits are fate and no one adjusts under pressure. I followed the punch and, taptaptaptap, four more crisp punches.


I was following Dad’s number one rule of fighting: Don’t get hit.


David looked angrier. His friends weren’t laughing anymore.
Haymaker, taptaptaptap.
Haymaker, taptaptaptap.


His friends were now silent. My dad had picked the newspaper back up. He would be able to tell if anything changed by the sound of footwork.


David: “You had enough.”

Me: “I got all day.”

David: “I think you’ve learned your lesson.”

Me: “I did?”

Turning to his friends, he said, “OK guys, I think he’s had enough.”

Me: “Sure. I’ve had enough. Psych.”

He turned around with new anger.

Me: “I won’t stop the next time you swing.”

He walked back to his friends and they left.

Dad: “Well I guess that didn’t go according to plan.”

Me: “Almost never does.”