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© 2003
Brian Hodges - Please do not remove the copyright from this essay
'm
having a really hard time with the epidemic of school shootings
in this country. Summer vacation is over and I fear that the clock
is ticking down to yet another Ritalin-saturated kid going berserk
and blowing away his teacher or principal. Before that happens,
I make this plea to every student in America. "Please stop
blowing away your teachers or principals!" Honestly, what
has society come to when a kid brings a gun to school and…
Okay, in the interest
of journalistic integrity, I'm afraid I must step down from this
particular soapbox. That little bout of self-righteousness was actually
nothing more than thinly veiled jealousy. There were plenty of teachers
at my high school I wished somebody would shoot, but nobody ever
did! It didn't seem like such an impossible dream considering
the fact that everybody in my town owned a gun. Of course,
this was rural Maine and most of those guns were hunting rifles
- which I suppose were harder to conceal under a varsity jacket.
Hindsight being 20/20
and all, I am glad that nobody ever busted the proverbial
cap on some of our more detestable teachers. First of all, I was
in a lot of those mean bastards' classes, and I mean, hello…
ricochet. Second, it took our janitor months to clean up vomit.
And third, in the midst of a generation fixated on instant gratification,
I was taught a valuable lesson. In situations like these, prolonged
torture was often far better revenge than instant death. Pushing
a teacher to the edge of sanity by undermining their authority was
more priceless than a canister full of bullets.
Subtlety was the key.
Subtlety and teamwork (another good lesson). Spitballs and
outbursts were fun and all, but all they gained you was detention
- which only served to strengthen the teacher's perceived dominance.
No, if any subversiveness was to be accomplished, it had to be done
a little at a time over the course of an entire year. And every
kid in the class had to be in on it. Divided we fell. United, we
said, "They can't send us all to the principal's office."
In Mr. Bailey's Life
Science class, we started simply. Many of us wore those digital
watches that beeped on the hour. Before class one day, we spent
ten minutes synchronizing them exactly two seconds apart. At precisely
ten o'clock, Mr. Bailey's lesson was interrupted by a chain symphony
of hourly reminders: beep-beep…boop-boop…tweet-tweet…chirp-chirp…honk-honk…yuk-yuk…
When he turned sternly from the blackboard, we were all diligently
taking notes, innocently unaware that anything unusual had occurred.
While discussing the
reproductive system, we took sadistic pleasure in getting Mr. Bailey
to say words like Sperm, Ejaculate and Testes over and over again.
"Uh, Mr. Bailey, what bone did you say this was…? Oh, the pubic
bone!"
By the end of the year,
Mr. Bailey's hair had started to thin and turn gray. The confident
air he'd projected on the first day of class was a faint shadow
of the rattled fear that now emanated from deep within his tortured
soul. The breaking point finally came during our study of the digestive
system and a lesson on Peristalsis, which Mr. Bailey described as
the process by which the intestines move food through the body using
"wave motions."
To illustrate the point,
the whole class spontaneously broke into "the wave", moving
from left to right and back again. Our favorite game became to see
how many times we could do the wave while Mr. Bailey's back was
turned. I think the record was something like fifteen. When Mr.
Bailey eventually caught us in the act, we erupted in laughter,
telling him that we were just trying really hard to study Peristalsis.
Something finally popped.
He slammed his pointer on the desk so hard that everybody jumped.
His head turning purple and his voice reaching a fevered pitch,
Mr. Bailey bellowed at us to "SHUT THE HELL UUUUUUP!!!"
With pure satisfaction at his complete and total loss of control,
the smug look on everybody's face said the same thing; "You
can't send us all to the principal's office."
So kids, take it from
me. Shooting your teachers, although tempting, is never the right
decision. There is far more fun to be had, screwing with their heads.
So be creative. Work together. And if you need any more ideas, contact
me through this website.
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