The Free Lunch Line; A Rant From My Past

August 14, 2008 at 9:53 am (blogs, children, kids, learning, social diversity, society, writing) (, , , , , , , , , )

     A travesty.   It seems when mankind is left with nothing to diversify or segregate to or from, he commits this travesty to his very own.  I’m not sure if this still takes place in the schools, but I suspect that it does.  I didn’t think much about it when I was in school and I’ll tell you why in due time.  But the simple fact that it existed at all is a crime against young, innocent people, their dignity, and their developmental years. 

    So, my mother wasn’t exactly rich.  She moved back home with her mother and father with us three kids in tow after divorcing my father who disappeared from our lives altogether for reasons only he can convey.  We struggled, but my mom and grandparents did what they could for us.  We led seemingly normal lives with a safe roof over our heads and three square a day.  I’m thankful for that. 

    In school, however, it’s quite one thing to have levels of social diversity.  The rich kids are going to hang out with the other rich kids that are being reared in their own neighborhoods.  After all, even city ordinances allow only certain homes to be built in certain neighborhoods.  You’re not going to find a double-wide in a neighborhood of estates, in other words.  So there’s no big surprise that rich kids are snooty and poor kids are trash.  It’s been that way for thousands of years.  Me saying it in this blog isn’t going to raise eyebrows or change anything.  So screw it.  I’m not looking to reform social diversity here.  There are all kinds of social diversities in school.  There are the jocks; rich or poor … the heads; rich or poor, the nerds; rich or poor, the rich; rich or poor … and the reason I say that is because even the rich diversify from one another.  Was the money family money or was it new found fortune?  New found fortune is often scrutinized by family fame and fortune; those born with silver spoons in their mouths, for example.  There are other social groups in schools and I’m sure they’re not called jocks and heads and nerds anymore.  Who knows?  I graduated way back in 1981.  By the time I graduated, I had plenty of pent up frustration with the politics of school and how the system worked … or didn’t work.  I guess that in itself set me up for the best education of the real world than all that time I spent sitting in all those classes learning mandated studies.  There were teachers who had favorite students and passed grades accordingly.  That was not fair to the others.  There were teachers who hated their jobs and weren’t afraid to let you know about it.  That was not fair to the students.  I didn’t let any of this bother me too much.  Well, to tell you the truth, it bothered me plenty, I just gave up caring about it.  To me, it was nothing more than another social group.  And me?  I wasn’t a head … I wasn’t a jock … I wasn’t rich … I was poor … but I worked after school and instead of wearing the clothes my mother could afford to buy for me, I bought and paid for my own clothes to “fit-in” status symbol-wise to a couple of categories higher on the social status than I actually deserved to be.  You had to wear Levi jeans to “be cool” at school.  You had to have name-brand sneakers or hiking boots … or Timberlane work boots.  Everything you wore had to have a brand name on it to be cool.  And it couldn’t be just any name.  The nerds didn’t care what they wore.  That’s what made them nerds.  Maybe they cared plenty, but were unable to do anything about it. Although, they spent more time on their studies and not so much wondering what the fluff they were going to wear, they passed their grades and probably are having the last laugh at the expense of the vanity of those of us who did care.  My hat’s off to those that did so.  I don’t know why it seemed important to me to be someone I wasn’t.  I was embarressed to be poor.  Probably because of the way it made me stick out in a crowd.  Probably because I was an attention monger.  A class clown.  A trouble-maker in sorts.  I would function in my studies.  I did well for those teachers that appreciated my work.  I also challenged the system to those teachers that found it necessary to point out their favorites.  I exploited them and made their year as miserable as they made mine.  It was a personal challenge of mine.  

     As mentioned, I wasn’t really a jock, nerd, head, or a social.  I was all of them.  In essence, I was none of them.  I spoke and befriended anyone who would give me the time of day.  It didn’t matter what society they belonged to.  I experimented with the pot … but I swear I never inhaled … (yeah … right) and I played sports … and I wore the right clothes … and I fit in … because I financed the whole lie with my own earnings.  My own blood, sweat, and tears.  Don’t pity me.  I’m not looking for that.  It was my decision and I have no issues with how I was raised or what decisions I made during my school years.  I harbor no pent up frustrations about that time in my life … well … maybe one

It’s true I didn’t care much for teachers that didn’t care much whether they were really teaching or not.  As mentioned, I had ways of getting even with them and I’m rather proud of the fact that I inhibited that quality to make their lives miserable for the short time they knew me.  But the one thing about school that really just screamed exploitation in social diversity was “the free lunch line.”  Has anyone ever heard of this?  Do they still do this?  What the fluff is that all about?  A welfare line of sorts.  In the cafeteria, two lines were formed for the lunch tickets to gather from students to eat the same exact lunch.  There was the regular kids from normal hard working households … and the rich kids … and then there was a line formed for the kids that were not from families that made a lot of money.  They fell under a program that offered their lunches to them for free.  Well … not really free.  There was one small price to pay.  The large blinking neon sign hanging above each one of our heads telling the entire cafeteria  and school population that we were dirt poor.  Our families were on welfare.  Our mothers and fathers were societal losers that stayed home all day and watched soap operas and bilked the system … that we lived in filthy double wides or trailer parks … None of which were necessarily true, but scenarios were certainly perceived by those who had to pay for their lunches with their parents money.  The “normal” and the “rich” kids.  If you got free lunches, you received a completely different colored lunch ticket.  Although I was a white kid in a predominantly white school, suddenly I had a different color because I came from a lower class family income bracket.  Suddenly, I was  minority among my very own.  This isn’t something the school could just work out by counting how many of the families were poor and give us the same colored lunch ticket at the beginning of the week?  Mail them to us incognito?  I’m sure there were thousands of different opportunities they could have created to make it a less embarrassing scenario for those of us that had to stand in that line.  They simply chose not to.  I stood in that line.  I’m proud to say I did, now.   Back then I wasn’t.  Back then it ate at me daily.  I didn’t always stand in that line, however.  You see.  I mentioned that I was a working lad and I financed my entire social status in school.  That included paying for my own lunches, although my family still fell under the stringent guidelines of me benefiting from free lunch at school.  I stood in the “normal” lunch line and pulled money from my own wallet that I had earned myself to be considered “normal.”  Because my school made the conscious decision to exploit poor kids.  To insure segregation from the rich.  I understood this at a very early age and resented it from then on.  I still resent it.  If I could find a lawyer that chased ambulances part time and offered me restitution from this school for all the years of lunches I paid for, hey … why the hell not?  It seems everyone else is litigious.  And … I could use the money, too.  

     With all joking aside, I would like to point out that if this procedure still takes place in schools anywhere … everywhere, that it should be STOPPED immediately and a way found to preserve the integrity of the developing children trying to grow up in society with limitless boundaries for the sake of their education.  Does it really need to be announced to the school that any of the children are from poor families?  Living in the neighborhoods they live in and the house they live in is all the social diversity a person needs.  The clothes they wear will define their wealth or lack thereof.  Making them stand in a separate line for free lunch is nothing more than exploitation.  Find out what’s going on in schools and speak up about it.  We’re never going to stop social diversification.  The lord knows we need that … I guess.  But what we can control, we simply should make an effort to try.  It’s for the youth of our nation and their tender and delicate developmental years.  

 

Jody L. Campbell

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Two Girls in My Bed … Not Exactly a Fantasy

August 7, 2008 at 10:16 am (authors, blogs, children, computers, family, humor, kids, love, marriage, writing) (, , , , , , , , , )

I woke up the other morning around 4 AM and there was this beautiful young girl in our bed between me and my wife. She was bright-eyed and bushy-tailed and she smiled when I opened my eyes and she said … “Hi daddy!” Hmmm

“What are you doin’ in my swamp?” I asked her in my best Shrek impersonation. This, as always, produced a smile.

“Sleeping,” she said.

“You don’t look like you’re sleeping to me,” said I.

Mommy, who was now awake, decided to try and return her to her own bedroom and that seemed to work, but I never got back to sleep. So, I tossed and turned for about an hour and finally relented at about 5 AM and got up. I crank started the dial-up connection and went to the kitchen to start a cup of coffee. In my mind, I was imagining the two tasks competing in a head to head race to see which would get accomplished first: the finished product of a cup of coffee or finally getting online through the archaic dialup and low KBs connection. To my astonishment, the computer won hands down. Adding the necessary ingredients into my coffee, I made my way towards the office, set the coffee on the desk, positioned the chair to a comfortable setting, and placed my hands on the keyboard. Ah yes, I can write … I thought, anyway.

Had I just heard something? A door creaking, maybe? I turned my back to see a fleeting glimpse from the corner of my eye speedily making its way towards our bedroom where I hoped my wife had not suffered the same fate as I had that morning trying to get back to sleep.

“Hey!” I hollered out. The figure’s pitter-pattering feeties stopped dead in their tracks, turned 180 degrees and bee-lined for the office.

“I can’t sleep,” she said.

“Join the club,” I said. She tried in vain to tell me she was scared, but I could tell otherwise with her gorgeous, but lying eyes. She’s not a very accomplished fibber yet.  It’s a work in progress.

“Why not lay on your bed with the door open for a while and I’ll protect you since you’re right next door to the office,” I offered.

“Okay,” she said excitedly. Too excitedly for me to think this was going to have any semblance of endurance. Sure enough … a few moments later, she emerged back into the office to tell daddy a really cool story. Of course it was gibberish and she was making it up as she went along. Gotta love her 5 year old imagination. I have no idea where she gets it.  <whistles>

Now, if I was Mommy, I’d be making her get back into bed and saying … you need your sleep because I do not want you to be a cranky girl at Nanny’s today and high maintenance when you finally get home tonight. This would produce wailing and crying in protest, and that she was scared and that she wasn’t tired. But I’m not Mommy. And I didn’t want to hear either wailing or crying at this time of the morning.  I don’t want to hear wailing or crying any time of the day.  I simply do not have the fortitude my wife inhibits when it comes to such matters.

“Look Daddy!” she exclaimed referring to the predawn light coming through the edges of the mini-blinds, “it’s already morning time!”

“Uhuh,” I said, “but it’s still early honey and I want your mommy to be able to sleep.”

“Can I stay up?” she asked knowing I would let her. How does she do that?

“If you stay in your room and occupy yourself without waking up your Mommy.”

Off she went happily and I didn’t really think Mommy was going to get back to sleep in all honesty. She has an uncanny ability to lay there for hours trying, though. And, I used to get up early when I was young. And look at me … I turned out just … fine? … Hmmm … wait a minute!

“Jadyn! Go back to bed!”

“Waaaaaaaaahhhhhhh!” Now … even the dog was wide awake. I clicked the red X on the upper right hand corner of the monitor screen and called it a day on the Internet.

This very morning, while I write … I have gone through the exact same routine as the other day, sans waking up to my wide awake daughter between my wife and me. I got a little bit further along in the routine this morning. I was already getting my stats on the preseason football games and the final roster cuts when I heard …

“Mommy!” being hollered out from her bedroom.  Oy vay! 6:15 AM is what the clock displayed. Wow … she’s sleeping in, I thought to myself sarcastically.

“MOMMY!” She hollered even louder with more enthusiasm while I was deep in thought. One would think I’d be intercepting the hollers before they produced a wide-awake Mommy.

I went to her bedroom and opened the door. “What’s the matter, Honey?” I asked.

“I want my nut.”

“Excuse me?”

You know, Daddy,” she said with a degree of contempt and a dash of sarcasm. It’s a little early for that, wouldn’t you think?

“Um … NO! I don’t know.”

“The peanut.” I’m still clueless. “I think it’s up on the shelf with my ballerina puppet.” I moved the puppets and saw no peanut. “It’s the one I got out in the woods, Daddy!” Obviously, she finally realized her father still had no idea what he was looking for. “The squirrel nut! Hello!” Yeah, full blown sarcasm. I hate to admit she gets that from me.

Now I finally understood what she was looking for. She had found an acorn in the woods one time while she was hiking with her preschool class. I have not, in all honesty, seen this crazy acorn in several months and why I’m looking for this damn nut at 6:15 this morning when I could be writing a blog entry is quite beyond my realm of reasoning.

“There’s no acorn up here, Jadyn,” I said.

“Oh … okay. I thought it was.” Uhuh … sure you did. Conniving little … Man, I love her though.

As I tried to exit her bedroom and shut the door, I got the “I gotta go potty” routine, so I just knew she wasn’t going back to bed. I used to get up early when I was a kid. And look at me. I turned out just fine. Hmmm … wait a minute. Nope. I don’t want her wailing this morning. I just got an idea for a blog entry. How about petty bribery?

“Jadyn?”

“Yes, Daddy?”

“How about I put Tak and the Power of Ju-ju on for you and you stay real quiet and not wake up Mommy.”

“Yeah, yeah, yeah!” she practically screamed. So much for keeping the house quiet, I thought as the dog emerged from our bedroom.

Anyway … Mommy’s still in bed (wide awake, I’m sure) and my daughter is laying on the sofa watching her TiVo’d television show. And that gave me the opportunity to write this blog writing exercise. Thank goodness!

Jody L. Campbell

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