Showing posts with label Story. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Story. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 16, 2019

Sixteen Pounds of Orange Juice


I can only imagine what the passing motorists thought.

It was one of those moments that really makes you wish thought bubbles from comic strips were real. Here I am, striding up the sidewalk in my Sunday best, bright yellow shirt; a straw fedora; a bright red tie that would do credit to Donald Trump; my cane  stuck in my belt like a sword because I don’t have a free hand, and a giant bottle of Cook’s Brut champagne swinging in each fist.
I’m guessing the dominant thought bubble would have been something along the lines of “???”
I can’t blame them. I have moments where I wonder why I thought this was a good idea myself. Champagne bottles weigh a lot more on the latter end of a mile-and-a-half walk than they do at the beginning. Seventy pounds apiece, at least. Who keeps feeding these things?
Don’t worry, my Baptist friends: I was not strolling home from church with massive amounts of alcohol. Actually, they were full of orange juice.
(Honest.)
It came about innocently enough. We were having a special farewell party for the family of one of the deacons, who were moving to San Diego. There were bagels with various cream cheeses. There were mimosas (almost a necessity if you are having to move to San Diego, in my opinion). There was fruit. [It was supposed to go on the bagels or in the mimosas, but most of the kids just shoveled it in plain. By the handful. I’m sure their mothers were all delighted with the state of their clothes later.] And when it was all over, there was far too much orange juice; somebody’d totally miscalculated the ratio, in a blatant failure of hard-learned eighth-grade math skills.
But, being a highly skilled scrounging bachelor, this was cause for rejoicing. “Would you like to take some of this orange juice home? We have too much.”
Would I? [Millennials, insert crafty-looking emoji with sunglasses here]
But there was a catch. The orange juice had all been made from frozen concentrate and mixed in situ. There were no containers. How would I get it home? Why, in one of those empty champagne bottles littering the table, of course. How clever of me. A twist of plastic wrap around the top, and we’re ready to roll. On second thought, I’ll take two; one can never have too much orange juice.
Wait, second catch. I walked here this morning because it was 68 degrees in early July and sunny and glorious. Could I walk back a mile and a half carrying three liters of orange juice in glass bottles? I hefted one. Totally doable. I’m still relatively young and hearty, even if I don’t ever work out!

Halfway up the long hill back to town my wrists are starting to cramp and I’m realizing that plastic wrap has very little friction, especially when you wrap it around the smooth neck of a glass champagne bottle. And for some reason the old song “Sixteen Tons” won’t quit running through my head, edited to fit the situation:

You load sixteen pounds, and whatd’ya get?
Another day older and deeper in sweat
This OJ’s a-fallin’ but I can’t go:
I’m stuck on a hill where the goin’ is slow...

It probably does weigh sixteen pounds, I think. I wonder how all the speed-walkers with the weights manage to do this. No plastic wrap for starters. I pass an old man going the other way and expect a question, or at least a raised eyebrow. Nope, nothing. He’s obviously lived in this Pacific Northwest college town for far too long for this to qualify as weird. I set the bottles down to wait at the traffic light and flex my fingers. The break feels amazing. Isn’t that just like the Christian life, I muse. We Western Christians expect life to be like a normal Sunday walk: long periods of sunshine and light breezes interspersed with a few brief hard bits, trials to keep us from being too comfortable. But the sermon series is on Acts this summer, and Paul’s life seems far more like today’s walk—long periods of pain and struggle and uphill climb broken by brief moments of blessed relief, when God is near.
But the rest breaks are not the end of the journey. They can’t be, you’ve got sixteen pounds of free orange juice to haul before it spoils in the afternoon heat. The breaks aren’t when you roll over and camp out, they’re when you thank God, your muscles unclamp, and you pop your neck and get ready for the next quarter-mile stretch. It was a good reminder for when I’m going through the dry spells of life, when little seems to be going right and family, friends—even God—seem far away. I can just hear Him chuckling gently in my ear, “Keep going, kid. Anybody can carry this burden another hundred yards, you’re getting close! (At the end there’s free orange juice.)” 
My apartment looked really good as I crossed the last parking lot. One of the bottles had slopped a little bit thirty yards back, and if you thought plastic wrap on glass was slippery, try wet plastic wrap! Not to mention I’d had a few mimosas too many back at the church...
Out of agony-born curiosity, I did actually weigh the bottles on the bathroom scale before I slipped them in the fridge. The needle read approximately fourteen pounds.
It lieth. Definitely sixteen, at least. Besides, fourteen doesn’t work in the song as well.

Thursday, July 30, 2015

Cavalry and Calvary

          
           English is stupid. That is a direct and oft-repeated quote from my best friend, and while I’m not sure I agree with him, I do admit that English is at least frustrating. Homonyms, homophones, sloughs and doughs and roughs: all bewildering to foreigners everywhere. But that’s not really what this is about. We are not here to discuss and lament the vagaries of our mother tongue.  In order to get to the original germ of this idea—the mustard seed of this post—we must hop in the nearest DeLorean and go back a bit. Say somewhere around the fall of A.D. 1997, in Germany.

I was six or so then, and was bouncing around the apartment doing something I always thoroughly enjoyed: singing. At that particular moment, it was the old Baptist hymn, “At Calvary.” So I chirped away with gusto, building volume as I neared the chorus: “…knowing not it was for me He died, at caaavaaaalryyyy!” Really, a natural mistake. To someone who knew his father was with an Army cavalry unit and whose favorite toy was a group of Playmobile Old West Cavalrymen, what other word was there?

But my father happened to be in the vicinity. “Actually, son, it’s cal-vary. Cav-alry is on horses. Cal-vary is the hill outside Jerusalem where Jesus died, also called Golgotha.”

Ah, my young mind thought. Well, I feel sheepish. That’s really close to the same. Funny. Oh well, life is short. Back to singing!

But the odd coincidence stayed with me.

Nearly twenty years later, I still like cavalry. One of my favorite movie phenomena, as a matter of fact, involves cavalry. Everyone knows that in a western, one of the good old ones, that when the wagon train is on its last wheels and the Indians are about to triumph—the bugle blows, the flag flutters, and the cavalry rides up to save the day. I call any moment when someone shows up—unexpectedly and out of the blue—to save the day a Cavalry Moment. Usually it’s not the main character, and if it is, he’s not the main character in that particular scene. Sometimes it’s a character you only see that one instance, here and then gone. But the day would be lost without them.

Why do these situations give us chills? Why does the adrenaline rush when some person or group—often before unseen for the entirety of the story—swoop in and tip the scales?

I believe God—who Authored authors, after all—built it in. After all, He executed the ultimate Cavalry Moment. A penniless carpenter being crucified like a robber on a hill turned out to be the salvation of the entire world. Which hill, because English is stupid, turned out to be named Calvary. Just ‘cause it could. I love God’s quirky plot twists.

Merely for fun, here are my top ten Cavalry Moments in cinema. They all still give me chills even after years of seeing some of them happen every time I watch that film.

10. Movie: Stagecoach. This is the one that almost birthed the cliché, as it were. The cavalry rides up and saves the passengers of our eponymous transport from destruction. Charge!

9. Rio Bravo. At the final gunfight, when Stumpy (Walter Brennan) shows up after being left behind and keeps John Wayne from being surrounded. Heh, heh!

8. The Longest Day. When Capitaine Philippe Kieffer of the Free French Commandos manages to show back up with a Sherman tank, with a big ol’ 75mm gun.

7. The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey. When the Dwarves show up to rescue Bilbo from being roasted. Not in the book, but I liked it anyway. It made the Company cool all of a sudden.

6. Superman Returns. Okay, fairly lousy movie, but that shot of Superman flying in front of the minigun bullets to save the guard made it all worth it!

5. Star Wars. When Han flies out of the sun and blows a TIE to smithereens, literally saving Luke’s tail. Really, how many people get to startle Darth Vader?

4. The Avengers. Loki is about to kill that old German man in Stuttgart merely to emphasize a point, and we all think he’s going to get away with it. Until somebody with a red, white, and blue shield drops in…

3. Guardians of the Galaxy. Star-lord and the Ravagers are attacking Ronan’s warship. But there’s too much incoming fire. There’s no way that they can make it—but then the Nova Corps shows up. Classic.

2. Facing the Giants. Okay, I know everyone is going, “Huh?” But I count David’s dad standing in the end zone, encouraging his son, as a Cavalry Moment. That’s love, right there. And the win wouldn’t have happened without him, right?

1. Star Trek. You know, the new one, with Chris Pine. Spock is in the small Vulcan ship, charging straight at Nero. He knows fully well that the massive number of torpedoes coming at him spell out his doom, and he is resigned to it. Then the Enterprise comes out of warp and in a beautiful display of firepower takes out all the incoming weaponry. I like that ship. You know, it’s exciting!

 

No, I didn’t forget. In a class all of its own stands my final favorite, the queen of the lot, the one that makes use of this trope so often but never dulls it. Its author, J.R.R. Tolkien, remains the only person who can give me that “chill down the spine” sensation merely from reading the printed word. I salute his genius, and awareness of the way the world is made that let him write so well.

0.       The Return of the King. Whether it be Sam carrying Frodo, Aragorn coming off of the ships, Boromir defending Merry and Sam, or that great charge of six thousand spears riding to Sunlending and death, this remains the one to beat. Forth, Eorlingas!

Thanks for coming along my trip down adrenaline lane. If I missed one of your favorites, sound off in the comments. Maybe I’ll have to add something to my watch list. And remember when you hear them blow the Charge that Calvary, not cavalry, gave us the greatest moment ever.