LeftyLen
Active Member
1974 An event took place in sixth grade, at a Lutheran school in Inglewood, an event almost resulting in an agonizing outcome. I waved my arm to block a softball thrown from the elementary school baseball diamond, a softball rapidly flying towards me. One boy, Val seeing the direction of the softball yelled, ’Look out” as the ball narrowly missed my ‘neither-regions,’ striking instead the back of my hand. If the ball had not been deflected by my hand my sheltered regions would have been struck resulting in considerable pain. For several days fellow students offered caustic jokes at my expense about the flight of the ball; but I figured better mean jokes and a big bruise on my hand than the balls uninterrupted trajectory.
1979 age 16, I observed an odd manifestation by several students who attended the church school I was compelled to attend. The older teen students, juniors and seniors were on a museum field trip at a natural history museum chaperoned by a members of the faculty. Many of the students had their hands outstretched vigorously attempting to block a panoramic view of fossils on display. The students blocking the views with frantic arm waving engaged did so to visually block the plethora of Pleistocene fossils on display at the La Bra Tar Pits. The formal position of the church school was such fossils did not exist, so like myself years before protecting one part of my anatomy from harm they were protecting another part of their anatomy from substantial pain, the pain of beholding fossils. The objective fact of the fossils uncompromised existence was in complete opposition to the narrative of the church school, thus through strenuous gesturing the fossils were, as best as possible relegated out of existence. I pointed and gestured at the fossils, declaring loudly " ain/t that interesting?"
The teens who rejected the reality in front of them were not chaperoned by the attending school faculty, their true chaperon an entrenched dogma. Such actions not acts of faith but acts of DENIAL. I was immediately expelled for my irreverence, ending my flirtation with fundamentalism
1979 age 16, I observed an odd manifestation by several students who attended the church school I was compelled to attend. The older teen students, juniors and seniors were on a museum field trip at a natural history museum chaperoned by a members of the faculty. Many of the students had their hands outstretched vigorously attempting to block a panoramic view of fossils on display. The students blocking the views with frantic arm waving engaged did so to visually block the plethora of Pleistocene fossils on display at the La Bra Tar Pits. The formal position of the church school was such fossils did not exist, so like myself years before protecting one part of my anatomy from harm they were protecting another part of their anatomy from substantial pain, the pain of beholding fossils. The objective fact of the fossils uncompromised existence was in complete opposition to the narrative of the church school, thus through strenuous gesturing the fossils were, as best as possible relegated out of existence. I pointed and gestured at the fossils, declaring loudly " ain/t that interesting?"
The teens who rejected the reality in front of them were not chaperoned by the attending school faculty, their true chaperon an entrenched dogma. Such actions not acts of faith but acts of DENIAL. I was immediately expelled for my irreverence, ending my flirtation with fundamentalism