Did You Just Call Me a Pantywaist?

Sometimes I sit at the keyboard, move my fingers and the words just flow.  Other times, like tonight, there’s a struggle.  Oh, I have no shortage of stories; those go on forever.  I have lived over a half century, you know.  The problem is that I’m not ready to tell some of the stories for different reasons.  Some entail a lot more embarrassment than I’m ready to reveal, others seem too trivial to waste time with.  They’ll probably all come in time, but I need to be ready for them to come.

What to do?  Do I just close the program and go home?  It seems to me that it would be simpler to just write less often.  The Lovely Lady has given her permission.  “You don’t have to write everyday, you know,” she told me as I left the house earlier.  The day will come when I’ll take that advice, but for now, I want to persevere.  It took me such a long time to get up the courage to start that I’m worried I’ll falter soon and quit for lack of motivation or in discouragement.

I have been a quitter, you know…When I was quite young, our neighbors would invite us to go to the tomato fields and pick with them.  I agreed one day and rode the big flat bed truck out to the field…only to ride it back the first time it returned to the processing plant.  I had assumed that the day would be a lark, nothing more than an easy few hours of picking in the garden.  Boy, was I mistaken!  Suffice it to say that I was embarrassed by kids half my age and adults who looked so old that decrepit wouldn’t be a stretch to describe their physical prowess.  When I heard that the truck was coming back to town, I was climbing on in a minute, without a second thought.  Let them say whatever they wanted to…I was done!

A few years later, this time at about 13 or 14 years old, these same neighbors (who must have been a little forgetful) invited me to work with them in their concrete finishing business.  I made it a little longer this time, actually sticking out the job for 4 days.  Setting forms, cleaning concrete-covered tools, and digging trenches by hand in the nearly 100 degree heat and through the dry, sun-blasted soil, was incredibly tiring work, but by the third day, the sunburn I had started accumulating the first day was blistered and the motion necessary to do my work was not only exhausting, but also excruciating. So, once again I quit, walking home this time.

The list of things I have tried and quit abruptly includes not only a job or two, but various clubs, sports, and even a correspondence school.  I’m good at leaving things unfinished. A close examination of my workbench today will reveal at least 4 unfinished jobs, which may never be resumed.  Sometimes when we start things, we don’t count the cost, we don’t consider what the task really entails.  Then when we hit the brick walls, and it happens invariably, we “reassess”.  That’s what I like to call it anyway.  It sounds better than “waffle” or “renege”.  My mom had a colorful name for people like me, probably a bit politically incorrect.  She would say, “Oh, don’t be such a pantywaist!”  Well, when the going gets tough, the wimpy get going…the other way!

I will tell you proudly of my triumphs, although a closer examination of  them will demonstrate the influence of someone other than myself, a blessed marriage made easy by an amazing partner, a long term involvement in the same church, facilitated by fellowship with some of the best people I know, and my business, in which I have been motivated by enjoyment as much as by necessity.  God has been good and well I know it!  When I find myself disappointed by my shortcomings and failures, and they are many, I have only to look at His goodness and faithfulness to find encouragement and the stimulus to keep pushing forward.

The past is our school, providing us the tools to struggle back to our feet and get it right the next time.  Our whole life is a picture of grace and redemption, with second chances being the rule rather than the exception.  So, quit being a pantywaist and get going…in the right direction!  You’re surrounded by failures who kept at it until they achieved success.  Your turn is next!

“Age wrinkles the body.  Quitting wrinkles the soul.”
(Douglas MacArthur)

It Just Doesn’t Add Up…

Up until sixth grade, I loved math.  I’ve since figured out that the reason is that math until then was actually basic arithmetic, with numbers which made sense to me and functions which were fairly consistent, such as addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division.  I actually remember a time when I thought that math was my favorite subject.  That all changed as we moved into the more theoretical fields and I rapidly lost interest.  Algebra was just okay and Geometry was one step beyond okay.  I basically blew off Geometry class due to a complete lack of interest in the subject.  It no longer was black and white, right and wrong.  We didn’t speak of adding and subtracting, but now had theorems and postulates, and questions such as: “State the theorem or postulate you would use to prove the following statement.”  I wanted to find the correct answer, not discuss why it was correct.

I should tell you from the start, that I’ll not be exploring any of the intricacies of the foreign language which is mathematics here.  I merely wish to set the stage for my little tale, to be assured of your understanding of my position, when I say that I had no interest in the subject.  You mathematicians (the Lovely Lady included) will gasp in horror, and the intellectuals among you will be convinced that your original impression of my lack of cerebral ability was correct.  You won’t change my stance.  I have no intention of becoming a “nuculer scientist”, and therefore will not be resuming my education in mathematics ever again.

For the college prep level of classes I chose to complete in High School, Geometry was a minimum requirement, so it had to be passed.  We had a two semester, four quarter system, with nine weeks in each quarter.  As I sat through my first nine-weeks of classes, my eyes rapidly glazed over as Mrs. Klinck discussed the basics of the class and my mind went into neutral for the duration of the first quarter, giving me a final grade for the nine-weeks of 68.  In those days, 70 was considered passing for the class, but you only had to pass the semester to move ahead, so the two nine-weeks grades were averaged together.  Mrs. Klinck was a good teacher, with a desire to see her students do well, so she arranged for me to come in for extra help before school.  I wasn’t alone in those early morning sessions, since there were other students who were of a kindred spirit with me.  At the end of the semester, with a little effort on my part, I achieved exactly the necessary minimum passing grade of 72.  My mind, which does simple division quite well, told me that the resulting averaged semester grade of 70 was completely acceptable.

For the third quarter, the eyes glazed over again, resulting in an abysmal grade of 62, the worst I ever had on a report card.  Mrs. Klinck was not amused at all.  “If you think I’m going to pass you with a 78 for the final nine-weeks, you’re sadly mistaken!”, were her exact words.  “If I don’t think you tried to do any more than just get by, I will make you take this entire class again next year!”  Now, Mrs. Klinck was one of the best looking teachers in high school and I think most of the boys in her classes had a crush on her, but another whole year of her Geometry class?  No, thank you!  I came in for the early tutoring sessions, applied myself to the hated postulates and theorems and finished the final quarter with a respectable 89 in the class.  I even came within a hair’s breadth of acing the final exam, missing only one question to achieve a very impressive 96.

I’d like to be able to tell you that this was a turning point, that I never again did the minimum necessary to fulfill a goal.  I’d even love to tell you that I always give one-hundred percent in everything I do.  I can’t tell you either of those.  Many times since that day I have waited for the last minute to finish a project, “phoning it in”, as the saying goes.  I have failed to remember the lesson of that hard year in Geometry on any number of occasions.  But, I can also say that over and over, I’ve thought of that year when faced with a task which I detest. On almost a daily basis, I see duties and responsibilities on which I would like to get a pass.  I have come to understand (even if not actually mastered) the need to achieve excellence all along the way.  I’m going to keep trying to make that one-hundred percent.  Mrs. Klinck couldn’t make me love Geometry, but she helped me to learn a valuable lesson which has stuck in my mind and heart for many years. 

Always do your best, even when it’s more than is required.  Whatever you do, do it with zeal.  We don’t work for ourselves, or even our favorite math teacher.  If we are followers of God, we owe Him our best efforts, even in the most menial of tasks.

“The difference between what we do and what we are capable of doing would suffice to solve most of the world’s problems.”
(Mahatma Ghandi)

Huge Profits and Their Hidden Costs

“That old cracked up uke?  Oh, give me a hundred dollars.”  The year was 1999 and I was in a pawn shop in one of the big cities I frequented at least once a month then. My intent was to buy used musical instruments which I could put a little work into and resell for a profit on eBay, the popular online auction website.  The ukulele was an afterthought, discovered hanging on the wall while I was waiting for the clerk to find the case to a nice professional trumpet, for which I had negotiated a fair price.  The old Martin uke was battered, with a crack in the back, and missing a couple of strings, but I thought that it should surely be worth the price and agreed to pay it.

Upon reaching home, I did as I always do, researching the instrument, finding to my gratification that it was a fairly rare, 80 year-old instrument, made of Hawaiian Koa wood.  Not being able to find an authoritative resale price, I started an auction with a reserve price much higher than I actually believed the battered instrument would bring.  To my surprise, the first bid reached the reserve price!  After that, my bewilderment increased each day of the seven day auction, as the bids mounted up, raising the price $1000 per day from the original $1800 bid.  My son’s friends watched the auction each day at school, incredulous that an old beat-up ukulele could actually bring such a price.  At the end of that seven days, the final auction price for this “oh, and I’ll take that too” purchase of mine, stood at an astounding $9000!  Nine thousand dollars!

I had spent a couple hundred dollars more, when it became obvious that the instrument was valuable, to have an appropriate hard case overnighted to me, and the auction site took a fair amount of the proceeds as a commission, so I actually had invested something between five and six hundred dollars in the deal, but I can safely say that this was the highest percentage profit I have ever made on a purchase, either before or after.  The congratulations were flying, from the high school boys, who were in awe of the whole process, to colleagues in the music business, who had also watched the auction with keen interest.  But I actually tell the story almost with shame, because I have never felt so distraught in making a sale.  It just felt wrong!  To this day, people who hear the story assure me that there was nothing to feel guilty about.

Their words remain unconvincing still.  I understand that the auction process allows folks who really desire something, to pay as much as they are willing to spend, regardless of the real value of the item.  The man who purchased the ukulele was beside himself with glee.  He was the new owner of the only Martin Style 3K Tenor ukulele known to be in existence then and it filled out his nearly complete Martin uke collection.  He was more than content.  But, I wasn’t.  It’s funny how events affect your subconscious choices.  Within a year, I had stopped making the monthly trips to big cities to scour the local pawn shops and junk stores.  I explained it to those who asked, that I had found the “Holy Grail” and could never top the experience, so the thrill was gone, but actually, over the intervening years, I have come to realize that the opposite is true.  I’m afraid that it could happen again.  You see, in that week that the auction was in process, I got a good look at the greed that was inside of me.  I actually found myself disappointed when the auction ended at $9000!  Why not $10,000 or $15,000?  There was real money to be made and I wanted more!  I had never known an experience like this and put simply, I was shamed by the desires it awoke in me.  And, I don’t want to experience those feelings again.

I sell items at a reasonable profit every day.  I don’t experience any guilt about that.  It is the system of economics which makes our culture thrive and rise above many others.  I have made a living in providing products which I believe are relevant to our culture and the fact that my business is successful attests to that relevancy.  I have recounted the story of my triumph/shame only to shine the light on how an event that most would view as a huge success, can actually be a huge disappointment to those who see if from a different perspective.

The experience of the Martin uke is just another gauge, a reference point, if you will, that shapes who I am and how I want to live my life.  There is nothing to praise in it, but much to be learned from it.  How I wish I had met the test better, but perhaps, if the opportunity ever arises again, I’ll pass with flying colors.  Where there’s life, there’s hope…

“…Monsters are real, and ghosts are real too.  They live inside us and sometimes, they win.”
(Stephen King)

I’m Dreaming of a….Whataburger?

It’s odd how a stray word or phrase will set my mind to wandering over ancient history.  A couple of friends made reference to Whataburger today and even though I’m avoiding beef like the plague (or should that be plaque?)lately, my taste buds are begging for a trip to Texas.  Oh, I know some of you from Arkansas think you know what I’m talking about because you’ve been to a burger joint in Russellville, which stole the name, but I’m talking about a chain of fast-food restaurants in Texas, famous for their A-frame buildings and their huge hamburgers.  In my mind, there isn’t a burger in the world that compares.

If I said I grew up on these wonderful meals on a bun, you might have an image of a modern day child, pigging out every other day at some fast-food joint.  Such was not the case with my growing up on Whataburgers.  My familiarity with these delectable all-beef patty, lettuce and tomato, dill pickles, not-a-smidge-of-mayonnaise-on-them sandwiches, requiring two hands on the buns at all times, was the worship-from-afar kind of acquaintance. 

I remember the day when eating out was a treat, something to be looked forward to and savored like the rare delight it was.  Families ate dinner at home, around the table.  Menus were planned for the week, groceries purchased at the H.E.B. store, and meals prepared in the kitchen.  We ate what was on our plates, even if it was liver and onions with a serving of mushy peas on the side (oh, if you could see the face I’m making as I write this!).  No wonder we dreamed of eating out!

For some reason, when I think of Whataburgers,  I remember most of all, Sunday afternoons.  I think this wasn’t so much because of the hamburgers (that seems such an inadequate word to describe this Manna from heaven), but because of the romance of the beautiful orange and white A-frame building (well, look at it!).  My family held church services at 2 different nursing homes on Sundays.  We were at one of them every week and at the second we had a service every other week.  The whole family went, piling into the old Ford station wagon and driving 10 or 12 miles to the next town over from where we lived.  We’d sing hymns, with one of us kids playing the old portable organ and Dad would preach.  After a 30 or 40 minute service, which could seem like hours to me, we’d head back across town to the next service, usually with a few extra minutes to spare.  Of course, there was a Whataburger positioned on the route, specifically placed there to torment us.  We would sit in the back seat, whispering, “Please stop, please stop”, hoping to hear the blinker come on and to have the amazing treat of Root Beer in those beautiful orange and white paper cups.  We usually just had the drinks, with the full meal being reserved for even more special occasions.  The funny thing is that both happened so seldom, I’m sure I remember it much more fondly now, than if it had been a weekly stop on the way.  Anticipation is an amazing tool in improving the actual experience.  And, boy, my Dad knew how to make the anticipation stage last a long time.  It was sometimes months between the much prayed for visits.

I always make it a point to eat at a Whataburger when I go back to Texas now.  It’s not the same…the A-frame buildings have been replaced with modern dine-in shops, retaining only the barest vestige of the original design motif.  When I step through the doors though, the aroma from the kitchen takes me back 40 years, and I’m a kid again.  The hamburgers seem much smaller and somehow, seeing breakfast tacos on the menu doesn’t help to bolster the mirage of childhood, but for just a split second, I’m back home.   And, it’s a good place to be.

Life speeds past.  What once was an uncomplicated existence, living in the moment and enjoying the simplest of pleasures, has become a jumble of events, interactions, and relationships.  But the simple pleasure is still there, waiting for moments of calm and a good memory or two to surface.  Right now, why not take a moment to remember, call an old friend, or take out the photo album and share a minute with your family?  You look good with a smile on your face!  And tomorrow will look better to you because of it.

“If more of us valued food and cheer and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world.”
(J.R.R. Tolkien)

Complaint Department

I’m doing my best not to use this forum to vent my frustrations, but there are some days when I come dangerously close to losing the self-control on which I pride myself.  This may be one of those days, so read on at your own risk.

Last night, I wrote a long diatribe about musicians who abuse their instruments and, upon re-reading it, decided not to unload like that on innocent bystanders.  So, that composition went in with the other drafts, material written, but waiting to be edited into a finished product suitable for consumption by casual readers who may or may not share my passion (or obsession, if you wish).  After that exhibition of restraint on my part, today I faced a day of pretty intense stress generated by customers, mostly not physically present, which stretched my patience nearly to the breaking point.  So if it seems that I’m complaining a bit in this little essay, it’s probably because I am. 

After a day jam-packed with other folks’ problems, I often find myself overwhelmed emotionally, unable to unwind or relax easily.  I really can’t explain it, but I guess I’m just a southern boy, needing to take life a little slower, calming down a bit between crises to keep on an even keel, but today, there was no possibility of that.  As I explained to a curious onlooker this afternoon, it was one of those occasions when it seemed that every person I helped “long distance” wanted a personal favor, with the expectation that I could accommodate every one of them.  “Can you ship this overnight for the same price as the standard shipping?“…”The Post Office lost my package.  Will you call them for me?”…”Can you play a demo over the phone for each of these six songs?  I’m not sure if they’re exactly what I want.“…”Can you stay on the phone a minute?  I have to go next door and get my credit card.“…and on and on, everyone wanting another piece of me.  On days like this, I often look at the Lovely Lady and ask, “Please tell me again…Why do I love my job?”

When a workday like this is over and the din subsides, I like to consider each of the interactions and determine whether my goal to serve each of them efficiently and with a servant’s heart was reached.  There was only one outburst on my part today  and it wasn’t directed at a customer (although it was caused by one).  I have apologized to the Lovely Lady and I think all is forgiven.  Overall, it was a successful day.  To my knowledge, each of the culprits, er…I mean customers, was satisfied with the outcome.  Tomorrow’s another day, and we’ll do it all over again.  When I consider the result, mostly I’m pleased.  Pleased, because my goals were generally reached and because I really do love what I do.

But it took one of my face-to-face interactions today to bolster my belief that I’m right where I need to be.  In between the two phone-lines’ jangling interruptions and the distressed email messages coming in and reassurances going out, a young lady walked in with an armful of guitar-shaped-objects.  I could see at a glance that the 3 instruments were all useless, unrepairable specimens.  But, as I talked with her, it was also obvious that she was in trouble financially.  As is so often the case, cash changed hands and the young lady was able to walk out with her pride intact and gas-money in her pocket, leaving me with the armful of GSOs to add to my growing collection.  Maybe it’s time for some house-cleaning…  

In the midst of a very stressful day, the Lord knew I needed a reminder to quit feeling sorry for myself.  I am incredibly blessed, with folks I can serve, work to do, and all of my physical needs provided for because of it.  So often I just need that kick-in-the-pants to have my focus shifted from my contrived problems to real issues that others face day in and day out. 

So, just ignore my complaints in the early parts of this note.  I’m doing okay!  The days really are filled with blessings and opportunities.  But, some day, I am going to unload on you about how I feel about people who abuse their musical instruments.  There’s just no excuse, what some unthinking….Yeah alright, another day…

“Do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit.  Rather, in humility value others above yourselves, not looking to your own interests, but each of you to the interests of others.”
(Philippians 2: 3,4)

Terror in the Dark

The Christmas parade has to be one of the best events in our little town.  People show up hours ahead of time to guarantee a spot on the route, the churches and businesses spend countless hours and not just a few dollars on the beautiful floats, and the candy flows like water from the parade participants to the children lining the street.  What’s not to like about a Christmas parade?

It was all wasted on the next to the youngest grandchild this year.  She was okay for the first set of police cars, who momentarily triggered their sirens as they passed, and the first few floats weren’t too bad, but after the third or fourth fire engine with sirens blaring came by, she had had enough.  “Me scared Christmas parade!”  were the words which accompanied the sobbing, so the beautiful girl came in to sit with Grandpa and watch the activities from the sofa in the living room, safe from the racket, the unfamiliar people, and the shadowy forms that moved in the dark, illuminated only by the flashing beacons on the emergency vehicles and the twinkle-lights on the floats.  Not that Grandpa was complaining, mind you.  I had elected to stay inside, the cold air having activated a minor episode of breathing problems earlier in the day.  So, her company was welcome, even if her conversation wasn’t completely intelligible to my untrained ears.

Knowing that she was missing out on the excitement and the distribution of candy and balloons, I suggested venturing back out a time or two, only to be met with the original plaint of “Me scared!” and the hint of approaching tears.  So we were content to sit and view the scene, waving to the costumed children and adults on the passing floats and commenting on the changing vista, from dancers, to tractors, to more fire engines.  I’ve watched the parade from the press of the crowd enough times to know that our perspective this time was tame and unexciting, but it was all the frightened little girl could manage tonight.  Her brothers and sister finally came in from the cold, bubbling and excited about what they had experienced, but this little one was happily naive, not interested in the joy she might have missed, but only in the fear averted.

We laugh at the unreasonable fear of a toddler, but I wonder what we are afraid of from our advanced and allegedly intelligent viewpoint.  We live our lives, many times paralyzed with fears which we can’t admit to ourselves, much less to each other.  The list of “phobias” is seemingly as endless as it is ridiculous, from chronomentrophobia (fear of clocks), to phalacrophobia (fear of becoming bald), to xenophobia (fear of strangers), with a host of other irrational fears in between.  Even those of us who don’t suffer from these fears, labeled as extreme, have things which we fear and keep to ourselves, things real or imagined which keep us from achieving our potential, which cause us to view life from the safety of the couch, never venturing into the street to experience life where it really happens.

I have spent the better part of my life terrified that people wouldn’t like me.  I don’t mean the manufactured me, the contrived man who usually stands in front of customers, or acquaintances, or congregations in church.  I mean that I’m afraid they won’t like the real me, the me I know myself to be, warts, scars, and all.  In part, writing is a way for me to open the curtain, little by little, on that person.  The fear that has kept me from doing that before is the same fear that the “Great and Powerful Oz” demonstrated in the Wizard story.  I’m afraid that you’ll realize that I’m a humbug, a fake, and will no longer respect me.  Look at the great phantasm, the contrivance, who inspires respect, awe, and an expectation of  predictable outcomes.  Pay no attention to the little, terrified flimflam man behind the curtain! 

My sister asked me the other day if I plan to reveal every embarrassing story about myself.  While the truth is that I won’t be disclosing all, I intend to keep telling the ones that, within the bounds of good taste, expose how I got to be who I am.  There are a number of my experiences which would implicate others who haven’t given permission for me to pull aside the curtain for them, so they’ll remain untold.  But, for all of us, the person we are becoming is shaped by our life experiences and our spiritual journey.  So, this is me, peeking through the picture window, giving you a glimpse of the real me and getting up my nerve to go out onto the street, into the noise and turmoil.  I fully expect that the process will take quite some time, but for now, it’s a start.

With the little girl, I’m still declaring with quivering lips, “Me scared!”  And like her, I have Someone with strong arms and a patient heart, who is ready to comfort and hold me until I’m able to face the dark, scary world.  He’s there for all of us.

“Not half the storms that threatened me 
     E’er broke upon my head,
Not half the pains I’ve waited for 
     E’er racked me on my bed.
Not half the clouds that drifted by 
     Have overshadowed me
Nor half the dangers ever came 
     I fancied I could see.”
(Anonymous [with thanks to my brother, Aaron for the reminder])

Limited Options

“Failure isn’t an option.”  I have to laugh every time I hear the statement.  It most certainly is!  Not a good option, mind you, but a very real option.  The fact that you choose to believe (or choose to claim to believe) the statement doesn’t change reality.  We always, always, have the option of failure looming right ahead of us.  It’s the fear of every successful person, the motivation behind every driven man, and the nightmare of every student who ever stood up in front of a class to give a presentation.  I can also tell you, and I know this by experience, a dose or two of failure is not always a bad thing.

Many years ago, the local university was doing a production of the musical “Brigadoon”.  I was asked to play the horn part in the pit orchestra, I thought , because I must be the best horn player around.  I now actually suspect it was because everyone else with more intelligence declined.  I was excited to be involved.  Who wouldn’t be?  Great music, sung by some very good vocal majors, as well as some great acting….Well, there was great music anyway!

We had rehearsed until even the musicians knew the spoken lines by rote, the singers were prepared, the instrumentalists practiced up, and then came opening night.  My first experience in a genuine pit, initially viewed as an adventure, became an ordeal not very high up on my list of favorites.  The acoustics might be favorable for the auditorium, but not so for the players themselves, to say nothing of the comparison noted with any number of fish products marketed in tin cans.  So you can’t hear what you need to hear, nor do you have any room for movement, and there’s always the potential for losing an extremity if the trombonist moves her slide from seventh position back to first too carelessly.  Even with these issues, I was doing fine until the beginning of one of the male lead’s solos.

What was supposed to occur was that the horn (that’s me!) would sound the C an octave above Middle C as a clear starting note, and the star would begin to sing “Almost Like Being In Love”.  What actually occurred was that the horn (that’s me!) sounded an E an octave and a third above Middle C, leaving the unhappy singer to start a few notes high and then make an abrupt correction when it became clear that he had been led down the primrose path.  In my defense, you should know that the harmonic qualities of the Kruspe wrap F/Bb Horn do not make it conducive to playing this particular C note right out of the blue, especially using the trigger/open combination for fingering.  The horn wants to play a different pitch…Well…okay.   It was nobody’s fault but my own.  You may well understand that there was one horn player who was wishing the pit had been dug just a bit deeper.  I would have loved to find a hole beneath a hole and hide in it.  At least the audience couldn’t see me, but I guarantee, the conductor could.  And he was looking!  Well, not exactly looking…Glaring might be a better description.

I didn’t hang around for any socializing afterward.  I really didn’t want to hear or participate in any of the conversation, either with other musicians or with the cast.  But, as I walked out of the practice room after putting away my horn, I couldn’t avoid hearing the male lead saying, “…horn player…mumble, mumble, mumble…needs to get a clue!”  Did he think I didn’t know it?  I was well aware of my shortcomings that night!

I would have gladly never entered that pit again, but this production was running for two more nights!  I thought maybe I could pretend to be sick and let them get someone else to finish up, but that’s just not my style.  So I went back and faced the music (pun intended).  I didn’t go back empty-handed though.  I “got a clue” in the form of a portable device which could have an earphone inserted and would allow me to hear the correct pitch before I attacked the beginning note on successive evenings.  Victory!  Being confident of my starting note, both nights went off without a hitch and by the end of the last performance, the lead male, whom I had feared would never speak to me again, was shaking my hand and talking about a fine performance.  Opening night was a vague memory, and we had overcome with two very good final presentations.

Failure is an option and sometimes a powerful motivator.  Confidence is important, but it is imperative that we know the possibilities and be prepared to face up to consequences.  If you fail (and you will), keep going.  You increase the likelihood of folks remembering your failures if you don’t go back and get it right (the way you knew you could) the next time.


“You may have a fresh start any moment you choose, for this thing we call “failure” is not the falling down, but the staying down.”
(Mary Pickford)


Forest…Or Trees?

Have you ever tried to see the hidden pictures in those “Magic Eye” 3-D books?  You know the ones I’m talking about…Those books filled with multi-colored pictures that have all sorts of repetitive designs covering the page.  You wouldn’t know that there was anything special about the pictures just to glance at them.  Actually, even to stare at them, sometimes, there is nothing special to see.  But, if you hold the book  and look at it in the correct way, the pattern disappears and shapes just seem to jump out at you, moving back and forth across the page as you move your head.  If doesn’t require special glasses;  It just requires that you know how to look, or more correctly, how not to look at the page properly.

I have spent long periods of time willing myself to see the images in some of these pictures, only to be stymied by my complete lack of ability.  Other times, I can look at the image, relax my vision and stare through it, only to have the 3-dimensional objects pop up instantly.  There seems to be no rhyme or reason to the procedure for me, just dumb luck, maybe especially that, in my case.  The Lovely Lady laughs at me and buys the contrivances of torture to lay out on the coffee table, knowing that sooner or later, she’ll find me staring into them, frustrated and shamed by this simple stunt which should be child’s play, but isn’t.

The old saw, “You can’t see the forest for the trees” actually doesn’t apply here.  If the point is to see the individual tree in a forest, you must focus on that tree.  In these “forests” of multi-colored patterns, you must let your vision relax, looking into the distance through the photo, and what you want to see at the fore-front just appears before your eyes.  Simple to say and know, difficult to achieve (for some of us).

Today, I was happy for the ability to see “through” a problem in a similar manner.  A customer came in this afternoon to have the strings changed on his guitar, a ten minute job at most.  He suggested an improved manner of wrapping the strings, since one had broken in an odd place, but as I loosened the remaining strings, I discovered a different part which was actually the culprit.  The plastic “bridge” at the top of the fingerboard, actually called the “nut”, was broken.  Easy to fix on a normal guitar…just remove the broken pieces and the old dried glue, select a new nut shaped at the factory and re-glue.  New strings installed and the customer would be off!  Unfortunately, this guitar is a custom built instrument, which the builder had endued with some odd features.  The unusual “zero-fret” required that the nut be lower than normal and the fact that the nut was about one-fourth of the normal thickness from front to back was completely baffling.  There was absolutely no product I could imagine which would work to replace the broken part.  I was buffaloed.  And, I was way overtime on the project!

What I wanted to do was hand the guitar back to the owner and tell him to take it back to the maker.  He wasn’t having that at all.  “You’re the master luthier,” he encouraged, a description which coincidentally, bears no resemblance to the truth.  I’ve never built a guitar in my life and have been dragged to the repairman’s bench kicking and screaming all the way.  But his statement made me think.  Knowing that I wasn’t actually the one responsible for this mess, I quit concentrating on the problem part and the necessity for me to get it repaired right now.  I stood with my eyes staring unseeingly at the guitar, thinking about the fool who had designed the guitar.  As I contemplated, I considered the notion that no one fabricates what can be purchased cheaply, and all of the sudden, my eyes narrowed and I saw…a modified, factory-cut bridge saddle (albeit, shortened and slotted), where a moment ago I was seeing the oddly designed (now broken) nut.  This fool wasn’t a fool at all (well except for a design flaw or two)!  He used the parts he had at hand.  True, it had been filed a little here, and cut a little there, but it was from a readily available and cheaper part than the professionally-made nut.  And in my own shop, a few moments later, having cut down and slotted one of my bridge saddles, I was installing the new strings and tuning up the instrument, much to the delight of both the owner and myself.  The Lord knows that I really didn’t need another repair project to add to the growing stack, which, as my sister descriptively quotes, “Heavy, heavy, hangs over my head.”  Therefore, I was absolutely delighted to complete the job and move on the the next item in my dizzying itinerary for the afternoon.

Why is it that we sometimes have to look past our problems to see them clearly?  Like the three dimensional photos, the harder we try to find it, the more elusive the solution becomes.  Why do the issues seem so intimidating when we concentrate on them, but are easily solved when we relax and quit worrying?  Maybe it’s because the real problem is in having the wrong focus.  Maybe by looking through, past the dilemma, we actually see the Maker, the Master Designer and so, see the simplicity of the design.  And, I’m fairly certain that this Builder is no fool, and as one kid said, “He don’t make no junk!”

“In every life we have some trouble,
When you worry, you make it double,
Don’t worry, be happy…”
(Bobby McFerrin, American songwriter, singer)
[thanks for the reminder, Becky!]