Are there any techno-geeks in your life? There are in mine. My oldest son is what you might call a computer geek. It's
OK, he doesn't mind the term. He recognizes that it somehow suggests the staggering genius bubbling just under his calm exterior and references to his genius are always acceptable. My brother is a computer geek too. I don't know if he is bothered by the term, but anyone who puts his age on his yearly birthday cake in binary code should be used to hearing it by now. It is important to note here that both my son and my brother are soft-spoken, friendly and approachable people. Neither of them have a tendency to be harsh with even the very deserving, and I suspect that my son is secretly giddy when someone points to their computer and says, "Can you tell me how......?" (again - evidence of his intellectual superiority) The calm, gentlemanly manner of these two men left me totally unprepared for the man I met today. While I do believe I will change his name - he is not innocent and therefore, for the purposes of this blog, I will call him "Mr. Rude."
I met Mr. Rude in my son's school today. My son had been assigned to bring a collection of "favorites" for a kind of getting to know you show and tell. To my utter
surprise and delight he announced that, not the computer, but his baby brother was his ultimate favorite thing. He then asked if I could bring his brother to school shortly before the appointed hour of "show and tell". His desire was to hide us out of site and then spring his unabashedly cute younger brother upon his classmates and his teacher. How could I resist? In my joy at hearing that anything in life trumped the computer, I would have dragged an aging elephant into the school, had my son asked for it. We arrived at school at the appointed hour and my eldest son ushered us down a few halls, explaining that he had the perfect place, near class, to hide us. He then led us swiftly to the "bat cave" of the district computer geeks.
This was an impressive room. Half of the walls were lined with various dinosaurs of the computer age. Some of them were actually running, others were obviously not, and some were only present as a collection of pieces and parts. It was like a museum exhibit, the line broken only by one very old microwave oven - proving, I suppose that a true computer "super hero" cares little for the quality of his food as long as he can eat without wandering far from the "nest". The counter along one wall held a line of newer computers and seemed to be more of a real work area. It was here that I met a delightful young man who shall remain nameless. This nameless soul, greeted me warmly, discovered my purpose in the bat cave and graciously allowed me to wait for the return of my son. As I stood in the corner nearest the door I took in the rest of the room. It consisted of a few roughly put together cubicles semi-covered in comic strips and family pictures. A tiny
Buddha graced one cubicle wall and as I looked at it and considered the gentleman who had just introduced himself, I also took note of the giant server system filling a considerable area of floor to ceiling space. It seemed to me that this particular bat cave was reserved for the use of a few valiant individuals who safeguarded the district computer system like a small group of shepherds. Watchful and calm , gentle souls keeping a look-out over the flock. (a strange looking and strung out flock, but a flock nonetheless.) Then something went wrong.
Time has this habit of passing. And suddenly it seemed to be passing quite a lot. For my part, I didn't mind the wait. For the toddler in my arms, this was a different story. Not wanting to deliver a seriously crabby boy to his older brother, I cashed in on my only option and put said little brother on the floor. I assigned his sister, who had come along, to watch him closely and let him touch nothing while I watched them both from the doorway, and kept watch for the return of my son, whom the school seemed to have swallowed. Brother and sister behaved beautifully. I mean really beautifully. The only thing little brother even attempted to touch was the large "open " button at the base of the microwave, which he couldn't begin to push hard enough to actually open the microwave. As the pair moved behind the server I moved to maintain a view of both the children and the open doorway. Little brother was tickled at the sight of a phone and pointed and talked about it excitedly, but when big sister reminded him not to touch, he didn't even try. So awesome. Then something went wrong - again.
I had failed to notice a small, moustached man on the phone in one of the cubicles. I had also failed to consider that outsiders were never meant to be in the bat cave. What I did notice was what appeared to be a wiry and somewhat angry little walrus
peering at me over the top of his
iceberg of a cubicle. Apparently, and according to his word, the toddler whom I thought to be behaving admirably, was actually and inevitably about to pull that one magic cord that would send the entire district computer system crashing to the ground. I must have appeared far too ignorant to realize this, because this puffed up little man felt the need to explain it to me in very small words - repeatedly and with steam beginning to leak from his ears. I think he may have been hoping for a response, some little signal that my puny brain perceived his greatness. He
didn't get one. It wasn't as though I had been rendered speechless. My mind was far from blank. In fact, it was near overflowing with words, though none of them seemed to be actually appropriate for use around children. I desperately wanted to ask Mr.Rude and his moustache why it is that women with children in tow, and particularly those who are full-time mothers are always supposed to be unintelligent. Did he really suppose that I was too dumb to recognize what was in front of my face and react with all the due caution required?
I wanted re-educate this man at high volume, but all I could muster in the face of my own anger was a terse, "fine- no problem." I then sent big sister out to a distant hall to play with her little brother, while I hovered in the doorway, fuming and waiting much less patiently for my son to arrive and take us all to friendlier locals.
Fortunately, we did re-unite with my son and his little brother was a huge hit in the classroom. It
buoyed my spirits considerably and I found myself contemplating recent events as I trekked back out to my car. I had arrived at the school that afternoon full of good will and good feelings. I had spent the morning studying the life and work of Stephen Hawking and had viewed part of an online Q&A with a group of college students. Stephen Hawking, wheelchair-bound and speaking by means of a computer, had explained to them that a person can't afford to be disabled in spirit as well as in body. I also recalled the words of Anne Shirley, a
fictional character who described herself as being considerably rumpled in spirit. I found myself thinking that I had allowed this fuzzy-faced, rude individual to rumple my spirit considerably and, honestly, he was not worth all that to-do. He had not been able to blot out the sunshine moments that followed our brief encounter and I certainly was not about to allow burning resentment to disable my spirit and handicap the rest of the day. Perhaps Mr. Rude is not all bad. I had intruded upon his sacred ground, after all, and was ready to concede some small fault. I was also ready to let go of what remained of my anger and move on to better things. After I blogged it all out of course. But, as the proud mother of one of the bat caves finest, what else could you expect me to do?