Monday, December 23, 2013

The Bench (Christmas Story 2013)


Behold a small Midwestern town on the way to nowhere.  The name of the town isn’t important.  There’s a set of train tracks on its edge that no railroad uses.  There’s one empty highway which also serves as the Main Street.  If you were to fly over our town in an airplane, you wouldn’t bother to look down.  None of this really matters because this story is not about a town.

            There’s a population of hard-working people in this town who all work together to keep the town going.  Everyone’s occupation serves more as than just the capacity of employment.  For instance, if my refrigerator stops working, the appliance store manager will come directly to house that evening so that my food does not spoil.  This he does, of course, without charge.  That’s just how our town works, each citizen serving each other. 

            Behold a small general store in this small town.  A narrow shop on the main drag, it has old west taste and charm as if it were from the old cow town days.  There’s a timeworn, squeaky wooden floor with an old soda fountain machine behind a bar back by the pharmacy.  There used to be wagon wheels, lassos, and ropes decorating the walls with pictorial representations of cattle drives, but they have been removed in favor of flat screen TVs with videos of good looking men and women showing off the latest fashions.  There’s also a rumor that the soda machine will soon be removed for more floor space.  For the purpose of this story, the store’s history does matter.

I’m seventy-eight years old and I got canned this morning from the only job I’ve ever had.  You see, I never really learned a trade that would make me marketable, or even needed.  My job throughout the years has been menial, but important, and I’ve learned enough over the ages to consider myself wise, despite what happened this morning, but I’ll get to that later.  

As for the aforementioned mercantile, I started working there as a small boy after school for Mr. Harbeson way back in 1945 when I was ten.  My first job was to sweep floors and climb ladders to the top shelf to take down merchandise for the customers.  It was a nice way to make a nickel, and the boss was a wonderful man, full of what you might call The Christmas Spirit.  What I mean is that he paid less attention to his bottom line than he did to the pulse of his customers.  Just like the refrigerator repair man, or the telephone repair man, or the leading local expert on plumbing, Mr. Harbeson felt his job was to lend a helping hand to the communtiy.  When customers couldn’t afford necessities, he let them charge it and pay it off as they could.  In helping keep his books, I knew that some families would never pay him back, and he was okay with that. 

Mr. Harbeson was a mentor to me.  On warm days when the store’s traffic was light, he would call me back to that soda machine and fill two mugs with root beer.  We would then take the mugs out to the front of the store where he had built a park bench with his own two hands.  There we would sit with the sun on our faces and talk about anything of interest, including baseball, and later, girls.

            When I graduated high school, Mr. Harbeson offered me fulltime employment, and seeing as the war was well over and America was booming, it seemed like the smart thing to do.  My duties were much the same until in 1965 when Mr. Harbeson suddenly died and left the store to his son, my younger by ten years. 

I was immediately given the unofficial title of manager which came with it the perks of being the wisest person there, with no more salary benefits.  Since I knew all the ins and outs of the store, I was able to teach Mr. Harbeson’s son how to run the shop, as well as sharing with him his father’s philanthropic wisdom.  It wasn’t easy for him, so young, and having to drop out of college to learn his father’s business, but my help so endeared me to my mentor’s son that I was always consulted in the business affairs of the shop, as well as acting as an uncle to his only kid.  That is up until last year when he too passed away.

This brings me to the shop’s present owner, a boy fresh out of college who insists that I call him Mr. Harbeson even though I’m his elder by some fifty plus years and helped to raise him.  I suppose that didn’t go over very well with an old curmudgeon like me.  You see, when he took over, I ceased to know anything of any importance.  All that the store had stood for has been replaced with fancy new ideas about cataloging and inventory, marketing and promoting, and if you can’t work a computer, you have no knowledge or place in this shop.  This is why he saw to it that I should come in and pick up my final paycheck today, the morning of Christmas Eve.

But sad as this story seems, it isn’t actually about me.  It’s about what I saw outside of the store this morning.

Late December in the Midwest brings with it harsh north winds and snow that comes in from the side.  The temperature hovers around the freezing mark in the afternoon and plummets well below at night.  This morning was not any different.  The unforgiving snow pelted my old face.  Though I had my overcoat, I was frozen to the bone.  I also admit that I was in a sour mood, knowing that a lifetime of dedication would be settled in a matter of minutes, ingloriously.

Forcing one foot in front of the other, I trudged through the snowdrifts on the unshoveled sidewalk.  Before I got to the front door, I saw something.  On Mr. Harbeson’s handmade bench at the door sat a young mother, clad in thin wraps, her baby tightly wrapped up and huddled next to her mother’s breast.  In a small town where everybody knew everyone, my old eyes did not recognize her. 

As I approached, forgetting my own troubles, she looked up pleadingly at me, snowflakes burning her eyes.  They burned my eyes as well.  Embarrassed, self-consumed, and slightly ashamed, I turned my gaze from her shivering figure and entered the store to face the music, wondering why she wasn’t indoors.

Though I had walked through that door a million times in my lifetime, everything seemed different.  The lighting, the tone, the mood, even the floor which was freshly waxed.  In fact, that bench outside that Mr. Harbeson and I sat on to talk about life, and which the mother was now sitting on in the blinding snow was the only thing that seemed original.

I walked through the store, back to the office to pick up my paycheck, the third owner sitting at his big, fancy oak desk and donning a suit and tie, his shiny, black wingtips poking out from under the massive pile of wood.  He was consumed with one of two laptops on his desk and didn’t even acknowledge my presence.  Apparently sensing my presence, he reached into the left-hand desk drawer and pulled out an envelope with my name on it.  Never taking his eyes off his computer, he held up the envelope for me to take.  When I did, he said, “Nice knowing you, old timer.”

Old age can bring with it an acidic tongue, especially when dealing with arrogant youth.  Though I had spent the evening before memorizing a monologue that would put him in his place, I held my tongue.  I just couldn’t get the image out of my head of a young woman with her baby, stuck in the blowing snow.  It was a thought that I had to do something about.

Before I left the store for the last time, I stopped at the glass door and peered out at the bleak scene, half-wondering if the woman and her baby were still there.  Sure enough, there she sat on that same bench, an inch of snow collecting on her shivering form. 

As my heart broke, I was interrupted at that very moment by a large family who had just checked out.  In a town where everybody knew everyone, this family was the poorest.  Every time the church had taken up an offering for the poor, this family of seven kids were always the ones on the other end of the collection.  It was a family of share crop farmers that Mr. Harbeson, my second boss, had helped out many times.  His father, my original boss, had helped out their parents.  I also knew that the new owner had called their debt a few months ago, asking me to deliver the news, and they were forced to come up with the money within thirty days.  Miraculously they had.

As they filed past me, I saw that each child held a sack of groceries in his or her hand.  The mother held a box of diapers.  Having worked there forever, it was more than I had ever seen them buy. 

The door opened and a rush of cold air punched me in the face until the door closed.  The young mother rose from her seat on the bench, snow cascading off her frail form.  What conversation took place between her and the family I can only guess at.  I suppose that doesn’t matter, because the family presented the groceries to the young woman and they ushered her away from the storefront. 

I stepped out into the cold air and watched them trudge through the snow towards the family’s house a few blocks away.

And here I have lamely related to you a moment in time that no one will remember as important, a moment that occurs in any given town on any given day, Christmas Eve or not.  Whether charity is given or purse strings are closed, it exists.  It always will.  So as I stood in the cold with my severance check in my clutch, I sat down on that old trusty bench.  I thought about the wisdom Mr. Harbeson had shared with me.  The charity he had given had been passed forward by the most unlikely of people, and from my vantage point with my old eyes, I was able to behold his spirit once more.  After that, the snow didn’t sting so much.

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

It's a Wonderful Life, What Happens after the Credits Roll














The angel Clarence helps George Bailey see the error of his thoughts and George decides his life is worth living.   He runs home to a wife and family who all hug him while the town collectively gives him the $8,000 deficit and more.  Everyone sings Auld Lang Syne and the credits roll. This is the classical Hollywood ending, but have you ever wondered what happened right afterwards?

GEORGE: "Uh, so that's a lot of cash," (then aside to his wife,) "So, we have a packed house, huh?"

MARY: (aside to George) "Yeah, I tried to get the money from them at their houses, but they insisted on coming over here. Just keep smiling."

GEORGE: "Uh, so it's been a long day.  (stammers) I'm kind of tired.  Thanks for coming over everybody."

CROWD: (silenced unbelief)

MARY: (aside to George) "Well, that was blunt."

GEORGE: (aside to Mary) "If we were cordial, they would just stick around all night.  Look at Martini.  He's bringing out the wine."

MARY: (aside to George) "Because I told him to."  (then to the stunned crowd) "Well, Merry Christmas."

MA BAILEY's MAID: "Give me my money back!"

UNCLE BILLY: (with bottle of wine in hand) "C'mon everybody.  Let's all go spit in Potter's eye."

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

George Bailey's Breakdown: an Empathizer's Perspective

Every year at Christmas I watch It's a Wonderful Life.  When I get to the part where George has his meltdown in front of his family after his uncle loses $8,000, I feel for the poor sap from the perspective of someone who also feels way too much pressure from too many places far too often.  George has a world of pressure on his shoulders, and the breakdown was long overdue.  Let's look at it more closely.

First, George wanted to see the world.  Night after night he would end up at the public library, reading about all the cool places he could visit, but God would have other plans for him to stick around Bedford Falls, the reasons to be illuminated in the next paragraph.

Second, George wanted his profession to be extraordinary.  His father Peter Baily was a saint for helping the town's citizens realize their dreams to become home owners instead of paying rent to Mr. Potter, the richest citizen in town and a man who has no soul.  When Peter dies, George's dreams of seeing the world and going to college go with it.  He does have the choice to leave, but if he did, the board of directors would close down the Bailey Building and Loan.  George has to save the day at the expense of his dreams.

Third, he made very little money.  On top of this, he is pressured to take a job for more money with Potter, in exchange for bulldozing the Building and Loan.  So in essence, he has to choose between his personal wealth and the health of the community, remembering his father's goals.  Potter may be referred to as the most important man in town because he is the richest, but I contend that since the whole town relies on George Bailey, this title should be conferred to him.  It begs the question: could I choose between the health of my family and the health of a town?  Nice parallel to the decision God had to make with Jesus by the way.

Fourth, he hates his house.  The night of his wedding day, after he gave out all his money to keep the town's citizens afloat until the bank reopens, he is called by his wife to come home.  He soon finds that she has selected the Old Granville House, the very house he says earlier on in that a ghost wouldn't want to live.  He will spend his time and money fixing up the "old drafty house." 

Fifth, his friends are all "successful."  Sam Wainright makes a fortune in plastics and his wife wears furs and they have a nice car, take vacations to exotic places, etc...essentially the life George could have had.  Sam even kids George about missing his opportunity.  That has to burn.

Finally, when Uncle Billy loses the $8,000 dollars on Christmas Eve, George finally implodes.  He goes home to his drafty, old house to a litter of kids, one of whom is sick.  Considering all my prior points, it's no surprise he bawls out his daughter's teacher, yells at his other kids, kicks stuff, gets rejected by Potter for a loan, is told the police are going to arrest him, ends up at the bar drunk, gets punched in the face by his daughter's teacher's husband, drives his car into a tree, grabs his life insurance policy, and heads for a bridge to jump. 

What does surprises me is that nobody saw it coming.