Puppy Out Of Breath

Puppy Out Of Breath
Doug's stories are now in a book: www.puppyoutofbreath.com

Saturday, December 31, 2011

Enticed At The US Embassy Garden Party


The photo above shows a traffic jam in Lagos, Nigeria, one of the most chaotic cities in the world.  So chaotic that the Nigerian federal government abandoned Lagos and moved 450 miles away.

When I visited Lagos for Christmas in 1972 it was still the federal capital.  A friend of mine who worked at the US Embassy got me invited to a garden party at US Ambassador’s home.  The party was not a diplomatic affair; it was a Christmas gathering for the Embassy staff.

When I arrived at the party, I started mingling with the other guests.

I was in a group of five standing by the swimming pool, when the Ambassador’s wife came up to us and started talking.  She talked about the Kennedys.  She got a wistful look in her eye as she mentioned that whenever the Kennedys had garden parties, fully-clothed people would get pushed into the Kennedys’ pool.

I looked around.  All of her party guests were fully-clothed.  Five of her guests were standing by the pool.  Was she hoping to achieve some glamour by mimicking the Kennedys?  Did she think that the success of her party would be measured by the number of guests that got drenched in the pool?  Was she inciting us?

A little later, I was by myself when the Ambassador’s wife came up to me and started talking.  She repeated her wistful-eyed spiel about fully-clothed people getting thrown into the Kennedys’ pool.  I realized that I was the only non-Embassy employee at the party.  I was the only person who would not jeopardize his job by throwing someone in the Ambassador’s swimming pool.

Did she want to be thrown in?  Was she inciting me?

I wavered between granting her wish and behaving decorously.

Decorum won out.  The Ambassador’s wife stayed dry.  Everyone stayed dry.

But the Ambassador’s wife may not have been looking for glamour.  She may have been looking for levity.  She knew that the newest Embassy official and his wife would soon arrive at the garden party.

The new official had recently finished his training at the Foreign Service Institute, apparently an honor graduate with a promising career ahead of him.  His first assignment: Lagos, Nigeria.  He and his wife had just flown from Washington DC to Lagos a few days before the garden party.  

An Embassy van met them at the airport and drove them to their new home.  On this short drive through the streets of Lagos, the new official’s wife flipped out.  The chaos was too much for her.

The new official and his heavily-sedated wife arrived at the party.  The tone of the party turned somber.

People stared at the woman who could not bear the chaos of Lagos, a chaos everyone else had adapted to.  People stared at the man who, because of his wife, could no longer look forward to a promising foreign service career.  We all felt sorry for the unfortunate couple.

Maybe we should have pushed people into the swimming pool.  We would be standing around in our wet clothing, joking about being drenched.  

The Ambassador’s wife knew that would have been a lot nicer party than a group of people in dry clothing staring somberly at an unfortunate couple.

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NOTE: Doug's best stories have been collected into a book: Puppy Out Of Breath.  Price = $11.  You can purchase a copy at  http://www.puppyoutofbreath.com




Saturday, December 17, 2011

Last Reindeer Sitting

Our company Christmas party attracts about 800 people each year: employees and their families. The company asked me to run one of the events at the party: musical chairs.

Musical chairs sounded delightful, innocent, so much like the grand days when I was a kid and got invited to birthday parties.

It also sounded simple: all I needed was some chairs and something that plays music.  A co-worker recorded Christmas music for me: standards like Santa Claus Is Coming to Town and new stuff like Leroy the Redneck Reindeer.

Party time came, and I set out 8 chairs and corralled 9 people at a time.  9 people because Santa has 8 reindeer plus Rudolf. 

Each participant in my game had to wear antlers.  The participants ranged in age from toddlers to adults.  Some adult men did not want to make fools of themselves in public. Some adult women thought the antlers would ruin their hair.  Some toddlers had no concept of what they were supposed to do.  Some kids refused to play.  Some kids refused to stop playing.

The adults who did play were good sports, managing to miss a chair in the first couple of rounds so that just the kids could continue playing.

I spiced it up, making people walk forward, or walk backward, or hop on one foot.   At the final round, with 1 chair and 2 people left, the participants had to take off their antlers and put Christmas shopping bags over their heads.

Every participant got a prize: a cheap kaleidoscope. The Last Reindeer Sitting got a prize plus a paper tag with the number one on it, to hang around their neck on a blue ribbon.

I counted on seeing lots of smiles. I had not counted on seeing lots of tears.

As the party progressed, I started to realize that each round started with 9 participants and finished with 1 winner and 8 losers.  That’s where the tears came from.
Then a lady in a mink coat and pearls entered the room, put on some antlers, and said she wanted to play.  OK, I got 8 other participants, and started up a game.  I waited for the lady in the mink coat to miss a chair on round two or round three…but she kept on playing, playing with intensity.  She wound up in the final round with a shopping bag over her head, competing against a 9-year-old boy.

When the music stopped for the final round, the lady in the mink coat knocked the 9-year-old to the floor, and sat down on the chair.  As the Last Reindeer Sitting, she was awarded a cheap kaleidoscope and a paper number-one tag on a blue ribbon, which joined the pearls around her neck.
I sighed.  I saw how cruel musical chairs can be.  Mentally cruel because it created so many losers --- physically cruel because players got knocked to the ground by an adult who was much richer than they would ever be.

That was the last time we played Last Reindeer Sitting at the company Christmas party.

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NOTE: Doug's best stories have been collected into a book: Puppy Out Of Breath.  Price = $11.  You can purchase a copy at  http://www.puppyoutofbreath.com


Saturday, December 10, 2011

The Color Of Death


As a teacher in Nigeria, the tools of my trade were chalk and red ball-point pens.

The red ball-points were for grading papers. One day, I sat down to write a letter to someone in another part of Nigeria.  There were no blue ball-point pens nearby, so I used a red ball-point pen. I mailed the letter, and got a response back.

“Please do not write letters in red.  Red is the color of death.”

I had never thought about the color of death.   As an American, I probably would have chosen black as the color of death. 

After getting a scolding about colors, I made a point of carrying both a red pen and a blue pen in my pocket.  Red in case I needed to grade a student homework assignment; blue in case I needed to write anything else.

Nigeria underwent a Civil War from 1967 to 1970.  Before 1967, there were basically no guns in Nigeria and it was a peaceful place.  The Civil War changed that.

After the War there were a lot of weapons floating around.  Suddenly, Nigeria had to face an unheard-of crime: armed robbery with guns.  The Nigerian public was scared and outraged.  Laws were passed: if you committed a crime with a gun, you were to be executed.  The country was so outraged that they decided to bring back public executions.

One day, I was in the Principal’s office, when he said: “Mr. Schneider, here is a wasifa.”

The word wasifa does not translate handily into English.  Wasifa means “misfortune”, wasifa means “this is what we are up against”, wasifa means “this is our suffering.”

He handed me an envelope.  Inside was an invitation to a public execution.  My Principal was clearly upset.

I could not tell if he was upset about guns, or upset about armed robbery, or upset about public executions, or upset about being considered important enough to sit in the VIP section to view an execution.

I looked at the invitation; it was printed on nice paper with nice script.  Nigeria was not used to inviting people to executions.  It was clear that the government had used a printing company that printed wedding invitations.

This, however, was not an engraved invitation to witness someone’s wedding.  It was an engraved invitation to witness someone’s death.  

It was printed in red.


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NOTE: Doug's best stories have been collected into a book: Puppy Out Of Breath.  Price = $11.  You can purchase a copy at  http://www.puppyoutofbreath.com

Saturday, December 3, 2011

Thicker Than Thick


The students in my math classes in Nigeria varied widely in ability.  I had students who were intelligent, and I had students who were slow learners.

Nigerians use the word “thick” to describe a slow learner.  I would do my best to bring the slow learners up to speed.  If someone gave an incorrect answer in my class, I would patiently steer him to the correct answer. The intelligent students listened patiently while I worked with the slow learners.

Then a new freshman class arrived. In this class were brilliant students, and slow learners, and a student named Hamidu.

I detected that something was amiss. The class seemed eager to have me call on Hamidu. Whenever I called on him, the class would not be patient, they would laugh.  Hamidu did not give correct answers, he did not give incorrect answers --- he gave incoherent answers.  The whole class was amused.

There was no way to patiently lead Hamidu to the correct answer. He was thicker than thick.

Clearly Hamidu was unsuitable for our school, and was going to drag down the learning experience for the other students.  This was a five-year school where the state government gave each student a full scholarship, which included room and board.

I mentioned to a history teacher that I was puzzled how Hamidu ever got admitted to our school. The history teacher said he was puzzled.  An Arabic teacher said the same.

I started to investigate.  Our school holds its own entrance examinations.  So, I went to the school vault, and pulled out all the entrance exams for this batch of incoming freshman. I thumbed through and found Hamidu’s examination paper.

I noticed immediately that the pen used for scoring his exam was different from the pens used to score the other exams.  I noticed that his paper got the highest score of all the exams --- significantly higher

I smelled a rat.  Then I found out that Hamidu was the nephew of the school clerk. There had been some funny business, and it did not take much to figure out that Hamidu’s uncle was involved.

I was now in a quandary.  On one hand, I needed to get Hamidu dismissed from the school.  On the other hand, I could not announce that there had been funny business. This would mean I was publically accusing the school clerk of collusion.  I needed to be on the school clerk’s good side; I depended on him for a lot of things.

How could I get Hamidu kicked out of school, while making sure the school clerk saved face?

I had a brilliant idea. I went to the Principal and announced that we should re-test the entire incoming freshman class. It was a lot of work, but there would be no public accusation.

My plan worked.  Hamidu failed the re-take miserably, and he was sent on his way.

My math class went back to its typical mixture of intelligent or slow. The answers in class were back to being correct or incorrect.

But I think all the students in the freshman class missed Hamidu.  They missed being amused and getting to laugh at incoherent answers.


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NOTE: Doug's best stories have been collected into a book: Puppy Out Of Breath.  Price = $11.  You can purchase a copy at  http://www.puppyoutofbreath.com