I announced to four
strangers that I am the world’s greatest lion tamer. Then I added that I
only use humane training methods with my lions.
I was taking a one-night
class called How To Get What You Wish For.
The presenter, Barbara Sher, had broken us up into 5-person groups and asked us
to tell a big lie about ourselves to the people in our group.
Barbara Sher based the
class on her book Wishcraft.
I realized that my big lie
about lion taming presented me in a good light. I thought about the way
my little lies present me in a good light: I tell people I am a little bit
taller than I actually am and a few pounds lighter than I actually weigh.
The same way my exaggerations present me in a good light: I tell people
that I graduated from Wat Po Medical School in Thailand, when what I really did
was complete a two-week course there.
After everyone in the
class had finished telling their big lies, Barbara Sher asked: “How well do you
know the people in your group?” The majority responded “Very well”.
Barbara responded:
“And all they did was lie to you.”
Lie-telling was an
ice-breaker to warm up the class for the focal point of the class: how to get
what you wish for.
How do you get what you
wish for? Just talk to some people and tell them what you wish for and
then describe an obstacle that is in your way. The typical American, when
they hear someone’s obstacles, will instinctively start making suggestions on
how to overcome them.
I know that this is true.
I was at a festival in
Pilot Knob, Missouri, site of a Civil War Battle – a Union
victory which kept St. Louis from falling into Confederate hands.
At the festival, someone
said she would give me a tour of her church a few blocks away. The hook:
the church served as a hospital during the battle and had the bloodstains to
prove it.
During the tour of
Immanuel Lutheran Church, which was built by Germans, I was told that the congregation
numbered less than 20. Because of their
small size, the congregation wished they had the money for the upkeep of the church.
An obstacle! My
American mind sprang into action and I started making suggestions:
The church really did have
blood stains where Civil War soldiers had died; so charge money for ghostly
flashlight tours of the church after dark.
The church had an antique
organ; charge money for concerts.
There was a church hall
next door: play up the German heritage by painting a German saying on the front
of the hall: “Froh beim Bier das lieben wir”, and put on money-making sausage-and-sauerkraut
suppers.
Brilliant suggestions
tumbled out of me; suggestions on how to get what the congregation wished for.
However, I never did
follow up to see if Immanuel Lutheran Church started giving flashlight tours or
antique organ concerts.
I do not know if
they painted a German saying on their church hall. If they did, it
probably wasn’t the saying I suggested, because “Froh beim Bier, das lieben wir”
translates into English as “Happy with the beer that we love so dear.”
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A one-minute YouTube video: an overview of the Battle of Pilot Knob, also known as the Battle of Fort Davidson:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XmUk4loHvCw
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
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