Last night, I went
to a special dinner with the Koreans.* David (second youngest and most
energetic of the boys) rode with me, while the others drove in the van.
“In America,”
David said, “what age can you get a driving license?”
“Sixteen,” I
replied.
“In Korea, any age
can get a foot massage license.”
“Wow,” I said.
“Even
five-year-old,” he added. “But tiny hands, so maybe not.”
I have been
tutoring Korean students for a year and a half now, and I am still caught off
guard by these strange and precious moments.
I suspect that I am
not the only teacher who is on the lookout for “moments.” Hollywood has trained
me to expect sudden breakthroughs of insight or connection, in which the
student suddenly blooms. The
gangbanger teeny opens up about his abusive father. The school outcast
stands on her desk and bursts into song. These are the moments a
teacher/mentor has been taught to expect.
I’ll admit, I’ve
tried to force one a few times. Early this year, while helping Daniel with his
homework, I came across a question that asked, “What would you like your
friends to remember you for?”
Daniel had written,
“Math.”
“I think it’s
asking for something a little different,” I said, seeing an opportunity to get
down to the nitty gritty (yes, I am using my Nacho Libre voice here).
I explained, “Like,
maybe I would want my friends to remember me for being a nice guy. Or caring
about them. You know what I mean? Is there anything that you would think, ‘I
hope my friends will remember me for that?’”
He lit up as if struck
by sudden inspiration and said one word: “Scientist.”
It’s real-life
epiphanies like this that make you realize life isn’t as dramatic as the
movies. The “moments” we stumble upon are mostly ordinary, accented with comedy.
But then again,
some moments are awesome.
Some moments, you
take two Koreans to your sister’s orchestra concert.
Daniel is
enthralled by the orchestra, and Paul has brought a camera to document the
concert. Taki, who is the boys’ guardian while the house parents are out of
town, is enamored. Throughout the concert, Daniel whispers to me twice, once to
ask me if this is a Christian school (no), and second to ask if I know that he
will turn 13 in February (didn’t know that either).
When the concert
is over, I introduce the boys to my grandma.
“This is Paul, and
this is Daniel.”
“Daniel,” my
grandma says, and she stares into the distance. “That’s what we were
going to name…”
My mom gives her a
warning look, and she trails off. I’m left standing on the brink of a mystery—that’s what you were going to name WHO?—and
Daniel is left stranded on half an introduction. On my list of the awkward ways
Grandma has introduced herself to my friends, this claims second. (Number one
was when she introduced herself to some college friends by wiggling her fingers
toward their feet and saying “Ticky, ticky.”)
Later, my mom
introduces Daniel and Paul to a Korean girl from the orchestra who is friends
with my sister. While Paul and Ju Yung converse in Korean, I overhear my
grandma asking Daniel, “Is ‘Konichiwa’ Japanese?”
Daniel says yes,
and then goes to inspect the snack table.
A friend touches
Ju Yung’s arm and says hi, and Taki takes advantage of the opportunity to lean close
to Paul, cup her hand next to his ear, and ask, “Is she a Christian?”
“Of course!” he
whispers back.
As we’re walking
out, I say in a playful manner, “That was a good concert. Nice cookies, nice
girls…”
“Nice cheese
balls,” Daniel adds.
In the car going
home, Daniel asks me if I am good at math. Daniel is a math wiz.
“I was good at
algebra and calculus, but it’s been eight years, so I don’t really remember
much.”
“If you were a
maniac for math, you would remember.”
“That’s true,” I
say. (“That’s true” is my go-to response when I’m dumbstruck by the awesomeness
of something Daniel says.)
I ask Daniel, “Are
you a maniac for math?”
“Yes. And for Toby
Mac.”
Without
exaggeration, we have had no fewer than 15 conversations about Toby Mac, each
of which begins with Daniel asking if I have heard of Toby Mac. Other recurring
questions include “Have you heard of John Steinbeck?” and “Did you know Of Mice and Men has swear words in
it?”**
“If you could be a
car,” Daniel says, “what car would you be? Not like, you could drive it, but
like you are the car.”
“I don’t know. I
guess a Jeep Rangler or something.”
“I would be a
Rolls Royce,” Daniel says.
“Your grandma very
nice lady,” Taki says.
“Thank you.”
“Mr. Josh, I saw a
Rolls Royce commercial… Mr. Josh?”
When we drive at
night, Daniel often thinks I have stopped listening if I keep my eyes on the
road.
“I’m listening,” I
say.
“I saw a Rolls
Royce commercial, and there were three characters, and they were all holding up
their M-I-D-D-L-E finger.”***
Moments like
these are some of the highlights of my life right now. They are unplanned,
unexpected gifts that make me surge with gratefulness and a certainty that life
is indeed good.
Yet, I wouldn’t be
honest if I didn’t mention that being a tutor can be a fearful endeavor. Not fearful in the way that being an ER nurse or a foster parent would be fearful. More like an uncle
who suddenly realizes his responsibility to his nieces and nephews goes deeper
than being the fun-initiator.
Some days, Mrs.
Joy has stepped onto the porch with me as I leave, shivering in her slippers
and clutching her arms against her stomach. She tells me how worried she’s been
about the boys, how some of them have been getting into trouble. She asks me to
pray for them, to be a good example. She asks me to help. Only Daniel is her
son, but she calls the students “my boys.”
During a time of
frequent uncertainty, restlessness, and melancholy, the Koreans’ home has been
a source of unexpected grace. Yet, I’ve become increasingly aware that this is
more than just a blessing to me, that I am meant to be a blessing to them, and
I feel my inadequacy. I am not a dad. Neither am I a trained teacher. I don’t
know how to encourage these boys. I want to invite them to do things with me,
to go bowling, to get coffee, but I find myself shy and insecure.
Some insecurities
I face:
1.
Is this creepy? (There’s this kid next door
whose family is pretty messed up. I recently asked if he wanted to play
basketball or go hiking or something, only to be told later by my family that
my “reaching out” may have sounded regrettably close to, “Hey kid, want some
candy?”)
2.
Will I be rejected? (What if they would rather I
left them alone?)
3.
Do I have anything to offer? (I can barely keep
my own life together, so what makes me think I could mentor others?)
Several of my
friends and I have been talking lately about the verse in Malachi that says,
“God will turn the hearts of the fathers to the sons and the sons to the
fathers.” Many of us have had the experience of reaching out to spiritual
fathers and mentors, only to feel frustrated when the vulnerability isn’t
reciprocated. I am not old—I relate more to the son than the father—but even in
my small way I’ve encountered fears that I imagine many fathers face, ones which
hinder the Biblical movement of father to son. I am now of “mentoring” age,
and I find myself second-guessing every interaction. Do I have anything to
offer?
I cling to the
same hope that inspires most of my interactions with friends and family—that somehow
merely loving them will be enough.
A few months ago,
as I was struggling to overcome my insecurity in loving these boys, Paul sat
down beside me and said, “I respect you.”
I thanked him and
laughed it off awkwardly, but he punched me in the arm, looked me in the eyes,
and said, “No, I respect you.”
I was shocked at
how vulnerable he was being with me, how much courage he displayed. Could I be
that vulnerable, not only when I’m the younger one, the one in need, but when
I’m acting as a father?
There are people
in my life who may secretly be longing, if not for a father, for
an older brother to come alongside them. If I quietly decline to engage with the young
people in my life, no one will call me a coward.
But let's be real here: the people in my life are not hard to love. God has seen fit to surround me with incredibly lovable people. So why not start taking those risks now, while the sacrifice is small?
But let's be real here: the people in my life are not hard to love. God has seen fit to surround me with incredibly lovable people. So why not start taking those risks now, while the sacrifice is small?
*Incidentally, I use the term “the
Koreans” because I can’t think of a better way of naming this ragtag group of
people. They are not all from the same family or attending the same school, but
they are all Korean. So, at the risk of reducing them to their lowest common
denominator—the Koreans.
** Daniel once opened to the final
page of Of Mice and Men and read the
final sentence aloud to me: “Curly and Carlson looked after them. And Carlson
said, ‘Now what the h-’” at the word “hell” he breathed out an “h” sound and
then mumbled the rest of the line. He looked at me to see if I was scandalized.
I was not.
***While blogging, I often wonder
if people would care if they knew I was mentioning them online. I have had
several conversations with my mom that conclude with her saying, “Don’t put
that in your blog!” This has become a bigger concern with this entry in
particular, as I have recently become friends with Paul and David on Facebook. I
don’t think they’ve read any of my blogs, and I wonder what they would think if
they did. The ethics of blogging is something I’ve thought about a lot, and I
still haven’t come to a conclusion. I hope that anytime I write about another
person, any resulting humor or empathy arises from a shared humanity, not
alienation or a violation of trust. What do you think about the ethics of
blogging? Leave your opinion in the comments!
1. Second half - Profound. Loved it.
ReplyDelete2. First half - Stinkin' HILARIOUS! I love reading your blog! I laugh to the point of tears every time! It takes a special writer to do that!
Also, I have not used that many exclamation points in one comment probably in years. Apparently I am rather emphatic about your writing talents. I digress...
Thanks for reading Anna Kate! Glad you liked it!
ReplyDeleteNot sure where I am on ethics of blogging, but I have started my own devotional blog. It's private. baby steps, Josh, but I'm getting out there.
ReplyDelete