Back to School! Causing a Metaphysical Riot Somewhere Between Michael Jackson’s Thriller and Nirvana’s Nevermind

We start with a quote:

I was starting to believe in the power of this thing, not as a talisman but as a phenomenon. It had to mean something that it – and I – had generated so much consternation. I represented something. To some I was a testament to discipline, to conviction, to inner strength. To others I was a fool who needed to be saved. To many I was both. And to a few I became a symbol of something horrible, something wrong with the world, or humanity; I needed to be exposed as a fraud. Whatever I represented, the principle on which I stood, needed to be expunged.

I started receiving threats. Violence seemed real. Would I die for this?  Object #18 – The Monopoly Game Piece

That’s right! It’s another back-to-school week! Last week we celebrated teachers (when we weren’t celebrating awesome princess ninjas or writers laughing or, um, ourselves. This week I’m running a special celebration of what it means to be a student. Or what it meant for me.

Today’s story: the ever popular story about the Monopoly Game Piece.In which a simple refusal (hello, Bartleby!) splits a high school down the middle. Into the world of believers and unbelievers. And finally, to an encounter with an actual religion, and the way it all circled back on me.

So put on your jeans-and-sweatshirt, pop in some Van Halen, and tape a few Sports Illustrated pictures to the inside of your locker door (if you haven’t forgotten the combo – d’oh!). And here…we…go…!

A History of Jacke in 100 Objects #18 – The Monopoly Game Piece



5 responses to “Back to School! Causing a Metaphysical Riot Somewhere Between Michael Jackson’s Thriller and Nirvana’s Nevermind”

  1. “if you haven’t forgotten the combination”–I didn’t use my locker for almost a year because I could never remember the combo (and when I could remember, the lock tended to be finicky and temperamental… probably as a result of disuse) Easier to just schlep the books around instead.

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    1. That is such a teenager move. Easier! But I would have done the exact same thing.

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  2. Two of our grandkids are just starting secondary school in the UK today, Tuesday, and that brings back the angst (but not the vivid details, mercifully) of my own start at such a school, a Dickensian Catholic all-boys institution. I do feel for all those 100s of millions doing the same this September. Great piece by the way, I remember it from before!

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    1. Thank you – and I hope you and your grandkids have an excellent year!

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