• Home
  • About FCJ
  • FCJ Staff
  • Advertise
  • Student Writers
  • Special Sections
  • Cookbook
  • 507-765-2151

Fillmore County Journal

"Where Fillmore County News Comes First"

  • News
    • Feature
    • Agriculture
    • Arts & Culture
    • Business
    • Education
    • Faith & Worship
    • Government
    • Health & Wellness
    • Home & Garden
    • Outdoors
  • Sports
  • Schools
    • Caledonia Warriors
    • Chatfield Gophers
    • Fillmore Central Falcons
    • Grand Meadow Super Larks
    • Houston Hurricanes
    • Kingsland Knights
    • Lanesboro Burros
    • LeRoy-Ostrander Cardinals
    • Mabel-Canton Cougars
    • Rushford-Peterson Trojans
    • Spring Grove Lions
  • Columnists
  • Commentary
  • Social Scenes
  • Obituaries
  • Police/Court
  • Legal Notices
  • Classifieds

I was Working on Degrees in Teetering and Tottering

August 28, 2023 by Al Batt Leave a Comment

Fillmore County Journal - Al Batt
Fillmore County Journal - Al Batt
Al Batt

We knew little, but we suspected a lot.

Each day was a test we hadn’t studied for back in the time before Vanna White landed her demanding letter-turning gig.

In a world filled with “aww” and “eww,” there were many mysteries. If medicine was good for us, why did it taste bad? Are the crusts of sandwiches good for us? Why do some people cut sandwiches diagonally? When I was given two forks at one meal, I thought one was for defense.

The world was a big place, but our school was small. Recess was a glorious moment of excessive freedom. We had no adult supervision because teachers were happy to get shed of us.

We faced injury each day from things designed to hurt us behind the school, where no one could hear us scream. Playground equipment wasn’t there to enhance our egos. It was made of museum-quality, sharp, unyielding metal covered in lead-based paint. Even though our class sizes were small, the school was willing to lose a few students in order to have a playground. The playground was the reason the school nurse was always crying.

Chicory grows in open and disturbed areas like fields, roadsides and railways, and blooms July-October. The flowers open with the sun and close by noon on sunny, bright days and open later in the morning or remain open most of the day during cloudy weather. Its roasted roots are used as a coffee substitute. It’s called blue daisy and blue dandelion, but more often blue sailors, from a legend of a beautiful girl falling in love with a sailor who left her for the sea. She waited alongside a road for his return. The gods took pity on her and turned her into chicory. Sailor blue blossoms still haunt roadsides waiting for the man’s return.
Photo by Al Batt

When it came to the playground, we were all on the varsity team and nobody rode the bench. Monkey bars, a horizontally mounted ladder, taught us how to walk things off. Mothers had prepared us for the wages of our tomfoolery. “If you fall and break a leg, don’t come running to me” or “Bet you won’t do that again.”

We had monkey bars because a cement mixer was unavailable.

There was a multi-passenger, model-horse free, merry-go-round that was kid-powered. A city park miles away had a smaller version we called the puker. The name was appropriate. The rumor was that the city had won the puker in a poker game.

We didn’t have a plastic slide with a protective dome. We climbed a vicious, slippery metal ladder begging to bark a shin, to get to the top of a metal slide. He who hesitated, didn’t slide. At the wispy end of summer, I skipped to the playground on a sizzling hot, sunny day. I scaled the ladder and sat down on molten metal, which turned me into a burger frying on the grill at Minske’s Cafe. Good times.

The only thing our playground was missing was Snidely Whiplash tying damsels to the railroad tracks, but 1,000 violins didn’t need to play for us. We had a teeter-totter that fostered cooperation.

I was bestride the teeter-totter that day. Folks without as much book learning as we had called it a seesaw. The teeter-totter was our Dow Jones Industrial Average, it went up and it went down.

A classmate, let’s call him Evel, short for Evel Knievel, made another of his daily attempts to go all the way over the top of the swing set—a full 360 degrees. He tried this every school day until the snow grew too deep. He’d recruited the strongest kid in school to push him. I’ll call him Atlas, short for Charles Atlas. Atlas grabbed the chains holding the swing’s seat and backed up to get a good run at it. “This is the time,” said a hopeful Evel, the poor man’s astronaut, from his seat.

“He’ll never do it,” I thought. It would be impossible unless rigid poles replaced the traditional chains.

I was at the top end of the teeter-totter in either the teeter or the totter position, when I saw Evel fly as if he had Acme Jet-Powered Rockets in his back pockets or was launched from a catapult. Atlas had pushed too hard and Evel had gained too much momentum. There was no seatbelt and Evel was on his way to a soft landing on sharpened gravel. He wouldn’t get a certificate of participation.

It was an amazing thing for a teeter-tottering kid to see; so amazing my partner seated at the grounded end of the teeter-totter fell off. That’s not a good thing for the rider in the highest seat and the landing could knock out fillings or fracture vertebrae.

I headed down at supersonic speed and hit the ground with a resounding thud.

I fell off.

I was speechless.

But I walked it off.

facebookShare on Facebook
TwitterTweet
FollowFollow us
PinterestSave

Filed Under: Columnists


Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

FILLMORE COUNTY WEATHER

Fillmore County Journal - Your number one source for news and community information in Fillmore County Minnesota
Fillmore County Journal - Your number one source for news and community information in Fillmore County Minnesota
Fillmore County Journal - Your number one source for news and community information in Fillmore County Minnesota

NEWS

  • Features
  • Agriculture
  • Arts & Culture
  • Business
  • Education
  • Faith & Worship
  • Government
  • Health & Wellness
  • Home & Garden
  • Outdoors

More FCJ

  • Sports
  • Obituaries
  • Commentary
  • Police/Court
  • Classifieds/Legals
  • Social Scenes
  • Special Sections
  • Columnists
  • Journal Writing Project
Fillmore County Journal
RSS
Facebook
Twitter
Visit Us
Tweet
Instagram
  • Home
  • About FCJ
  • Contact FCJ
  • FCJ Staff
  • Employment
  • Advertise
  • Commentary Policies & Submissions

© 2023 · Website Design and Hosting by SMG Web Design of Preston, MN.