
Ben Raymond
Over the years we brush up against scores of people. Some are easily forgotten and others we take with us throughout our life's journey. Ben Raymond is one person who has stayed in my mind and been with me on my life's journey.
Some people are beautiful and stand out in a crowd. Most are average. A few are noticed because they are peculiar. I was like that and so was Mr. Raymond. I wore thick glasses due to poor eyesight. The pop bottle lenses were easy targets for children to try out their creative insults. This was good training for me. I would sometimes fire back insults of my own or laugh. Sometimes the teasing resulted in me feeling sorry for myself. I would bemoan the fact I was not normal like the other kids, but it would pass and I would go on.
Mr. Raymond walked with a limp and one arm hung motionless. I am not sure what happened to him maybe polio or something. He was one of the leaders in my Boy Scout troop and he was like me in that he stood out for peculiar reasons. Like me the boys made fun of him and at times I did too. His nickname was “oney.” He had one good arm and one good leg. We deduced he probably had one good nut as well. It was not the kind of thing said to Mr. Raymond’s face the insults were always said behind his back. He had to know, but he never lashed out at us. He must have realized we were young and dumb. He probably further reasoned that we would eventually grow out of it.
Regardless of the disrespect, Mr. Raymond was nice. He was tall, quiet, and gentle. He smoked a pipe and I watched with fascination as he cleaned the pipe and loaded it with tobacco all very skillfully and with one hand. Mr. Raymond could not play baseball or football with us like some of the other leaders. On camp outs there were certain tasks he could not do, but he was always there encouraging or joking with us.
More than one time I felt ashamed for participating in the name calling. I knew what it felt like first hand and I did not like it. I was guilty of the very thing by which I had been victimized. It is a useful thing to be aware of one’s own hypocrisy and even more useful to want to change it.
Eventually I earned five merit badges and was eligible for the rank of Star. After a board of review and some additional formalities I was ready to receive the award at the next awards ceremony or court of honor. Scouts who receive the rank of Star, Life, and Eagle are given the privilege to choose someone to present the award. Nobody ever chose Mr. Raymond for this task - I was the first. Some of the other kids laughed at my choice. “You chose oney, ha, ha, you probably only have one nut yourself, ha, ha.” I did not care what they said. I had watched Mr. Raymond rise above insults and I was doing the same.
When I asked Mr. Raymond to present the award I knew he was touched. He congratulated me and told me how honored he was that I would think of him for this task. He made me feel better about myself.
I do not know how much I understood then as a 13 year old boy. I did realize that Mr. Raymond and I were a lot alike. Asking him to present my medal was one way I could acknowledge him, it was also a display of genuine respect.
It is both a mystery and a truth that good character is often forged in the furnace of ridicule and disrespect. A diamond is the result of enormous pressures. How often do people rush past diamonds like Mr. Raymond on their way to fool's gold?
Until the next time
John Strain