
My life Part V: A journey begun
My life had suddenly taken on a direction. I knew what I was going to be doing for at least the next four years.
Because I entered school at the last minute, I was placed as the third person in a two-person dorm room. It was a bit crowded, but within a few weeks, someone dropped out of school and I moved into the spot he left.
I settled in fine. I could walk everywhere I needed to go. My roommate had a car so I could hitch a ride with him if need be. In those days, there were plenty of people without cars so I was not an odd ball - at least where having a car was concerned.
It was no problem getting around. I could usually ride along with someone going where I wanted to go without asking them to make a special trip. I would kick in some gas money or buy them a meal and everyone was happy.
Southwest Baptist College was a liberal arts college, now it is a university and much bigger than when I was a student. I found the professors personable and helpful.
Often, they would approach me to see if there was some way they could help. I sat in the front of the class and sometimes I could read the board, but not usually. I did better writing fast and listening. If I missed notes, I just got them from someone in the class later. That was always a good excuse to call up a girl.
My first semester or two, I had to bone up on the fundamentals. I remember in my first semester, I took a class that required five, five-page term papers. When I got the first one back, it looked like it had been painted red. The professor began marking mistakes, but gave up about half way through and simply wrote on the paper, "Please see me." I was mercifully given a C-.
I did go to see Dr. Hunt and he told me that my grammar was very bad. I told him how I had gotten into school at the last minute and had not exactly planned on going to college, but I was going to work hard.
As a matter of fact, I never took the ACT. They waived that requirement since it was so near the beginning of school. I signed up for the entry level English and math. English 103 focused on grammar and I soaked it up like a sponge.
My papers improved in Dr. Hunt's class. I didn't make the same mistakes twice and my grades slowly climbed reflecting my progress.
As far as my vision is concerned, my greatest disadvantage is when something is new. If I am in a new area or doing something different, my eyesight slows me down. If I am given a chance to settle in though, I can figure out what I need to do to overcome whatever obstacles I have to address.
So my first few days of being at college in Bolivar were difficult, scary, and stressful, but that soon gave way to familiarity and routine. I learned that if I can weather the initial storm, the rest is as easy as playing out the string.
A job is the same way. I may be a slow starter, but I am learning what needs to be done and how I can do it more efficiently. In a short time, I am able to do the job as expected.
I have had to struggle more with what others think about me than what I really can do. Some folks would not even give me a chance, ruling me out because of what they thought my being legally blind meant. It is a struggle I always have when going for a job. How do I express to them that I have a visual problem and still get the job? How do I communicate to them I am not a liability? How do I tell them there is a problem, but it isn't really a problem? I have experienced prejudice and I don't like it one bit.
The thing that hurts me the most is when I do not get the chance to take my turn at bat based on what someone thinks I can or cannot do. It is one thing to strike out but much worse not to get the opportunity to swing the bat.
I do not expect employers to make performance exceptions for me. If you think about it though, at any office or job site accommodations are made for almost everyone. Employees are people and the job flexes a bit for the person. Employers are usually flexible about someone's hours to allow them to pick up their children from school. It all works out.
I don't expect my employer to buy me any special equipment or make any special allowances for me because I am legally blind. I only want what is coming to a normal employee and I expect to deliver at the very least what a normal employee would produce. In truth, I want to do better. I don't want to be an average employee, I want to be one of the best, most versatile and knowledgeable.
College teaches you a lot out of the classroom. My four years at Southwest Baptist College were good years of growth for me. It opened my mind and served as a bridge between childhood and adulthood.
Because of my grandfather's influence and my friend Bob, I was almost paranoid about becoming a pansy preacher. You know the type, they are so heavenly minded that they are no earthly good. I wanted to be a man, be cool, but also be a good example spiritually. I was struggling more with society's idea of what a preacher was than the reality of it.
John the Baptist and Jesus were no wimps. They were bold and controversial. Society on the other hand treated preachers like young children. The barber wouldn't tell any dirty jokes when I was in the shop and if anyone ever cursed or said something off color they would apologize to me. I hated that.
So to keep my feet on the ground and to make money, I worked in the summers with Gene who was a brick and block mason. The Missouri summers were brutal, but I liked working out in the sun. It was good exercise and I got a tan. The only problem was the tan was from the waste up.
I learned to mix masonry, supply it to Jean two scaffolds high with a shovel, carry bricks and blocks to keep him supplied, roll a wheelbarrow full of mud over a ditch on a 2 x 12 without dumping it, and to clean the mud joints. It was good hard work and I enjoyed it.
In the evenings I often rode in the patrol car with Bob. It was a real education too. I saw bad accidents, speeders ticketed, and drunk drivers arrested. I drank a lot of coffee at diners, police stations, and the weight scales. Bob and I had lots of discussions about religion and life and he was a good person for that.
I hung out with Bob a lot. He was always involved in some project or another and I tagged along. We talked and laughed and worked. Anything from remodeling a storefront apartment to digging potatoes I did with him.
In the winter, I would help him cut firewood. We would take the pickup out in the woods, fell a few trees, cut and load them on the truck, then come home for a hot meal his wife Donna had prepared.
Whatever work they got out of me, they gave it back in the food I ate. I was their adopted son for those years.
When I went home to Willow Springs I had transportation. I had purchased a Honda XL 250 motorcycle. At first I just rode around on trails and back roads, but soon I ventured out into larger circles. I avoided traffic for the most part, but with my familiarity of the roads, my eyesight was adequate; or so I thought.
Here is what I am talking about. The road going into town is a two-lane highway. I know where the city limits began and where the speed limits changed. I know where the stop signs were so I did not have to rely on seeing them first.
That just left me to see the oncoming traffic or people pulling out of driveways. So I got along fine and I had a measure of independence with the motorcycle. I had about two close calls where I came up behind someone who was stopped in the road. Before I realized they were stopped I was on them, but in both instances, slamming on the breaks and a little luck I avoided disaster. My mom had gray hairs over the motorcycle and my guardian angel had to work overtime.
Looking back on those days, I still don't think I was taking major risks, with the exception of driving without a license. I could see where I was going. I only drove when conditions were right. There were ways I could avoid traffic or other conditions that put me at a greater disadvantage. I was careful. I would never have a motorcycle where I live now the traffic is too heavy.
Another thing I did during college was to play the drums with a gospel quartet. Bob was the bass singer. The other members of the group were members of our church.
I showed up with my drums at one practice and they included me in the group. We had a piano player, bass player, and me on drums. Playing in the quartet was another vital part of my education because I got to visit so many different churches and meet a lot of people.
Some of the churches we played at were as small as someone's living room. They would be so far out in the country that sunshine had to be piped in. Then other churches were large and formal. We played in town on the 4th of July, we played at all day singing and dinner on the grounds events, and we played at gospel singings with many other groups.
It eventually came time for me to preach my first sermon. I think it was January of 1976. I was going to preach the Sunday night sermon at our church. I was scared to death. How could I talk for 30 minutes or so? How do you do that? Then I had to read scripture in front of everyone, which meant I would have to hold the Bible in one hand, my magnifying glass in the other hand and plant my face in the book. One thing I have had to do because of my eyesight is to get over being self-consciousness or to not do it.
Damage to my pride is one of the worst things poor vision has done to me, but the result isn't so bad - it is humility. I have to humble myself, to not look cool many times. It still embarrasses me to have to pull a magnifying glass out at a restaurant to read the menu. If I have to use my debit card at a store, I have to bend close to the little monitor with my magnifying glass and work the keys. I feel the people staring at me in line along with the cashier. It is all in my head, because they could probably care less, but those are my feelings.
I would rather not have to do things that make me stand out, but the alternative is not to do them, so I swallow my pride and do it.
It is funny how when I was a kid, everyone could see I was different because of the thick glasses. As an adult, people are usually surprised when they are told I am legally blind. That has its drawbacks too.
If I make an "eyesight related" mistake, it may appear to folks that I am just stupid or strange. I am often branded as a snob or stuck up, because I do not return waves or non-verbal attempts at communication. If I am at a counter with a crowd of people, I often miss my chance to get waited on because I do not speak when I am acknowledged. The sales person interprets my lack of response as a cue to go onto the next person. To avoid such embarrassments, I rely a lot on the people I am with to run interference for me.
I can get separated from the group easily too. In a crowd of people, it is difficult for me to maintain visual contact. At an airport or sporting event where lots of people are around I am at the mercy of who I am with. They have to find me if we get separated.
Once I got separated from my friends at a Saints game. I backtracked to the big clock in front of the Superdome and waited. Eventually, they realized I was lost and came looking for me. It is those moments I get close to whining about my poor eyesight.
Back to the first sermon, I prepared like a fiend and I wrote a narrative of 20 pages or so. I read over that text a million times and memorized it. My sister wrote out the text in magic marker for me so I could "cheat" if I had to.
Like everything usually does, it all went fine. I delivered the sermon and didn't even use the cheat sheet. I was nervous and I am sure the delivery was barely tolerable, but everyone shook my hand and told me how much they enjoyed it.
At some point, I hope I realized that preaching the sermon was not about me, but supposed to be about God.
I had a lot of firsts in those college years. In January of 1979 I took out a student loan and traveled to the Holy Land and got college credit for my trouble. That was an amazing 3-week trip to Israel, Turkey, and Italy.
I had started keeping a journal my senior year of college and kept it up for about 5 years.
The traditional training for a pastor includes college and seminary. Seminary is to the preacher what medical school is to the doctor. My last year of college was spent thinking about and exploring my options.
There were 6 Southern Baptist seminaries at the time. Golden Gate, New Orleans, North Carolina, Kansas City, Fort Worth, and Louisville.
I was leaning toward New Orleans, because one of the professors I admired in college had attended there. New Orleans had a romantic charm and a sense of adventure. After my New Orleans visit, the decision was not difficult to make; I was going to New Orleans.
New Orleans would be a new chapter in my life and I will talk about it the next time.
Until the next time
John Strain