I Had The Whole Cafeteria Screaming
It was early in my freshman year of high school. I was happy because it was a rare day for me to eat hot lunch in the school cafeteria, rather than the usual bologna sandwich from a brown paper bag. I had just sat down at a table of some friends and picked up the salt and sprinkled it on my food. Martin, evidently, thought it would be hilarious to unscrew the top for some unsuspecting soul, and I was that soul. So when I “sprinkled,” it poured.My food was virtually ruined and I was mad. I picked up the ketchup bottle, not knowing he did the same to it, and pretended to flick it at the kid across from me who was laughing. But when I flicked, the top popped off and a wad of ketchup went flying across our table, through the air, across the second table, and smack dab in the middle of the white blouse on a senior girl’s chest. Right at that moment a boy at another table dropped his books loudly on his table and it sounded like a shot had gone off. She felt the impact, looked down, and screamed. Then all the other girls sitting across from her started screaming. She stood up, looking horrified, and pointed at her bleeding wound. That’s when the entire cafeteria joined in on the mayhem.I sat in my chair with a nearly empty ketchup bottle, dumbfounded. I saw no holes to crawl into. I was too young to join the army. Instead, I spent the rest of the afternoon in the principal’s office.You can imagine my glee when the school paper headline read something like, “14 year-old freshman, armed with a ketchup bottle and a grudge to settle, triggers hysteria in cafeteria.”But I learned a valuable lesson that day. One that I’ve had to relearn many times since. Quick reactions based on emotions rarely accomplish good things.Now think about the atmosphere created by your emotional reactions at work and home. When you are wronged, do you flick back, only with a more damaging thing than a ketchup bottle? What damage has been done to your marriage, your kids, your workplace, because you pick up the bottle and flick when you feel like someone ruined your food?We live in a world where people are so quick to flick back, almost instantaneously, and without thinking. My wife observed, “I can’t believe how fast some people are at getting their middle finger up in the air. It actually takes some coordination. I’d have to really work at what I see other people do almost instantaneously.” Very true. They’ve had a lot of practice, and now they are good at it.But we are followers of Jesus. Let’s be known as people who think, respond with patience, and treat others, even those who harm us, with gentleness and respect. That too will take some practice. But the end result is being the salt and light that Jesus was talking about.