This is Baytown Bert in Baytown Texas August 8th, 2014 and this is Podcast 07
If the jungle of Borneo has
a doppelganger, it’s the Old River/Winfree thickets off of FM1409. I say this even though I’ve never been to Borneo. I imagine
I am not too far off though and for arguments sake, let’s just say it is. If I am wrong, I imagine some of my more
enlightened Borneo experts will inform me, as
a couple of them are pretty much experts on everything it seems.
I am in awe of their ability to sit on the couch and correct
everything everyone else produces. It’s
like they have amazing powers or something.
Maybe they drink that special coffee from Borneo
produced by the civet cat? Obviously I
need some of that. I’ve heard that
coffee makes you real smart. I wish I
knew.
On more than one occasion, including this past Saturday, my
geocaching friends and I clawed, crawled, and slung machete blades through 5
hours of thorns, brambles, and vines. It
was real world sweating, grunting, and bleeding. I can’t remember one single sarcastic remark
along the hike, as we were all in the fray and all of us were putting forth
honest, hard labor to back up our individual tales of adventure.
For the sake of this column, if I were to go to Borneo, I might ask around for the most vocal guide I
could find. You know the kind of
character I mean, right? They are the self-righteous
person who always has a loud take on everything, but are rarely seen actually
doing anything to contribute other than to dole out their enlightened opinion. Thus we have the famed crazy man from Borneo.
They never generate anything original, but feed off of what
others contribute and proceed to pick it apart, skewing fact after fact; never
mind the misquotes and wild sidebar speculation. If anything, their tangents are so far off
the mark, it becomes humorous to behold, but difficult to comprehend how they
arrived where they did. And on top of
everything, they feel like their contributions are ultimately the righteous
hand of God.
Yes, yes, I know. You
are asking me why I would want a crazy man as a guide and I’ll come right out
and say it. Even the jungle of Borneo or the thickets of Old River/Winfree need comic
relief. This sounds like fun, right? I wish it were.
Unfortunately, it wouldn’t be fun at all and here is
why. These characters only have fodder
that is created by others and our guide would be reduced to the talking head
they truly are, prattling along with drivel from past observations and that my
friend, come to think about it, is pretty danged unfunny. They wouldn’t lead us anywhere. They can only operate after someone else
suggests a trail or direction.
The amusing part is they would be the target of their own
sarcasms for a change and that would make up for their lack direction! On third thought, it would indeed be
funny. Add in that no amount of
criticism will stop their condescending diatribe and you have a reverse peanut
gallery in full swing - and taking the very same liberties our guide uses, we
can skew their offerings any way we want to make our point smack home.
We will not only get to listen to someone who may have no
more experience or knowledge than we have, but for sheer entertainment value,
sit back in the comfort of our digs and throw wooly-boogers at them to bump up our
own egos and gain the open admiration of our fellow trail travelers.
Hold on a second. Am
I losing my grip on reality here or what?
Why would I want to do any of these stupid things? They’re idiotic and non-productive. I want to experience the thickets and jungle
trails, not walk behind a loud-mouth know it all and be baffled by their smoke
screen of how it all should have went down yesterday. If anything, I want a visionary of how things
should be on our future travels.
I think it would be far better to assemble as many people as
we can who have done their homework, studied the treacherous road ahead, and
have a feel for moving forward in the safest and most productive manner. Yes.
If anyone in the group feels like they have a real handle on our future,
I’m going to ask them to step forward and lead, but the first time we venture
down the trail and I hear that crazy Borneo guy yelling non-productive
second-guessing sarcastic remarks about how stupid everyone is; I’m going call
them out again and again.
It amazes me how some outspoken people will look at the
trail and disparagingly announce seeing something totally different than the
rest of us, misidentifying almost every plant and tree along the way and then
accusing the group of being uneducated buffoons. If they didn’t show up every time I turned around,
I could dismiss their contribution as an occasional aberration, but seeing they
won’t learn, I just have to see it for what it is – comic relief.
The Baytown
area has many trails yet untraveled and with our growing population, we need
answers and wise extrapolation, not destructive and pessimistic afterthought to
move down the future trail safely. Our
city needs people who want to move foreword with vision and the wild men of Borneo needs to get onboard.
11 comments:
What a lovely parallel to the needs currently in GCCISD. I think it's important to be a great speaker but even more important the ability to follow through with all the hot air "you" created. I find less and less people create and work....... Just blah....blah...blah!!! Thanks for the article Bert. Intriguing as always!!!! SPG
Someone sure got under your skin. SL
HA!HA!HA! VERY CLEVER, my friend... I was waiting to see the "response". And, yes, folks do read more than just a few words... I've just been danged busy! Enjoyed it as usual. --Natalie
Bert, it sounds like he has been bitten by the bug in his old age...the chronic complainer bug! Sounds kinda sad too.
pg
That was deep...
*I liked as well as read this* TC
Great article this morning, Bert! DDC
Wow, glad it wasn't me you were poking your sharp stick at! Nothing like a little sharp and cutting wit to carve someone down to size. Yep, moonshine kills. SW
I'm just sorry everyone can't be just like you, think like you, act like you, and perhaps be you. But no just kidding, being self-centered on one's own lifestyle and surroundings would be selfish wouldn't it. I have to say you brought yourself to the same level as the business end.
To the last anonymous comment maker: Yes, I probably did, but at least I identified myself. :) Thank you for joining me down here.
Wow, good one! Geocaching gives us lessons we can use in everyday life, especially in social media. We all want to think that this article is not about us, but I think you covered both sides pretty well. Thanks for the perspective of comic relief. Here's to hoping we can all laugh at ourselves when needed and not be so dang uptight about the crazy Borneo guy. WC
I was in the new Altus center waiting for medical testing this morning and was able to listen to you blog from your audio version. It finally hit he that the thorn Borneo was a know it all the trip through the brush in Old Winfree. With your experience at your event I wouldn't have allowed it. If the thorn wanted to take over you event I would have ordered him to leave the group and point the direction to the vehicles. I have taken novice fisherman out many times that caught nothing while others caught fish all day. He did realize when I was cleaning 40 fish at Thompsons, it could have been 50. I told him the secret was the others listened and also had their line in the water while you were giving instructions. He asked are you saying I can't catch a fish? I said well maybe, just not today when everyone else did. If not for the patience I grew as I aged he would have had to swim a few miles to a shoreline. A few have back in the day. Good Job!
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