If I have to be a failure at something,
at least I'm in good company.
Loraine and I were joking around the
other night. She had been reading several articles about soccer
players we follow, all of whom used to play in Germany, didn't have
much success there, moved on, and became stars. However, the German
press still invariably calls them “Bundesliga Transfer Flop (in
this case, Atletico Madrid star Alexander Sorloth)", because no matter
how successful they are now, they flopped when they played in
Germany.
And, apparently, that's all that
matters. They could be the greatest player in the world outside of
the country and STILL be known in Germany as “Bundesliga Transfer
Flop”...
Oh, those wacky, wacky Germans.
Anyway, the two of us got to talking
about that German practice, and I started to think. That, as we all
know, can be a dangerous thing, and I was soon wondering how the
German press would describe me, in the extremely unlikely event that
they would have to make snide fun of me. I mean, I know I would
never be “Bundesliga Transfer Flop”, but what WOULD be my biggest
failure in life, the one that they could tag me with?
How about “High School Math Flop Jim
Koski”?
I hope this doesn't sound bad, but
after Loraine and I were joking around I started to run the concept
of “failure” through my brain. What endeavors have I attempted
and totally flopped at in my life? Well, I couldn't come up with
any. I mean, there have been things I've tried and didn't totally
succeed at, but was there anything at which that I totally failed?
Thankfully, there's always high school
math.
I often joke that I'm in broadcasting
because I suck at math, a joke that's actually common among people in
this particular field. In all honesty, I don't suck at all math;
addition, multiplication, and fractions don't bother me at all. But
when you get past algebra, into geometry and trigonometry and
calculus?
Well, then, I really AM a “flop”.
I took all those classes back in high
school, managing to limp through them with grades no higher than,
uhm, a C-. And aside from a little basic algebra used when trying to
upscale or downscale the size of recipes, I've never used geometry or
trigonometry or calculus in the thousand years since I took the
classes. That, I guess, proves two things—that unless you're an
engineer of some sort you probably won't use any math in your every
day life, and that, if you're like me and took the classes anyway,
you'll have two lasting effects thanks of it--
You'll probably go into a career field
that has nothing to DO with math and, in the event that the German
press needs something with which to label you as a flop, you're good
to go.
8-)
(jim@wmqt.com),
high school math flop.