Tuesday 14 January 2014

The Biscuits Still Turn Out

One of the courses I teach is Grade 8 Home Ec. When the class involves a Food Lab, the students are put into groups of three or four and given a role in order to produce some sort of food.

By this time in the school year, I know the students reasonably well so when I put them into groups recently, I gave particular students particular roles in order to give them practice where they most needed it.

The assignment was baking “Rich Tea Biscuits.” I gave the role of chef to Sam* because he needed practice in reading and following a recipe. He would notoriously begin reading the recipe, or at least listen as we went over it, then get to the kitchen and start mixing things together without consulting the recipe again. This method of cooking had already resulted in some playdough-like colored and textured blueberry muffins and some rather salty pancakes.

Also in his group, I assigned Marie* as host. She has considerable experience in the kitchen and didn't have trouble putting things together. She likes to do things right and I thought maybe her presence in the group would keep Sam on track with the recipe, would keep him from madly rushing ahead towards the goal.

It didn't quite work that way. Sam went ahead and added the milk to the flour mixture before he cut in the butter. Using a pastry cutter under these circumstances is harder than you may imagine. Remarkably, though, he managed to incorporate the butter into the dough.

Somehow in the process, the cook in their group, whose job it is to collect the ingredients, had neglected to add an ingredient or had added the wrong amount. Marie's sense of needing to follow directions kicked in. She grabbed the measuring cup and headed to where the ingredients were set out, bent on remedying the sorry situation. With a junior high sense of drama and a self-aware twinkle in her eye, she muttered in a stage whisper, “This is why I always work alone.” You could practically hear the eye-roll! Boys!

I had to laugh. I'm with her. I like to work alone too, and follow directions and do things correctly. I don't rush madly ahead without bothering to consult a plan or considering the consequences. But as I pondered this groups' experience and the members' past track record, I realized that no matter who was wearing the chef's hat, nothing completely inedible has ever been produced. Marie's cooking may be more appetizing, but Sam's food has all been eaten too. The biscuits still turned out.

While I can't give Sam full marks for following a recipe, I do have to admire his enthusiasm and his not sitting around, wringing his hands till he know every final detail of a thing before he jumps into action. I could learn something from him.

In our society, we are often pressured to be something other than we are. The quiet ones are encouraged to “speak up,” leaders are told to follow, people who prefer to work alone are put into groups, people who are enthusiastic are told to tone it down, creative individuals are instructed to follow directions, direction followers are pressured to think “outside the box.” Society thrives on cookie-cutter people; they're easier to manage. While only ever doing things the way we feel most comfortable with can stunt our growth, always feeling we need to be other than what we are can diminish zest for life and appreciation for the way we were made and fails to make the most of each unique gift. There needs to be room in our world for the Sams who forge ahead, who jump into action, who blaze their own trail and there needs to be room for the Maries who follow directions and execute a plan in all its details, who work better alone. As Ralph Waldo Emerson says, “To be yourself in a world that is constantly trying to make you something else is the greatest achievement.” Even greater than having the biscuits turn out!

I praise you because I am
fearfully and wonderfully made;
your works are wonderful,
I know that full well.
Psalm 139:14

*Names have been changed to protect the innocent.

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