Friday, March 6, 2015

a lunchbox like Larry's













Even at an early age we know how important it is to make a first impression.  The clothes we wear, the bike we ride, even the cartoons we watched told more about us than we wanted some to know.  But one important facet of growing up was choosing your lunch box.  My first one in kindergarten was just for carrying a snack.  It was a firehouse, with a round top that held the thermos.  All four sides portrayed a firehouse and firemen in action, even a fire engine and the standard equipment Dalmation.  I was cool, particularly next to Chuckie on our first day, his was a girlish light blue with his name on it.  Even then you could see the competitive nature of us coming out, and the social groups forming.  Chuckie was well, a Chuckie, the firehouse was cool.  No one ever tried to borrow his lunch box...boys will be boys, not so sure about the rest of you.
But in first grade my new lunch box had rockets on the moon.  It as 1960, and the Mercury program was just beginning, and outer space was cool.  While watching a rerun of Leave it to Beaver, there it was, my lunchbox, being carried by Larry Mondello.  I had a lunch box like Larry’s, and even if Larry was the coolest, there was my choice on TV!  Sure beat Beaver’s plaid lunch box, you know he caught grief over that, and I can hear June whining to Ward, old man, “why does he have to have a boys’ lunch box?  He’ll just outgrow it...” And Ward trying to help her figure out not everyone was a pain in the neck when it came to be being cool like she was.  I wonder if she ever realized that her sons weren’t girls?  Had someone played a cruel trick at birth?  And how come you never saw a show about girls growing up?  But there it was, a lunch box like Larry’s, and that $2.95 purchase some 55 years ago is now worth over $400 today.  Take that June....
But by third grade we were no longer kids, and brown paper bags were it.  The uncool part was when your mother would write something cutesy under your name on it, something like “have a good day,” or even worse “love you.”  Yuck, c’mon, we were 8 years old,almost men!  Can’t you treat us like one?  But somehow no matter how old, or how many years later, you would always be her little boy. 
Lunchboxes reappeared when I got my first real job working for the Union County Park Commission, and our boss Tony had the standard black lunch box with the thermos in the round top.  His thermos of coffee always next to him while sitting on his tractor making us work.  No matter he had such a hard time staying awake.  But that was what the workers carried then, the lunch bucket brigade they were referred to, and someday we would have one too, just so you could tell we were a boss.  But for me it was always, and would always be the brown bag.  Disposable, the first throw away lunch box, and the forecasting of recyclables was here.  Or there.  No one looked cool with a lunch box bungee corded to their Honda, we would put up with squashed sandwiches just to look cool.  But last night after seeing Larry’s lunch box, I want one.  If only I could find one, and afford the $400, just to be cool like a kid that wasn’t, to rekindle a time I don’t want to go back to, to eat a lunch I rather pass on today.  Maybe the past is best left in the past...but I sure would like another firehouse lunchbox.  I was always cooler than Larry!
Box lunches were popular at one time, and we see them offered for sale at many resorts today.  For hikes in the country, road trips, or times when you don’t want to eat out, you can eat out of a box.  Never as cool as the ones we had in school, the cardboard even brags about being recycled.  June Cleaver still at work taking the fun out of lunches for boys. 
What would we find in the lunchbox of a young Jesus of Nazareth 2000 years ago?  It may surprise you, as in those pre-June Cleaver days, they still ate healthy.  His lunch may have been carried in a burlap bag, with a portion of salted fish, which made Mary Magdalene richer than her other well known social business.  It would come with assorted veggies, bitter herbs found in the fields, reminding them of the Passover meal.  Seasoned with berries, spices, certain roots, and walnuts and persimmons, these pre-pepper meals had a flavor all their own.  Olives were included to munch on, as was various wheat picked along the way for a snack.  Bread was included, very basic, but fresh.  Fruit was included, figs the most popular, and readily picked.  The annual first figs of the season highly prized.  He would have eaten persimmons, dates, quince, pomegranate, and mulberry.  All fresh, all healthy.  With a jug of goat’s milk to wash it down.  Which helped make you sleepy, Mexico didn’t invent siestas!  And over the mid day meal imagine the discussions, and think about eating with Jesus today, and the discussions you can have.  For eating, meal time was and is special to the Jews, and a time to sit and visit with the family.  Something society misses today, a special time to meet and eat with the family.  To eat what Mom has prepared, not what takes 4 minutes to microwave.  To let the kids tell of their day, to listen and instruct, to enjoy a tie together, a meal with family.  Maybe that is why communion is so special to Jesus, and should be to us, a time to rest, eat, and be blessed.  A time to spend with Jesus, thanking him for what  he has provided.  A time to thank him for our families, our jobs, school,and how he provides it each case for us.  That somehow what is in the lunchbox is more important than what it advertises.  Yet I still want the lunchbox, and what it tells the world about me, whereas Jesus wants us to tell the world about him.
I ate many tuna fish sandwiches over the years, lots of crackers, potato chips, and milk.  Good lunches, eaten out of a lunch box or brown bag, with school mates at our desks.  A time we fellowshipped, a time away from teachers and studies, where we prepped for recess.  And how our eyes would light up when we saw an extra Twinkie or Yodel.  We felt blessed....and so we should feel today.  Jesus has packed a life for us filled with blessings, and it comes in various boxes.  Some pass over the plain ones, looking for glitz and glamour.  Some care more about the box than its contents, and some trade what is packed.  Some pass on lunch, some pass on Jesus.  His offer is free everyday, lunch and life is on him, in him.  Today when eating, spend some time thanking him.  Have a communion time, not a religious ceremony, but eat with a friend.  See what his father packed for him today, and what he has for you.  He traded everything just to spend time with you, share lunch with him.  But to be really cool, bring a friend and share with them too.  I can only imagine all the apple cores stored in Larry’s lunchbox, I’ll bet there was never any left over food.  Look into Jesus today and see what he has in store for you.  Don’t be afraid of a brown bag, or a lunch box with flowers on it.  Many good meals have been hidden so that no one would steal them.  Jesus has packed a special meal just for you, as always it is what inside that counts the most.  But  I sure would like to have that old firehouse lunchbox....see you on the playground after lunch. 
love with compassion,
Mike
matthew25biker.blogspot.com