A few days back, I was riding my bike up the hill next to my school on the way home when I spied a soccer ball in the gutter.
Our soccer ball.
That is to say that this is the soccer ball that belongs to the school. School property. As mentioned here on frequent stories about the fanaticism of our student body for "the beautiful game," keeping equipment on site for the continued amusement of the kiddos is vital.
Which is why finding a soccer ball, our soccer ball, in the gutter at the end of the day is such a crisis. The mystery is not specifically in the discovery of the culprit, but rather to try and understand the though process behind the errant kicks that land our ball outside the fence.
For a while I imagined a scheme in which young men were actively booting the ball over the fence with the expectation of collecting them off the street on their way home from school. Upon some mild reflection, this seems to be giving the perpetrators more credit than they deserve. Affording them such a complex thought process may be missing the mark. The actual target may be much simpler to divine.
They want to see the ball go over the fence.
That's it. A momentary flash of accomplishment, then on to the next thing. The continued thought process that would connect them with the immediate consequence being that they would not have a ball to kick anywhere is just outside their reasoning. There is a mild reassurance that the powers that be, which in this case happens to be yours truly, will find a new soccer ball before the next morning comes.
And I take that responsibility very seriously. Seriously enough that I would stop on my ride home, get off my bike and rearrange the contents of my backpack to accommodate the ball that I will return to the PE cart before most of them will be awake the following morning. Ascribing bad intent is something I do as I grumble about those darn kids. But who could really fault them for expecting that there will be a soccer ball there when they return to school. It is, to paraphrase Thanos, Inevitable.
It worked yesterday. Why not today?