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Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Robby, the Piano Student

from Betty Kellen and Angie Mixner
At the prodding of my friends I am writing this story. My name is Mildred Honor and I am a former elementary  school music teacher from Des Moines , Iowa .  
 
I have always supplemented my income by teaching piano lessons - something I have done for over 30 years. 
 
During those years I found that children have many levels of musical ability, and even though I have never had  the pleasure of having a prodigy, I have taught some very talented students. However, I have also had my share of what I call
'musically challenged' pupils - one such pupil being Robby..  
 
Robby was 11 years old when his mother (a single mom) dropped him off for his first piano lesson. I prefer  that  students (especially boys) begin at an earlier age, which I explained  to Robby. But Robby said that it had always been his mother's  dream to hear him play the piano, so I took him as a student.  
 
Well, Robby began his piano lessons and from the beginning I thought it was a hopeless endeavor. As much as  Robby tried, he lacked the sense of tone and basic rhythm needed to  excel. But he dutifully reviewed his scales and some elementary piano  pieces that I require all my students to learn. Over the months he  tried and tried while I listened and cringed and tried to encourage  him.  
 
At the end of each weekly lesson he would always say 'My mom's going to hear me play someday'. But to me, it seemed hopeless, he just did not have any inborn ability.
 
I only knew his mother from a distance as she dropped Robby off or waited in her aged car to pick him up. She always  waved and smiled, but never  dropped in.  
 
Then one day Robby stopped coming for his lessons. I thought about calling him, but assumed that because of his  lack of ability he had decided to pursue something else. I was also  glad that he had stopped coming - he was a bad advertisement for my  teaching!  
 
Several weeks later I mailed a flyer recital to the students' homes. To my surprise, Robby (who had received a  flyer) asked me if he could be in the recital. I told him that the  recital was for current pupils and that because he had dropped out, he  really did not qualify.
 
He told me that his mother had been sick and unable to take him to his piano lessons, but that he had been  practicing. 'Please Miss Honor, I've just got to play' he insisted. I  don't know what led me to allow him to play in the recital - perhaps it  was his insistence or maybe something inside of me saying that it  would be all  right.  
 
The night of the recital came and the high school gymnasium was packed with parents, relatives and friends. I  put Robby last in the program, just before I was to come up and thank  all the students and play a finishing piece. I thought that any damage  he might do would come at the end of the program and I could  always salvage his poor performance through my 'curtain closer'.  
 
Well, the recital went off without a hitch, the students had been practicing and it showed. Then Robby came up  on the stage. His clothes were wrinkled and his hair looked as though  he had run an egg beater through it. 'Why wasn't he dressed up like  the other students?' I thought. 'Why didn't his mother at least  make him comb his hair for this special night?'  
 
Robby pulled out the piano bench, and I was surprised when he announced that he had chosen to play Mozart's Concerto  No..21 in C Major. I was  not prepared for what I heard next.  His fingers were light on the keys, they even danced nimbly on the  ivories. He went from pianissimo to fortissimo, from allegro to virtuoso;  his suspended chords that Mozart demands were magnificent!  
 
Never had I heard Mozart played so well by anyone his
age.
After six and a half minutes he ended in a grand crescendo, and everyone was on their feet in wild applause!  Overcome and in tears, I ran up onstage and put my arms around Robby in joy. 'I have never heard you play like that Robby, how did you do it?  
 
' Through the microphone Robby explained: 'Well, Miss Honor ..... remember I told you that my mom was sick?  Well, she actually had cancer and passed away this morning. And well  ...... she was born deaf, so tonight was the first time she had ever  heard me play, and I wanted to make it special.' 
 
There wasn't a dry eye in  the house that evening. As the people from Social Services led Robby from the stage to be  placed into foster care, I noticed that even their eyes were red and  puffy. I thought to myself then how much richer my life had been for  taking Robby as my pupil.  
 
No, I have never had a prodigy, but that night I became a prodigy ........ of Robby. He was the teacher and I  was the pupil, for he had taught me the meaning of perseverance and  love and believing in yourself, and may be even taking a chance on someone and you didn't know why.  
 
Robby was killed years later in the senseless bombing of the Alfred P. Murray Federal Building in Oklahoma City in  April, 1995.

Friday, March 8, 2013

Saturday, March 2, 2013

See how much he loved him...

from Father Don Talafous, OSB (Chaplain Emeritus, Saint John's University, Collegeville, MN)

Painting by Karl Isakson
As Jesus wept at the tomb of Lazarus (John 11:1-45) those standing about remarked: "See how much He loved him!" The fact that Jesus stands outside the tomb of the recently deceased Lazarus and weeps shows how much He valued Lazarus' friendship. The story goes on to show us Jesus calling Lazarus out of the tomb and back to life. "See how much He loved him!" John's Gospel is full of lines that offer several possible interpretations. Can't we see in the fact that Jesus raises Lazarus back to life another indication of how much He loved him? Furthermore John means for the modern reader to see a picture here of how much Jesus loves all of us, enough to bring us all back to life and even here and now to invigorate our slack and stumbling selves.

And there's more suggested in the many-layered writing of John: the love of anyone of us for another is a power that can bring the other back to life, revitalize a dead, somnolent existence. In our relationships we see again and again how life-giving love is. Love brings out intelligence and generosity, hope and courage in those who are loved, awakes dormant potential. Love makes people bloom who would otherwise stay slow-growing. Warmed by love, they come out like those daring crocuses that poke their heads out of the snow in early March in northern climes. We are both able to give this kind of love and see its results and to receive this kind of love and produce these results. Much of the good in anyone of us is the result of parents, teachers, coaches, friends who took the time and effort to love into life some vaguely formed quality of ours, to encourage what another without love would never see. "See how much He loved him."