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Latest post 07-08-2008 3:59 PM by Joey. 1 replies.
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  • 07-08-2008 1:20 PM

    No More Tickets! (another kids' story)

     

    Thanks to David Mitchell for the idea. Here's the story.

     

    It was lunch time in the cafeteria.  This was where the real learning took place.  This was where the action was…where it all went down.  If you have ever seen the trading floor on Wall Street, you know exactly what I am talking about.  The only difference was no one in the middle school stood more than 5 ‘4 (except for Mark Donaldson, but he didn’t count because supposedly his mother fed him horse steroids when he was baby).

     

      This was the commodities floor.  Anything could be traded for anything by a skilled trader and a trader was only as good as his last trade.  Here on the floor, a Magic Moments chocolate pudding could fetch up to three chocolate chip granola bars on a good day.  But there were other days, like when fruit roll up’s put out a new flavor, that you couldn’t give away a chocolate pudding. 

     

      Gerald was known as one of the most skilled traders on the floor.  It was rumored he had started his career last September with only a package of salted peanuts and had been trading his way up since then.  Gerald didn’t pack a lunch, he didn’t need to.  He ate the cream.  The cream was the top fifteen or twenty percent of his trades, usually the perishables like ice cream bars and chocolate milk.

     

     In January Gerald had purchased an extra locker from Samantha Brooke, a girl in grade six, for whole box of ding-dongs.  HeH He called this his pantry.  Anything a middle schooler could ever crave was available from the pantry…at a price of course.  It was true. Gerald was a legend of the trading floor.

     

      But today was to be Gerald’s finest performance.   Today he had a plan that would surpass even his greatest trades of all time.  Gerald entered the trading floor without a packsack.  He hadn’t a single edible item, but in his left hand he held a chart affixed to an easel and in his right he held a huge stack of yellow paper slips.  Gerald climbed on top of the folding table in the middle of the trading floor and unfolded the easel. He coughed once to clear his throat and to gain the attention of the students in the cafeteria, all of whom had been transfixed on him since he entered the room. 

     

      “Ladies and gentleman, today is history in the making for our trading floor.  Today we will enter the 21st century of trading.  No longer will the silly whims of fickle peanut allegies or upset stomachs determine the value of your snacks.  No longer will one parent's trip to Costco ruin the value of your Oreo cookies.  No, today and from this day forward, things on this trading floor will be different.  I have devised a system of currency and fixed prices that will make your trading fast, efficient, and fair.  If you look at this chart you will see that each item you have has a value.  It has a number assigned to it:   one, two, or three.  That directly corresponds to the number of trading floor tickets that item is worth.   These tickets are as good as money.  They can be used to trade for anything and no one on the trading floor may refuse to trade.  And to show my generosity and the faith I put in this currency, for today only I will be giving away an extra ticket for everyone who comes to cash in their snacks for tickets.”

     

      The kids all looked at each other.  This was incredible; it was almost like a two for one deal.  Everyone imagined themselves with more snacks than they could eat.  There was a line up at the table and Gerald quickly collected the snacks in exchange for his yellow paper tickets.  In a show of good faith, as soon as the snacks were collected, Gerald opened up shop.  He emptied out the snacks onto the table and collected up the tickets again.  To sweeten the deal, Gerald mixed in a generous selection from his pantry.  Everyone came out with something as good or better. Some even decided to keep their tickets for the next day.

     

       The next day was frantic on the trading floor.  Gerald collected the tickets and set up shop again, but he was not the only one making deals.  On the other side of the cafeteria, there was a market in fruit leather immerging.  Deals were being made everywhere.  Anything could be traded for anything now.  There was no worry that not everyone liked what you had brought.  Everyone liked the tickets. 

     

      A week had passed and the tickets had begun to show up in classrooms.  The teachers thought they were bookmarks, proof that their government mandated reading program had finally taken off.

     

      But on the trading floor something was happening.  Gerald had not been bringing in any more snacks.  He didn’t need to because everyday, he simply brought in another handful of yellow tickets.  He had purchased another locker from Kevin Doyle, who seemed very content to hang his belongings on a hook in the classroom.  Gerald named his new locker Pantry 2.0.  It was almost full now.  He was still eating the cream off his trades, but now the cream was only 5% of his trades. 

     

      Gerald walked up to Derek, a grade six. 

     

      “Trade me for your fudge bar.”  Gerald held out two tickets.

      “No,” said Derek.

      “What do you mean no? You have to trade.  These are trading floor rules.”

      “I don’t care. I will only trade for a pudding.”

      “But this is just as good as a pudding.  See, look,” Gerald pointed to the chart where pudding was clearly worth two tickets.

      “That was last week.  Now a pudding is worth five tickets and who knows what it will be worth next week.  I will only trade for an actual pudding.”

      “I will give you ten tickets,” Gerald reached into his back pocket and pulled out a wrinkled fistful of currency.

     

    Down the hall, Kevin Doyle and Samatha Brooke were fingering the combination locks on their old lockers. 

     

    Gerald had turned his attention to another kid with a stack of fruit leather. 

    “Give me one piece,” Gerald pleaded.

    “I only take crispy crunch bars, no tickets.”  The kid was not budging.

     

    “I have those, I mean, not here, but I can get them.  Wait for me. Wait right here.” 

     

    Gerald ran down the hallway to his pantries.  The doors on pantries 1.0 and 2.0 were open.  He knew they were empty before he was able to stare into the abyss that was once a legendary stock hold of lunchtime delights. 

     

     In the cafeteria tickets were torn up and sprinkled like confetti from the mezzanine.  More snacks than could ever be devoured by an army of 7th graders were tossed back and forth between laughing and gorging kids.

     

    Gerald ran onto the trading floor in tears scooping up the scraps of yellow paper.  He dashed back and forth between the tables making more empty promises and thrusting forth the yellow paper.  No one was interested in what he had to say or offer. His futile attempts at making a deal were lost in the children’s chant.

     

    “No more tickets!”

    “No more tickets!”

     

    "When you salute the flag, you are standing in blood." -Stefan Molyneux

    Listen to and download my anarchist songs for free right here  http://www.reverbnation.com/davidkopp

  • 07-08-2008 3:59 PM In reply to

    • Joey
    • Top 50 Contributor
    • Joined on 08-03-2006
    • Midland, Texas
    • Posts 581
    • Diamond Donator

    Re: No More Tickets! (another kids' story)

    The Stephen King of children's stories has struck again! I posted it on my blog too. Very nice job!

    What is the difference between fate and destiny? Imagine yourself on a supremely windy day. If you just sit there, and let the wind take you where it will, that's fate. But if you are the deciding factor of where you will go--even against the wind--that is destiny.

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