January 20, 2020

Opie Cooper (May) Not Flourish

Part 1: Cereal Shapes & School Secrets

Part 1: Cereal Shapes & School Secrets

Opie was eight years old when he had his first epiphany. The events leading to this life-changing enlightenment began in earnest during his customary breakfast ritual of scrutinizing the back of a cereal box. That morning, the carton in question was E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial, featuring peanut butter and chocolate-flavored puffs shaped like the letters “E” and “T.”

In Opie’s eyes, this was a monumental missed opportunity. Two letters? That’s it? Surely, the cereal designers at General Mills hadn’t truly watched Spielberg’s masterpiece. How could they ignore E.T.’s unmistakable silhouette—an easily recognizable alien outline? What about the enchanting image of a full moon with a flying bicycle, or E.T.’s distinctive globe-shaped spaceship? Even a pot of geraniums would have nodded to the movie’s nuances. If they insisted on letters, marshmallows shaped like a Speak & Spell would have been ingenious. To Opie, it all seemed wasteful.

His dismay waned as Opie’s attention zeroed in on the promotional offer: a vinyl record featuring Michael Jackson narrating an adaptation of the movie. A photograph showed the King of Pop smiling in the affectionate embrace of E.T. himself—the two most famous beings on the planet, best of friends.

Lost in the historic significance of this photo, Opie almost missed the gentle slide of an envelope across the table, until a perfectly polished nail at the end of his mother’s right index finger tapped the surface.

Tap. TapTapTap.

It was a well-practiced pattern—a discreet beacon leading him back to their breakfast nook.

Opie’s eyes landed on the Saint Martin Elementary crest atop a typed letter just as his mother announced, “Your teacher has invited us to a meeting this evening after school.”

It took Opie a good thirty to forty-five seconds of repeating the sentence in his head before he was able to fully comprehend its context.

Prior to this precise moment, Opie had never even entertained the existence of an After School. In hindsight, however, he felt silly for assuming a facility as vast and as important as Saint Martin Elementary would sit idle after the last bus rolled away.

This newfound notion now commanded the full capacity of Opie’s considerable curiosity. When the halls emptied and the locks clicked shut, what went unwitnessed within those walls?

Diving into his backpack, he rummaged past school essentials and stowaway Star Wars figures until his fingers found the familiar texture of his Firefly Journal—a black and white marbled composition notebook he’d personalized with markers and pens. He laid it on the table and turned to a fresh page, smoothing the seam to make it lie flat.

Notebooks were essential to Opie’s inner ecosystem, a concept his mom had introduced one summer. “Your ideas are like fireflies, Opie,” she had said, handing him his first MEAD notebook. “And this is your jar. Catch them before they fly away.”

And catch them he did. Whenever a thought flickered in his mind—a question he couldn’t quite grasp, a feeling without a name, a fragment of a figment—he’d hurry to trap it on the page, like catching a firefly in a jar to admire its glow.

His journals became a collection of these tiny illuminations, offering brief light in the darkness when his thoughts felt tangled. Often, when he looked back, the entries were like mysterious sparks—bright in the moment but hard to decipher later. But that was the beauty of it. Not to hold onto every thought forever, but to let them shine just long enough to guide him through the maze inside his head.

“Fireflideas,” he called them.

Opie sketched the words “after” and “school,” topping them with a giant bubble-letter question mark.

Then he doodled his teacher, Mrs. Howett, sporting dark glasses, a fedora, and an overcoat—Special Agent Howett. Beside her, he scribbled a rectangle filled with lines and circles: a wall-mounted supercomputer.

For Opie, drawing wasn’t about art; it was writing his thoughts with pictures—early emojis, if you will.

Below his sketch, he wrote his school’s initials: S–M–E, paused thoughtfully, then added “HQ?”

Of course! How had he not realized it sooner? Saint Martin Elementary was obviously a secret headquarters. How else could teachers juggle grading tests, planning lessons, restocking supplies, and tracking every student’s progress—all while keeping up with their favorite TV shows? Through the clear lens of a third-grader’s logic, it made perfect sense.

He could almost see it: teachers by day, agents by night. Pull the right trophy in the display case, and—whoosh!—classrooms transformed into command centers. Blackboards flipping to reveal glowing monitors, desks turning into control panels, the quiet gym morphing into a bustling hub of activity. They tackled their missions with the precision of G.I. Joe and the camaraderie of the A-Team, their banter light but their goals serious. By morning, they’d vanish without a trace, leaving the school looking perfectly ordinary.

His pencil tapped the paper thoughtfully. “Why the invite?” he scribbled. Was this a special glimpse behind the scenes? It seemed unlikely. None of his friends had mentioned receiving such a mysterious summons.

Yet, there it was—embossed and elegant and golden and glorious. He was Charlie Bucket. And the letter? The candy bar wrapper of his Whipple-Scrumptious-Fudge-Mallow-Delight.

Opie added three more characters to the image: his mother, his father, and himself, each sporting dark glasses like Mrs. Howett’s. Finally, he drew a broad smile on his figure’s face, mirroring his own—blissfully unaware of what lay ahead.

For in this fleeting moment, Opie’s world was as simple and bright as any eight-year-old’s could be. Blissfully oblivious that even the most magical of tickets, the ones that promise worlds of wonder, can sometimes be printed on fool’s gold, and that the real adventures of life often unravel in ways far more intricate and bewildering than the wildest of fantasies.

PART 2: The Undiscovered Campus

As the sun began its descent, Opie stepped onto the after-hours campus to discover neither the secret converted spy base of his imagination nor the familiar grounds he thought he knew. It looked like his school. Yet, it did not.

The setting sun cast a dual tone of golden twilight and grayish hues, transforming his usually lively playground into a silent, sepia tone landscape. No joyful shouts. No vibrant colors. No giggles and chatter of play. The slides, swings, and sandpit, those constant companions of chaos and cheer, stood silent and somber, like seasoned actors waiting in the wings, their roles in the day’s drama concluded.

Opie experienced a dash of disappointment. But only a dash. Because the playground’s silent masquerade exuded an unconventional magic. Sure, it was unsettling—like the first time Opie saw his father with a clean-shaven face—but also curiously intriguing.

He began reanalyzing his initial assessment. While it wasn’t the after-hours adventure he’d scripted in his head, it was a story nevertheless—one his friends would be eager to hear and he would relish sharing.

In the halls, each squeak of Opie’s sneakers awakened exuberant sprites of sound. These sprites, once familiar with the overpowering uproar and the cramped confines of kids crowding their personal space, now, at long last, had the corridors to themselves! With glee, the sprites squealed in harmony, darting ahead and bouncing off each surface in spirited leaps and twirls. They returned again and again, each time with newly discovered friends, forming a lively chorus of echoes that danced along the once-constricted hallways.

And the floor!

Normally scuffed and dusty, it now transcended pure cleanliness; it shimmered under the overhead lights with such a polish that Opie was quite sure it was wet to the touch. Compelled by this illusion, he paused and reached down, tentatively pressing a finger against the cool, hard surface to determine the dampness.

(It was disappointingly dry.)

Opie felt a sudden surge of suspense as he reached the door of room 210.

Would what waited within be the room he knew, a second home of sorts? Or perhaps today, it would morph into something unrecognizable, a shell of its former self. Answering this unspoken inquiry, his father’s steady and reassuring hand pressed down on the handle, and the door creaked open.

The room he encountered tugged at Opie’s heartstrings with the force of unfamiliarity. His mother stepped in, a soft sigh eluding as she surveyed the space, but Opie remained anchored to the spot, peering into a room he didn’t recognize.

During the day, the air was rich with the unique bouquet of scents from the lunchroom’s cheesy pizza and the rubbery notes of rubbed erasers, all undercut with the zest of well-worn wax crayons.

Sunlight, warm and golden, poured through the windows, casting a theatrical glow which flowed through the storm of chalk dust swirling against the ebony board.

Sounds interlaced like a patchwork quilt—his friends swapping tales like trading cards, the mechanical whir of the wall-mounted pencil sharpener, and the rhythmic tap-tap-tap of Mrs. Howett’s purposeful strides through the maze of desks.

Now the room looked like a set after the closing curtain.

The desks and tables and chairs had been moved and stacked and rearranged. Fluorescent lights buzzed above, casting a sterile glow that turned the familiar cream walls into a dull, monochrome canvas.

The fresh, inky scent of markers was traded for a more clinical aroma, a blend of disinfectant and adult anxiety.

Thankfully, like a gentle nudge from an old friend, a familiar voice called out, “Welcome, Opie. How wonderful to have you and your parents pop in!”

PART 3: The Itty-Bitty Sitty Committee

Opie felt his face smile. There was Mrs. Howett, blooming right out from behind her desk. Her blouse, as usual, was a riot of florals clashing delightfully with her cherry-red lipstick. Her horn-rimmed glasses sported a perky shade of teal matching her signature powder blue sweater. She was a patch of perfect sky on a cloudy day, a smidgen of normal set against the backdrop of the bizarre. Unknown to Opie, however, another figure awaited inside.

As he crossed the threshold of his classroom door, Opie caught sight of the man he would, to this day, know only as the ‘Counselor.’ Standing soundlessly in the corner of the room, like a squiggle in the margins, his presence was a muted shade in a room desperately trying to regain its color. Opie felt his face unsmile.

The man was of a stature that fell notably short of what Opie had come to expect from grown-ups—a stark contrast to the towering figure of authority represented by his own six-foot-something father. Even Opie’s mother, who often spoke of herself as slight in stature, had a very good view of the top of the Counselor’s significant forehead. He was taller than Opie and his classmates, yet his height seemed to draw more from the realm of storybook Dwarfs than from the world of average adults.

His build, on the other hand, suggested a strong fondness for doughnuts. Or, so Opie deduced. This roundness made his head appear disproportionately large, like a balloon struggling to stay aloft atop a slightly larger balloon. It seemed his head, perhaps filled with grown-up worries and adult-sized thoughts, had ambitiously outpaced the rest of his body.

The first time he recalled seeing this person, Mrs. Howett had not introduced him as a ‘counselor’, but as an ‘observer.’ At the time, Opie had interpreted this to mean the man was an alien. Likely from another country rather than another planet. Opie reasoned that the latter scenario would have certainly raised eyebrows among the parents, if not drawn outright disapproval from the school board.

Now, getting a better look at the stranger, Opie revised his assessment. He didn’t resemble any kind of alien. Rather, Opie decided he looked more like a lawyer. In fact, upon reflection, Opie realized lawyers were often referred to as “Counselors,” and this notion suddenly clicked in his brain, satisfyingly justifying the title. But not the noble kind of lawyer, like Atticus in his mom’s favorite book and movie, but rather like the ones from television commercials promising free consultations and sporting thick-rimmed glasses. Their smiles a tad too eager. Suits a shade too shiny. This man, however, lacked even the sheen of televised charisma, his appearance more a caricature than a tribute to the profession.

Still, whether a lawyer or an alien, Opie felt uncomfortable with his presence. Something in his tone. An air of sarcasm, not quite rude but bordering on indifference. It was as though he saw the kids not as young people full of ideas and questions but as a minor detail in a larger, more important narrative he was scripting in his oversized head.

Like when he stated, “Opie, how about you take a seat at the back?” It didn’t sound like a question. Rather, it sounded like he was telling Opie he was but a minor character in a drama he couldn’t yet understand.

Standing at her side, Opie looked up at his mother, whose warm face was awaiting him in anticipation. “Why don’t you go sit with your notebook?” she suggested while delicately brushing the hair from Opie’s forehead. “Catch a few fireflies while we talk, okay?”

Obediently, Opie made his way to a distant corner where his desk had been sidelined along with the others lined up inexplicably along the walls. He pulled out his favorite notebook, flipped to a clean sheet of paper and, somewhere near the edge of a page, wrote the notion that had been in the back of his mind for some time: “where are they going to sit?”

This notion, it appeared, had not occurred to anyone other than the 8-year-old.

As the adults moved through the classroom, a subtle yet straightforward understanding gently tapped on each of their shoulders, manifesting in their hesitant glances and slight frowns of perplexity. The room, a realm usually tailored to the dimensions of third-graders, offered only one chair built for an adult – Mrs. Howett’s desk chair, a solitary island of size-appropriate comfort in a sea of pint-sized seating.

This awkward awareness gradually crept into the class’s atmosphere, almost palpable in its silent progression. Opie, observing from his vantage point, watched as his mother, father, and the Counselor each, in turn, came to terms with this unanticipated predicament. The Counselor, initially poised with a stoic demeanor, allowed a flicker of surprise to cross his face, quickly masked by a return to his professional facade.

Opie’s father, after a brief survey of the room, offered a resigned chuckle, as if acknowledging the unspoken comedy of the situation. His mother, ever graceful, exhibited a momentary look of contemplation before accepting the reality with a willowy nod, conceding to an unspoken challenge.

Opie and his pencil studied the slow dance of adult adaptation to a child-sized world. It struck Opie, with a clarity that only comes from observing the ordinary turned extraordinary, how this room – so familiar and yet so altered in its evening guise – brought out a childlike adaptability in even the most composed of adults.

Only Mrs. Howett, a veteran of such-sized seating, seemed unvexed as she settled into a tiny chair with the ease of a daily routine. Opie’s mom, exuding elegance, perched daintily on the rim of her tiny seat, her posture regal, reminiscent of a queen gracefully adapting to a throne far too small. The Counselor began to sit, but paused, evidently weighing his own girth and stature against the modest dimensions of the chairs. After a moment of judicious assessment, he opted to stand beside Mrs. Howett, sparing himself the mismatch.

Then there was Opie’s dad. A giant among the Lilliputian furnishings.

He tried on several poses. An undignified dance of dips and redirections.

For one long, awkward moment prompting Opie to giggle more than he knew was acceptable, his dad tried to straddle the chair, a cowboy taming a wild plastic Mustang, too vibrant and blue to be bridled. Eventually, he surrendered, tucking himself into the seat, knees jostling for space with his chest.

As the meeting commenced, with each adult cautiously settling into their undersized surroundings, the room filled with a blend of earnest conversation and the unspoken acknowledgment of the evening’s peculiar charm. Opie and his pencil and his notebook, now bearing witness to this moment of gentle absurdity, couldn’t help but feel a part of something strangely significant – a grown-up meeting, reframed through the whimsical lens of a child’s world.

PART 4 – Creative Use of School Essentials

Mrs. Howett, with a deliberate clearing of her throat, signaled the commencement of the meeting. Her voice, imbued with warmth, broke the silence, “We’d like to acknowledge Opie’s exceptional imagination. His creativity,” she paused, her gaze momentarily dipping in contemplation, “is indeed unique.”

In his chair, Opie straightened, a subtle swell of pride lifting his posture. His pencil danced across the paper, scribbling a self-portrait taking a bow, encircled by abstract silhouettes of his classmates and Mrs. Howett, their hands raised in applause.

The Counselor, with a deliberate readjustment of his glasses, interjected, his voice carrying a weight that seemed to anchor the air around him. “This is precisely the concern I raised, prompting me to suggest Mrs. Howett reach out. Opie’s wandering focus, it seems, meanders rather frequently, causing a ripple of disruption in her classes.”

Opie’s pencil faltered, only to resume with a new character in the sketch. It drew a figure, notably round and bespectacled, standing apart from the applauding crowd, its expression marked by a conspicuous frown on a fairly enormous head.

Opie’s dad, his eyebrow arching skyward, echoed the Counselor’s words, infusing them with a tinge of inquiry: “Opie’s wandering focus?”

“Often?” his mother added, her voice lacing the word with a delicate blend of skepticism and curiosity.

Mrs. Howett, nestled in her diminutive chair, responded with a swiftness that betrayed her unease. “Well, I wouldn’t characterize it as ‘often’. However, Opie does exhibit certain… tendencies that, um…”

The Counselor, still upright and yet almost level with the seated adults, slid a hand into his trouser pocket. With his free hand, he began a dismissive dance of his fingers, as if batting away an invisible nuisance. Simultaneously, he seemed to feed prompts to Mrs. Howett, “Fidgeting. Daydreaming. Arbitrary unsolicited outbursts.”

Mrs. Howett, her words spilling forth in a rhythm that hinted at a script only partially committed to memory, continued, “Opie, at times, particularly during exams or silent reading periods, has been known to… let’s say, stray from the task at hand.”

Opie’s father, still negotiating an uneasy truce with the undersized chair, subtly shifted to one side, perhaps to ease a leg cramp. He chimed in, “Opie loves his books. He can get lost in reading for hours.” Seeking affirmation, he glanced towards his wife, only to be met with a look tinged with faint apprehension. Responding with a thoughtful sigh and a nod of acknowledgment, he added, “But yeah. He’ll blurt out some random things here and there while he’s reading. A lot.”

The Counselor interjected, clearing his throat conspicuously. Mrs. Howett, dutifully acknowledging the cue, turned to him and caught his hand mid-gesture, as if sketching an invisible picture in the air.

“Yes,” Mrs. Howett hesitated, choosing her words with care, “Opie also has a tendency to—uh— ”

“Misuse school essentials,” interjected the Counselor, his volume unexpectedly brisk, as if revealing a thrilling secret. “Specifically, permanent markers.”

The Counselor emphasized, “Specifically, school stationary.”

“Misuse of markers?” his mother questioned, clearly fishing for more details before crafting her reply.

“Permanent Markers.” Reiterated the Counselor.

“Drawings, mostly,” Mrs. Howett elaborated, “usually of robots.”

The councilor felt compelled to further elaborate. “On desks,” he stressed, “Various desks, to be exact.”

Mrs. Howett nodded, her face reflecting a mix of apology and understanding. “We’ve had to remove the drawings from the desks.”

“Frequently.” Counselor specified, his skill at adding emphasis clearly keen.

Opie doodled a new drawing of the Counselor, hugging and kissing his own word bubbles, hearts of love floating around his oversized stick figure head.

In response, Opie’s mother took a moment. She pondered. She nodded slowly. She fell into a second, deeper ponder, her eyes narrowing a bit in contemplation, her lips pursed in silent analysis. After a carefully measured pause, she nodded again. To herself, really. Validating an internal conversation.

This was her signature ‘ponder-pause-ponder’ maneuver, a subtle yet cunning tactic she had honed over the years. She employed it whenever she found herself in discussions where others tried to dominate or steer the narrative aggressively.

It was a strategy of quiet dominance. In these moments of reflective silence, Opie’s mother had a way of turning the tide of any conversation. Her pauses were filled with unspoken words, often leading those around her to second-guess their assertions or question their own conclusions. The room would fill with an anticipatory tension, waiting for her to break the silence. It was a tactful way of regaining control, making even the most assertive speakers doubt their stance and anxiously await her input.

When she finally spoke, her words were measured, her gaze shifting deliberately between the counselor and Mrs. Howett. “So, to clarify,” her eyes settled on Mrs. Howett, “Opie used markers…” then turning to the counselor, “…to doodle.”

This was not a question. Nevertheless, all eyes, including Mrs. Howett’s, focused on the Counselor for the answer.

It took him a moment to realize this, and the only response he managed was, “Well…”

“I mean—” she interrupted, “‘Doodling’ doesn’t feel like a ‘misuse’ of a marker. I would argue that doodling is, in fact, one of its primary purposes.”

“Exactly,” agreed Opie’s dad, “And if you don’t want surfaces near kids marked permanently, then don’t give the kid a permanent marker.”

The Counselor emitted a low, rumbling grunt, more of a growl really, his amusement evidently absent as his gaze shifted toward Mrs. Howett. He uttered a single word, small but heavy with implication: “Fort.”

Mrs. Howett, fingers dancing a thoughtful ballet in the air, echoed the sentiment. “Yes. Fort.”

A silent exchange of glances, loaded with unspoken questions, passed between Opie’s parents. It was a dance of raised eyebrows and half-smiles, an unscripted choreography of parental intrigue.

“Did you just say-” Opie’s father inquired, “-what did you just say?”

“Did you say ‘fort’?” Opie’s mother inserted.

Affirmation came with a nod from Mrs. Howett, her expression suggesting equal parts disapproval and unintended awe. “There was indeed an, um, elaborate stationary fort that Opie, um, constructed in the playground just last week,” her voice betrayed a hint of admiration. “Fashioned from an assortment of items he commandeered from around the room.”

“The quantity of stationery was noteworthy,” added the Counselor, his words wrapped in an almost-smile that never quite reached the depth of his eyes. “A significant quantity of stationary.”

Opie beamed. He had been honestly proud of that fort.

And why not? It had a working paper clip drawbridge!

Also, he had been delighted to discover that the thirteen spools of Scotch tape not only reinforced the fort’s sturdiness and water resistance but also gave the entire structure a futuristic sheen and a pleasant aroma, which he found reminiscent of Christmastime.

Notwithstanding, Opie’s pride was placed aside by his parents’ poor reactions to the polaroid documentation of his fort – a departure from their usual repertoire of chuckles and grins. These ‘somber parent’ faces, chisled with thought and solemnity, were unfamiliar markers on the map of his childhood. For the first time, Opie found himself navigating the murky waters of uncertainty, feeling the heavy weight of the conversation pressing down upon him, a tangible pang of vulnerability piercing his youthful armor.

His pencil, keen to help but unsure of how, moved hesitantly across the page of his notebook. Disoriented, it drew not one, not two, but three emphatic question marks, each meticulously shaded, as if to mirror the intensity of his parents’ newfound seriousness. Below these looming symbols of inquiry, in letters so small they seemed to tiptoe across the paper, Opie inscribed, ‘Am I in trouble?’ – a whisper that spoke volumes of his internal anxiety.

PART 5 – A Brief History of Impactful Sentences

In the repositories of Opie’s recollections, only a select few written words find permanent residence. At least, not explicitly. For example, a sentence from his first girlfriend’s handwritten note, marking the twilight of their fleeting three-day romance, holds a special place:

“I do think you are funny, and I hope you’ll still make me laugh.”

Then there’s the life-changing letter from Steven Spielberg, a pivotal accolade in Opie’s journey, acknowledging him as one of the first Boy Scouts to earn the cinematography merit badge:

“Congratulations! I look forward to seeing your films!”

This same note introduced Opie inadvertently to the concept of form letters. Yet, this insight scarcely subdued the sheen of its significance, both in that cherished moment and in reflective nostalgia.

These examples, while poignant, pale in comparison to the prominence of one specific sentence in Opie’s memory. This sentence is metaphorically highlighted in the brightest yellow, underlined with emphasis, bolded for significance, encircled in the most striking red, and eternally enshrined in the hallowed halls of Opie’s internal natural history museum. A calculated configuration of unconventional words ordained to etch an indelible impression on his self-perception that would resonate of decades yet to unfold.

The sentence came riding into Opie’s life within an otherwise inconspicuous cream-colored file folder, revealed with some amount of dramatic flair by the counselor, as though presenting surprise testimony in a trial case all had thought lost.

The folder was placed on the desk, opened with deliberate hesitance, turned ninety degrees once, then a second time, before being slid towards Opie’s parents with all the pomp and circumstance of a black-tie waiter presenting the main course at a fancy restaurant. Inside, a handwritten note.

A single sentence encircled.

The room shrank around him. He couldn’t see the paper, but in his mind’s eye, he was right there, caught between his parents as the counselor’s finger moved across each word as he read aloud:

“Opie Cooper may not flourish in normal environments.”

The words pealed themselves from the note stretching towards Opie, growing in mass and volume, darkening the fluorescents before dropping upon him, wrapping around his chest, squeezing just enough to alarm him.

Opie’s mother stole a quick, discreet glance at him, silently hoping he was lost in his notebook, shielded from the sharpness of the previous words. Her face flushed, a mother’s instinct to protect surfacing swiftly. She sent Opie a gentle, reassuring air kiss, a silent gesture of support, which did in fact relieve a bit of the tightness in his chest.

His mother turned back to the discussion in progress. Words were exchanged. His father said something about being “insulted for his son,” and the counselor responded with something about intentions, his voice a blend of professional detachment and underlying firmness.

When Opie’s own eyes returned to his notebook, he saw that someone with unsteady handwriting had jotted down two words: ‘Normal Environments’. The shaky letters quivered on the page, echoing his inner turmoil.

His pencil floated above the word “Normal,” before scribbling a question mark behind it, and three words above:

“Am I not…”

In that moment, the words on the page transformed from mere graphite and clay to a defining marker in Opie’s life, etching a clear charcoal-colored line between the confidence of childhood and the insecurities of growing up.

PART 6 – Opie & the F-Word

Opie didn’t write out the word “flourish,” and not simply because he had no clue how to spell it.

It was because the word made him angry. It made no sense. He didn’t understand it.

‘Flourish’—to him, the word conjured images of blooming flowers, a term he associated with gardens, not people. Why would they use a word about flowers to talk about him? His mind scoured for a relatable, visual context, something familiar and meaningful. Naturally, his thoughts turned to a movie. One of the most emotionally impactful movies he had encountered so far in his young life—“E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial.”

His thoughts settled on the aliens in the movie, gentle gardeners of the cosmos, enamored with Earth’s blossoming wonders. The pivotal scene where E.T.’s fate intertwined with a wilting flower resonated deeply with him. The flower’s rejuvenation as E.T. healed had etched itself into Opie’s memory—a living metaphor for resilience and belonging.

An interesting scenario started to swirl in his head. What if he needed isolation from the ordinary world? He pictured his house encased in cellophane, linked to reality by sprawling transparent hamster tunnels. In this peculiar realm, he’d reign over a labyrinth of tubes, corridors, and unique chambers.

At first, the notion held a peculiar charm for Opie—his home transformed into a sanctuary of the surreal, where visitors, sheathed in hazmat suits like the elusive agent Keys from E.T., would navigate air-locked portals. Their muffled laughter would reverberate down the translucent corridors, an echo of camaraderie contained within this whimsical labyrinth. It was a scenario that unfurled in Opie’s mind with a strange allure, not at all dreadful in its inception. But as his imagination continued to paint this scene, a subtle shift occurred. The once vivid tapestry of his thoughts began to lose its luster, the playful echoes in the halls giving way to a silence that spoke of isolation more than solitude. The corridors, ensconced in bubble wrap and clear tunnels, whispered questions of sensory deprivation—what of the caress of sunlight, or the warmth found in unencumbered embrace? As the fantasy continued to unfold, the very walls that protected also seemed to isolate, turning expressions of affection into impersonal gestures obscured by layers of plastic.

Opie’s rogue fantasy began to retract. The reel unraveled, revealing once again the stark reality of the classroom. The voices of adults gradually regained clarity and volume, pulling Opie back from the depths of his daydreams to the immediacy of the here and now.

In the hush of room 210, where the fading afternoon sun cast long shadows across the desks, Opie sat, legs swinging. He became aware that no one was talking. He saw his mother nodding to herself. She leaned forward, looking the counselor right in the eye, and asked: “Do you have a front yard?”

PART 7 – A Flower Among Weeds

The counselor contemplated the question with visual effort. Even Opie, who was a connoisseur of randomly asked questions, was curious about where his mother was going with this.

“No, I live in an apartment,” the counselor replied, a note of uncertainty in his voice.

Opie’s mother conveyed her understanding with a nod, her voice gentle yet inquisitive. “Does your apartment have landscaping?” Her tone was like a soft breeze, gently coaxing a kite to climb a little higher in the sky.

“Yes, it’s one of the reasons I chose it,” the counselor nodded, a hint of pride seeping in. “Beautiful gardens, topiary along–

Opie’s father made an indistinct noise as he placed his “shh” finger to his lips, offering the counselor a meaningful, but quite earnest glance. It was his father’s version of a discrete signal, underscoring the rhetorical art of his wife’s wisdom—a lesson unfolding, not not only for Opie, but perhaps for the counselor as well.

“Does anyone take care of those gardens?” Opie’s mother tilted her head slightly, a quick, subtle motion that echoed the curiosity in her voice, her expression as inquisitive as her words.

“Of course,” assured the counselor. “The groundskeepers are out there all the time.”

In the heart of a quiet room, the words of Opie’s mother unfurled like tendrils of a vine, gentle and persistent. “Consider, if you will, a garden,” she began, her voice a soft brushstroke in the canvas of silence, “not merely plots of earth and seed, but a testament to patience and understanding.”

The counselor’s eyes flickered, curious despite himself, as the room leaned into her narrative embrace.

“A gardener’s true task,” she continued, her tone dipping and rising with the rhythm of her tale, “is to know that each bloom and blade of grass has its own voice, whispering its needs to those who would listen.”

Mrs. Howett, who had never been one for poetry, found herself nodding, drawn into the metaphor’s unfolding petals. It was an acknowledgment of shared insights, a silent accord blooming between them.

“The strongest of sunflowers may bask in the heat, robust and eager for the light, while the delicate fern recoils from such fervor, seeking solace in the cool shade,” Opie’s mother elaborated, her hands gesturing the dance of growth and retreat.

The room held its breath, the narrative’s roots delving deeper, winding around them in an unseen embrace.

“But what of the garden left to chance?” she asked, her gaze steady, inviting them to envision such a world. “Where the whispers of the fern go unheard, drowned out by the clamor of hardier breeds?”

Mrs. Howett’s eyes, alight with understanding, met hers. “Weeds,” she intoned, a soft note of revelation in her voice. “They are but survivors in a world not shaped for them, growing in places others cannot—often misunderstood in their tenacity.”

Opie’s mother smiled faintly, the seeds of understanding sown. “Precisely,” she agreed. “In another life, they might be wildflowers, pioneers in landscapes unclaimed.”

She allowed the thought to take root among them before continuing. “In our garden,” she said, a hand briefly touching her heart, “the unique plants, like our children,” her eyes flickered towards Opie with a warmth that spoke volumes, “they are more than their blooms. They are soul and story, potential that withers if forced into sunlight when they are meant for the dusk.”

The counselor, a figure often unswayed, found in her words a clarity that sharpened his vision.

“Different care,” he echoed, the term lingering, tasting of newfound comprehension.

Opie watched as his mother’s words lingered in the room, sunlight seeping through a canopy of leaves. They went beyond the defense of her own child; they were advocating a new way of understanding children like hers, not as problems to be fixed or transplanted, but as unique individuals with their distinctive ways of developing.

The conversation had shifted the room’s atmosphere, turning it into a space ripe for reflection, if not complete understanding.

The counselor’s expression shifted, contemplative, as if processing this new perspective.

A wordless exchange passed between Mrs. Howett and Opie, marked by a refreshed shared respect.

Amid this pensive silence, Opie’s dad lean forward with a trademark twinkle in his eyes—a familiar prelude to his way of tying up one of his wife’s insights. “You know those mowers that spin like a top? They’re called ‘zero-turn,’ but why? It turns a full 360 degrees. If it made zero turns, it would strictly go in straight lines, constantly. Right?”

The counselor simply nodded, unsure of the proper response. Opie’s dad hadn’t really been talking to the counselor, though. He was talking to Opie and his mom. This was their family’s way. Their unique rhythm. Nothing overly silly. Also, nothing was strictly serious. Life, much like a garden, thrives best with a balance of work and enjoyment.

Epilogue – Opie Cooper May Flourish

In the days that followed, Opie walked the transformed hallways of Saint Martin Elementary with a new sense of freedom. The corridors, once just passages, now beckoned with promise and potential.

The counselor, a man who had been a vague figure in the margins of Opie’s school life, soon left, presumably, Opie assumed, to return to his homeworld. In his place came fresh faces, educators with smiles that met their eyes and words that wafted with wonder rather than with judgment.

One such face belonged to Ms. Troyanovich, a teacher with a laugh that sounded like music and ideas as bright as her colorful scarves. She introduced Opie and a few other students to an exclusive class—a place where the desks were arranged not in rigid rows, but in a circle, like friends gathering for a story.

Here, Opie found kindred spirits—kids who colored outside the lines, both literally and figuratively. They shared stories, built fantastical structures from classroom materials, and doodled their thoughts on any surface that could bear their mark, regardless of rules.

Later that year, just a few weeks shy of his ninth birthday, Opie gazed at a fresh, blank page in his notebook. It had occurred to him that he was destined to discover new and challenging insecurities, a distinct awareness that came with losing the blissful ignorance of youth, unburdened by judgment. And that’s when his eye-opening 8-year-old epiphany crystallized. The discovery of one’s insecurities was a natural part of growing up. Each new challenge brought evidence of growth. And to grow meant to flourish.

His pencil danced across the page, sketching four figures in safari-style hats. One armed with a rake, another with a watering can. A third wielded a giant pair of scissors, and the fourth, a tiny one-handed shovel. His groundskeepers. Mrs. Howett. Mrs. Troyanovich. His mother and his father.

They were the ones who showed him that he was neither a weed nor a delicate flower, but a bloom flourishing just as he should. And no matter what insecurities might spring up, he knew he had a fertile ground where new forms of confidence could also take root.

As he snapped his notebook shut and returned to the comforting embrace of his home, Opie’s mind brimmed with possibilities. He strode forward, heart aglow with the spirit of an explorer, eagerly anticipating the unfolding chapters of his own extraordinary journey.”

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