HEADCASES AND HEADLOCKS
Of
all the oddball comments I’d heard in TEFL over the years, the words that
issued from the Principal’s mouth that lunchtime definitely made the top three.
Sweeping into the staffroom with his hand clasped to his brow, he blurted to no
one in particular, “That idiot’s just put one of the Thai girls in a headlock”.
Books were slowly closed, and eyes cast downwards, as we strived collectively
to imagine circumstances in which putting a Thai girl in a headlock would be a)
necessary, or b) warranted. The Thai girls at the school at the time were all
demure, unfailingly polite and cheerful, and none of them appeared likely to
require incapacitating physical restraint.
The
“idiot” in question, whose name slips my mind, was one of the many unhinged
summer teachers who’d descended out of nowhere and tricked their way onto the
staff due to a long career spent teaching English all over the world. In fact,
a long career in TEFL should arguably be a very good reason not to employ
someone, such is the psychological deterioration frequently witnessed with the
passing of the years, but that’s an argument to be fleshed out on another occasion.
He
was a heavy-set gent, probably in his late forties or early fifties, and there
was something unnerving about him. Everything, from the way he walked to the
manner in which he engaged in conversation, was just a little too… deliberate. He stomped
around heavily as if he’d finally decided to grab an axe and put a stop to his neighbour’s
late-night trumpet practice. He asked bizarre questions about subjects nobody
had any idea about, such as the Welsh Assembly’s new rules on use of the Welsh
language in dog training and the like, which a Welsh colleague dismissed with a
delightfully crisp, “How should I bloody know?” And he had plans to conquer
Europe by travelling around camp sites teaching English to continental caravaners,
a scheme which we were all too eager to encourage, even offering to help him
find out about ferry timetables. So, when word reached us that he’d grabbed an
unsuspecting Thai student in class from behind and playfully set about strangling
her, disbelief was not the common reaction, but rather weary resignation.
The
Principle, genuinely decent and ever the peacemaker, was forced into a corner
and felt he had to act decisively. The heavy-handed goon would have to be dismissed for gross
misconduct, with immediate effect, he concluded.
The
next day I arrived at the school and a colleague had casually asked the
Principal how the sacking had gone, to which I caught the tail end of his reply. “…
Because I’m a bloody coward!” he roared, as he bounded up the stairs to the safety of his
office. I wondered whether there had been some sort of physical confrontation,
and maybe the Principal had backed down, but when the full facts came to light,
it turned out that he’d driven out to a remote farm where the muttonhead was
staying, and rather than risk a possible showdown, the consequences of which
would have been, to say the least, unpredictable, particularly on a remote farm, he had left his letter of dismissal
wedged in the gate and run for it, and I can’t say I blame him for that.
The
nitwit must have received and read the letter, because we never saw or heard from him again
and we never knew whether he had gone on to terrorise European camping
enthusiasts or received the clarifications he felt he required regarding the
Welsh Assembly’s linguistic directives.
But peace once again reigned in the kingdom, however briefly.
But peace once again reigned in the kingdom, however briefly.
3 Comments:
I have missed you Mr Ward, welcome back.
Thank you Mrs Fishlifter, it's nice to be back.
I do hope you have not definitively hung up your keyboard ... we live in troubled times and your acid wit is a welcome antidote/anecdote. We may be headed to hell in a hand cart, but it doesn't mean we can't enjoy a good laugh from time to time.
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