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You won’t find it
mentioned in any Albany guidebook, no
matter how obscure. And forget about
Google. Even the beefed-up security
force of the post-911 era hasn’t a
clue that there is a dragon residing
at the rear of the New York State
Museum. That’s right, a real, live,
fire-breathing dragon, one wise and
powerful enough to survive St. George
and all the other knights in shining
armor, and in modern times Walt
Disney, Harry Potter, and reality TV.
It was my wife who first uncovered
this startling fact, quite by
accident, not long after the museum’s
construction over thirty years ago.
One morning Betsy was walking with her
kindergarten class along the edge of
Lincoln Park, above which the building
perches on a man-made plateau
overlooking the historic eastern
portion of the city. It was midwinter.
Suddenly someone spied a plume of
steam coming out of the roof directly
above a giant spiral staircase that
rises up mysteriously in the back and
appears to lead to nowhere.
Now any other observers would have
foolishly assumed what they were
seeing was the exhaust from an unseen
heating vent, made visible by the
frigid January temperatures. But for
Betsy and her kids there could only be
one possible explanation—dragon’s
breath.
The group boldly decided to
investigate. Slowly and with much
trepidation they wound their way up,
stopping frequently to listen for any
sign that the dragon might be awake.
At the top, some fifty feet above the
ground, they found a bronze colored
door, big enough for a mastodon to fit
through, set into the museum’s top
storey. The door was locked. They
decided not to knock, unanimously
agreeing that arousing a slumbering
dragon might not be such a hot idea.
Besides it was almost lunchtime and
their bellies were beginning to growl.
But why the museum? Was the ancient
reptile attracted to the almost
medieval cast of the building’s
ultramodern design? Or to the
excellent hunting opportunities
afforded by the adjacent park, which
covers a dozen city blocks and is
replete with small tasty mammals? Or
maybe it wanted to be near its
dinosaur cousins, who stand frozen in
time inside.
Later that evening Betsy reflected
privately on the morning’s events.
Perhaps, she mused, if children had a
wish—not the Santa Claus variety but
some urgent, deep-seated need—and if
they had the courage to walk up those
stairs alone and drop their
handwritten supplications on the
dragon’s doorstep, then possibly the
dragon might read them and make them
come true.
So Betsy came in the next morning and
talked with her kids about the magical
powers of dragons. She asked them if
there was anything they thought they
might need their own dragon’s help
with. Not surprisingly, all seven
heads nodded vigorously. Then she met
with each child privately to help
write down the messages. After that
they bundled up and headed off for the
back of the museum, freshly penned, or
I should say penciled, notes tightly
in hand.
Thus a tradition was born, one that
has become an annual rite of passage
for Albany Free School five-year-olds.
After fifteen years or so, Betsy left
the school to become a midwife and I
was appointed leader of this bizarre
pilgrimage of preschoolers. This year,
when I returned to working primarily
with our elementary-age students, I
passed the torch on to Mike.
Which is how it happened that Marie,
trembling with a delicious blend of
terror and excitement, looked up at me
during breakfast yesterday morning and
said, “Chris, Mike told me I should
ask you if you will take our class up
to the dragon’s house today.”
I nearly choked on the coffee I was
sipping. Marie was holding two
carefully folded pieces of loose-leaf
paper, the letters done in purple
marker.
“Can we, please?” She was probably
beginning to wonder why I wasn’t
responding to her question.
But I was too stunned—of all children,
Marie. Just the other day Mike and I
had shared our concerns over her
upcoming transition into the
elementary section of the school. Here
the only actual division among
students is between the two floors of
the old parochial school building. The
preschoolers occupy the second floor
and are therefore known as “upstairs
kids.” When they are mentally and
emotionally mature enough to steer
themselves and to hold their own in
the school’s system of governance and
conflict resolution, they graduate
from the preschool and move downstairs
to the first floor. Marie is
responsible almost to a fault. But she
is also a timid, sometimes tentative
child, and leaving the upstairs nest
can be quite daunting at first.
“I wrote down my wishes at home last
night,” persisted Marie, not a trace
of hesitation in her voice. “I sounded
out the words all by myself."
I had been meaning for months to
initiate Mike and his kids into the
mysteries of the dragon, but had just
been too busy downstairs. Obviously it
was time.
“Wow, Marie, you already have your
notes?”
Her grin broadened.
“Of course I will take you, but I
really think we should talk first. I
want to make sure you all realize what
you’re getting yourselves into.”
“Can we do it now?”
Before I could answer she had already
dashed off to round up the others. In
that moment a leader was born.
I counted seven young heads sitting at
the low table in the kindergarten
room. How perfect. “Do you know what a
dragon is?” I asked the assembled
group.
My question set off a flurry of
descriptions, to which I added
occasional embellishment so that
everyone would be sufficiently
wide-eyed before we departed.
“And do you understand that the dragon
will only honor your wish if you are
brave enough to climb up to his
doorstep by yourself?”
“Oh, that’s okay; I’m not scared,”
chimed two cocky boys in the class,
almost in unison.
And Denial is a river in Egypt.
I left Mike to help the kids with
their notes, and about a half-hour
later the nine of us set off up the
hill. Normally Free School outings
start out like the Indianapolis 500,
with the kids racing madly to the next
corner and waiting for the slowpoke
adults to catch up. But this time no
one seemed eager to set the pace. At
times Mike and I had to be careful
there were no little shoes underfoot
as we walked. The two “fearless” boys
were uncharacteristically mute.
When we arrived at the base of the
staircase I reminded everyone about
the necessity of making the ascent
alone. “And it’s okay if you don’t
make it the whole way the first time,”
I added. “Mike can bring you back as
many times as you need him to.”
What ensued was as funny as any Three
Stooges outtake. “I’ll go second,”
said one of the kids.
“No, I’ll go second.”
“No. I’ll go second.”
As the echo continued to ripple
through the group, the scene grew even
more comical. The kids actually formed
a physical line—very uncommon behavior
for free schoolers—and each time they
found themselves in the front, they
hastily dropped out and retreated to
the rear.
Meanwhile, Mike and I did what any
good teacher should do in a novel
situation such as this: we became
invisible. While the kids chattered on
like nervous birds driven to cover by
a hungry falcon, we sat back against a
concrete pillar and stared off blankly
into space.
A full ten minutes passed before any
feet mounted the first step. And then
an interesting kind of group support
began to emerge. It took shape
organically, in the wonderful way that
children’s play always does when it
isn’t adult structured and managed.
The kids, each in turn, began climbing
one step higher than the classmate
before them. I was suddenly reminded
of Kropotkin’s Mutual Aid, in which he
suggested that it is cooperation and
not Darwin’s “red in tooth and claw”
notion that propels forward the
evolutionary process. Very often,
observed Kropotkin in the wilds of his
native Russia, a species under threat
will work together to co-invent a way
to survive.
The kids’ shared strategy got them up
and around the first turn, out of
sight of the ground. But for some time
this remained the upper limit. No one
was willing to chance it any further.
It was simply too damned scary.
And then up stepped Marie. “I’m going
to try to go all the way,” she
announced quietly.
There was still fear in her
expression, but also an unmistakable
look of determination. Mike and I
turned toward each other and nodded.
It didn’t take a mind reader to sense
that something big was about to happen
The other children must have felt it
too, because one by one they fell
silent when Marie climbed beyond the
first curve and disappeared from
sight.
A minute or two passed, but it seemed
much longer. Then there came a
high-pitched call from the top. Not a
shout, but somehow that voice could’ve
been heard over the rush hour din in
mid-town Manhattan.
“I made it!”
I looked to my left and saw Mike
quietly take out the blue bandana that
he sometimes wears over his closely
shaven head and begin dabbing at his
eyes. It was quite a sight. This
former personal trainer, with thick
gold rings in his ears and muscles
bulging out of a tee shirt that always
seems two sizes too small, had been
moved to tears by the triumph of his
student.
There are so many teachings embedded
in this very true story, about
Einstein and the power of imagination,
or Bruno Bettelheim and the positive
uses of enchantment, or children’s
inner knowing and their instinctive
ability to create the growth
experiences that are right for them,
or the importance of facing our fears
in our own time and our own way. I
could write a whole book, really, but
instead I will conclude like I think
the wise old dragon might—and leave
the readers to draw their own
conclusions.
[click here to
contact Chris] |