I saw a piece of flair on facebook the other day that said, "I was uncool, before uncool was cool." I love that because it's so perfectly true. People go to extreme lengths to show their disdain for the mainstream or what they consider cool. For instance, I am starting to really love plain white t-shirts because everyone is wearing so many graphic t-shirts right now. But I'm not wearing them because I'm so abundantly secure in my coolness that I think "who cares what everyone else is doing." I might like to pretend that, but I'm really doing it because I want to stand out like a beacon of white t-shirted sarcasm in a sea of visually complicated graphic t's. And I don't think I am alone in this silly thinking. But in reacting to mainstream cool this way, in trying to be unique and go the opposite direction, we've all ended up in the land of anti-cool. And if we're all there, then we've transformed being different into something mainstream. So uncool is now the new cool.
These are the confusing, circular conversations that go through my head when I pick a t-shirt to wear to my church small group. That might feel stressful but it's nothing like the stress I used to feel when we went on youth group retreats. We could probably do a million posts on that general topic, but the specific issue I want to focus on today is "riding on the cool van in youth group."
It would be awesome if youth group was a safe haven free of cliques and gossip and all the other things that seem to first blossom in junior high and high school. I wish we all did fire drills together at gas stations and had walkie talkies to chit chat between the vans on the way to retreats and that the cool kids were evenly dispersed and we all got ponies and pants made of cotton candy. La, la, la.
But we don't. There is a distinct caste system when it comes to which van you ride in. I can't change that with this post. What I can do however is reveal to you the secret techniques I used to get on the cool van when I was in youth group.
1. Bring snacks
Cool kids are often easily tricked with snacks. Become the "gum guy" or the "candy chick" or the "lollipop lad." (OK, that last one is probably going to require you wearing brightly festooned, stripped pants. Scratch that.) But eventually, once you have established that you travel with delicious treats, cool kids will start actually recruiting you for their van. That's a great feeling. Whatever you do though, make sure you don't give away your bag of food before everyone picks vehicles. If you do, you might find yourself on the uncool van while your bag of deliciousness lives it up on the cool van. On the highway you'd just see your big bag of tootsie rolls pressed up against the window of the cool van mocking you as it learned all the "you had to be there jokes" that are going to dominate every conversation during the retreat.
2. Be the first on the van.
Typically, before a retreat, we all stand around in the parking lot waiting for everyone to show up. People just casually hang out and load their bags. This is your moment to strike. While everyone is distracted, go ahead and get on the van. I don't care if you have to sit in there by yourself for 45 minutes. Get in, buckle up and claim your spot. Which van do you get on? Do your homework. Get on the one that the cool kids sat on the last few retreats you went to. Chances are it's the van that doesn't regularly break down or have engine fires. Every church has at least one of these vans. You know which one I am talking about.
3. Smell nice.
I only buy deodorants that have a combination of some sort of the following words in the name, "Xtreme," "Zone," "Power," and "Thunder." Why, you ask? Because the smelly kid rarely gets to ride on the cool van. And sweating is apparently one of my spiritual gifts. But be careful on this one, don't overdo it. Smelling nice also means you have not drowned every inch of your skin in Axe "Dark Temptation" body spray. (I wish I was making that scent up, but here's how Dark Temptation is described on Wikipedia, "A chocolate smelling fragrance that implies that because women like chocolate, they will find men who smell of chocolate irresistible.") Trust me on this one, don't try to get on the cool van by smelling like a candy bar made of chocolate and nougat. Keep it simple. Just shower regularly and wear a normal deodorant. "Xtreme Thunder Power" works pretty well for me. (If you don't have access to fancy deodorants, simply hang around the nicest smelling person in youth group. It's like drafting, or running behind someone so that they have to do all the work of fighting wind resistance. You will smell nice just by association.)
I could share more of the secrets that helped me have an 87% percent cool van success rate over the years but if God ever calls me to youth ministry I might have to use them again. For although youth leaders might pretend that they are immune to the cool van phenomenon, they are not. They just call it the "chill van phenomenon" which refers to the van that has all the kids in it that are just going to chill on the ride up instead of lighting fireworks, throwing a variety of things out the window, and bouncing off the walls from 19 energy drinks. Or basically, acting like us pastor's kids.
Uncool is cool? YESSSSSSSS (insert HUGE arm pump here), I finally made it!!!! (It's also nice to be #1 occasionally.....LOL)
ReplyDeleteHey! That's my flair you saw! Unofficial shout-out! WOOO!
ReplyDeleteAhem. Really, though, I've always been terribly uncool. Never had a chance. Even the rare times I tried backfired horribly. I mean, the only kind of gum my mother would ever let me buy was sugar-free! Who was impressed by that? Um, no one, that's who.
But I'm okay with it. I surrendered to the uncool bus/van/what have you. I embraced the Dr. Demento songs and the overly involved jokes about Canadian bacon. It's all good.
(Does that make me cool?)
I totally used the candy trick once, and then i was the cool new guy with candy...i was pretty popular that weekend, i'm not gonna lie
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure the get-on-the-van-in-advance method is very reliable. First of all, if you're so uncool that you carry a stigma then the cool kids will pick another van if they see you on it. Second of all, cool kids often need all the seats on the van for their existing entourage so if you're taking up Super Cool Susie's seat, they'll find another van. In fact, I am inclined to think that the pick-a-van-early strategy can backfire horribly, because you can never be sure who's actually going to get on that van, and it can be tricky to excuse yourself should the "wrong" people board. In my experience, it was much better to at least find one person you can bear to be with to pick a van with. Also, on most of the youth group trips I ever went on, all the vans were indistinguishable as far as the one the cool kids rode on last time or the one that isn't prone to engine fires.
ReplyDeleteThis method may still work, but it should be employed with caution for the aforementioned reasons.
I think that if a SCL convention ever happens, you will have gathered some of the coolest uncool people on the planet.
ReplyDeleteindy-(insert HUGE arm pump here)-awesome.
elizabeth-thanks for the dr. demento reference. "They're coming to take me away, HAHA!" -- good times.
I was always hovering on the outskirts of cool in high school, but for some reason, uncool people (guys in particular) flocked to me like moths to a flame. I'd like to think it was because I understood and embraced their nerdiness, but I think it was my striking resemblance to the lead singer of BOW WOW WOW...
If two of your high school kids are playing Pokemon on their gameboy for 9 hours, are you driving the cool van or the "uncool is the new cool" van?
ReplyDeleteYou left out the "Be the Funny Kid" option. If all the uncool-cool kids are in one van, you can always make up your own 'you had to be there' jokes. Or if the the kids in your van are (I say this in a very Christian-love kind of way) total losers, you can pick one and conspire to say a signature phrase, then die laughing hysterically.
ReplyDeleteWhen people ask you what that was about, you say, "I could tell you, but then it wouldn't be funny. Also you probably wouldn't understand on account of all the product in your fauxhawk."
Speaking of graphic tees AND church vans...
ReplyDeleteInsert Plug for Awesome Christian-based Graphic Tee Company I don't work for but always endorse
In #1, there, you said "stripped pants". You'd be wearing striPed pants, not "striPPed" pants.
ReplyDeleteWearing "stripped" pants is a way to get you onto a whole OTHER van, I would think...
Our group was coming back from a trip. We were not in a van, we were on a church bus (which is a sweet way to travel and especially conducive to making out behind tall seats). There was an accident on the highway and we were stopped for a long time in a sea of traffic. The guys in the back were harassing the drivers of surrounding cars. At first it was funny. Then it went downhill when an older lady behind us started finger wagging those naughty boys. Everyone knows a finger wag is an invitation to offend, insult, and obliterate anyone over the age of 40. So, while the rest of the group made a wall of protection so no adult could see what was going on, 3 boys pressed their bare posteriors against the back door of the bus, then flipped the bird. What they weren't counting on was that the church's address was plastered on all sides of the bus. I wish I could tell you everything worked out ok and there was lots of butt repentance going on, but sadly, no. There were other incidents that included marijuana, handcuffs, and painting the entire youth group room fluorescent purple (including the carpet), but I've already said too much. I'm in the witness protection program because of this. Don't tell anyone where I live...
ReplyDeleteI still have nightmarish flashbacks of the time when I got on the cool bus (using the 'as soon as one cool kid gets on you barge past everyone else and get on too' trick). I had visions of grandeur and coolness, of understanding the in-jokes and possibly even hooking up with one of the cool guys... until a youth leader hopped on and shouted out that there wasn't enough room and could all her cabin - MY CABIN - move to a different bus! Part of me died that day...
ReplyDeleteI am now above all that. Which is a shame (and a lie), as I have now discovered the best way to be on the cool vehicle: drive it. (Then you can make up excuses for picking the cool kids to ride with you. "He's a great navigator", "She's sensible and I can't be distracted" etc)
For me the cool van was the one that had the 12" TV and VCR in the back. We never watched it, but in the late 80's/early 90's the idea of having a TV in a van was way cool.
ReplyDeleteSeriously, Jon, if kids are wearing brightly festooned, "stripped", 100% cotton-candy pantaloons, I think we're going to have some serious issues with making purple in the back row of the van...ew.
ReplyDeleteOur church has a 1985 Chevy Van that's blue. We call it Big Blue and haul things in it. It's not the Chevy Vandura model, which is a great van name, but it has a special place in my heart. And since it's in my heart, Jesus is at the wheel.
Are you sure that you weren't in my youth group? This is all very familiar.
ReplyDeleteUmmm....
ReplyDeleteI would have to interject here and say that there were no cool kids in either van.
The cool kids were at the hottest night club in town drinking and dancing the night away courtesty of their older sister's stolen driver's license which said sister later tracked down while they were spending the night at a friend's house and proceeded to beat the crap out of one cool kid in particular while hurling indiscriminant explextives in front of cool kid's best friends and their parents.
On second thought, maybe the cool kids were in those vans...
You so forgot about be the kid who knows which van has a working tape player. When I was in youth group you just had to pick a van you could play your tunes in. And also find a driver that didn't care what you listened to in the van.
ReplyDeleteThat was the trick for us, and we were the cool kids.
As a youth leader I fear that I will get stuck on the uncool bus ... BUT this yr I'm moving up from MS to HS bc the cool kids asked me to! Cool Bus here I come!
ReplyDeleteDuh, everyone knows the cool bus is the high schoolers and the uncool are the jr high kids. But there is another level of cool...
ReplyDeleteOur former youth pastor bumped me, the music minister and his wife, the children's minister and another awesome couple from our church to all time cool status when he let the graduated high schoolers have their own van on a loooooong trip out of state and let us ride with them.
And if that wasn't cool enough, we listened to SECULAR MUSIC, played on our laptops, gameboys and Ipods while the losers in the bus weren't allowed to. AND IF THAT WASN'T COOL ENOUGH, we could stop whenever and wherever we wanted for snacks and potty breaks because it was so easy for a van to catch up to a loaded down charter bus.
I've never felt more cool in my entire life ;)...
Oh yeah, and props for the Dr Demento reference. I was always a fan of "Shaving Cream, feel nice and clean" ;)
ReplyDeleteI was always the "uncool" trying to be "cool"! All the cool kids played ROOK non-stop. I hate that game! So, on one trip, I snuck two cards from the deck. I might have been uncool, but I was dying laughing inside! ha,ha,ha... (is that too evil?)
ReplyDeleteJon! You must read my buddy Mike's article on the cool/uncool thing. It's deeper than you think, my friend. And this is just the blog. If you'd been around for the lecture...
ReplyDeleteCheck it out: http://mikesanders.tumblr.com/post/28417908/cool-uncool
Ouch. This hurts.
ReplyDeleteThankfully we have a bus so usually we all ride together. But during a yuoth trip a couple weeks ago the bus was full and I had to ride with some parents... not fun :(
And I thought I was the only one who had the spiritual gift of sweating...
ReplyDeleteMarni - you make me feel old. iPods didn't exist when I was in high school and laptops were very big and very heavy and only rich businesspeople had them... So we snuck in our very inconspicuous cd walkmans! Nevermind the circular object hiding under my jacket that I have to keep perfectly level so it doesn't skip - it's nothing!
ReplyDelete(Oh but I really never snuck anything in because I was a perpetual rule-follower, and thus always solidified my spot on the van with the engine fires.)
As a youth pastor, the trick I see used the most is to figure out which van is going to be driven by the "cool young guy" youth sponsor. The one who hasn't caught on to all the stuff that will be going on behind his back...
ReplyDeleteI've had some kids even try to figure out which set of keys I held on to before we leave
""cool young guy" youth sponsor. The one who hasn't caught on to all the stuff that will be going on behind his back..."
ReplyDeleteHAHA- This is probably the reason the cool kids asked me to move from MS to HS - I'm 24 who could pass for 14yr old and I know they assume I will overlook anything they shouldn't be doing ... But little do they realize I was "that kid" (and am now "that grownup") and can (but won't) teach them tricks they haven't even thought of 0:-)
I was always the kid trying my hardest to get in the cool van and I had a pretty good method. When everyone was walking around talking in the parking lot before we left I would just stick as close as I could to cool kids and try to follow them as soon as they started heading toward a van. The worst was when I actually would make it on the cool van but then all the leaders would declare that at every pit stop everyone had to switch vans and I would switch because they made me, only to find out no one else from the cool van had moved, so dissapointing!
ReplyDeleteLet me get this straight...you want to have candy, but not SMELL like you have candy?
ReplyDeleteI guess you could end up VERY uncool by smelling like you had candy, exciting the cool kids, and then get ousted for being a poser.
This is a very delicate system indeed.
Maybe you would be a little cooler if you tried riding IN the van and not ON the van.
ReplyDeleteOn second thought, I think it might be rather cool to see someone try to ride on top of the van for 3 hours on the way to the retreat...nevermind.
You know, I've been burned by getting on the van early. I once mapped it out perfectly: I would get on the van that the cool kids would ride and secure my spot of coolness. However, I didn't account for one thing: cool kids must sit in the back. Thinking I was cool (a serious mistake), I placed my pillow to reserve my seat in the back. Well, after everyone was standing around awkwardly for a while, the cool kids decided to get on a van and yes, they chose mine, but seeing that someone was already in the back, they promptly moved to another van where they could dominate the rear. I spent that ride with smelly kids and boring group word association games, which the cool kids totally would have never allowed. Sigh.
ReplyDeletei tried EVERYTHING you said when I was trying to get with the cool kids.
ReplyDeleteBut unfortunately for me, I am an ugly kid. No seriously, compared to my youth group "crew" members, I just wasn't attractive enough to get in with the cool kids van. I usually ended up in the side car with some volunteer parent.
However, none of those kids are now serving God at all. Sad. None of those kids are married, nor graduated college. In fact, Maybe being ugly and uncool in youth group was the best thing for me.
Sad but true...as a teen I felt the most uncomfortable at church youth group because it was more cliquish, had more "mean girls", and more hook-ups than school.
ReplyDeleteAnother idea...
ReplyDeleteBring your acoustic guitar-
Though this may not be a golden ticket to the cool van, it will definitely get you on the road to finding your camp love muffin. They're out there, just waiting for the right guy to open his case and play a song written by you to some girl in Songland. You may only need to learn 3 chords, but it doesn't matter. They don't know the difference. For all they know, you're John Mayer's little bro. Keep the music going for the whole trip. Even if you just pick the strings behind conversation, you are still the mack daddy. Rock on.
You definitely need to do some counting first. Here is why... suppose there are 8 really cool kids (or more likely 4 really cool kids and their 4 semi-cool/wanna-be-cool friends). You don't want a situation where you pile in the 8 person cool van with everyone and then, the coolest of all the cool kids shows up at the last minute (cause let's face it, he doesn't have to get there early) and everyone says "oh no where is Blaine going to sit" while glaring at you.
ReplyDeleteI tend to think the only thing worse than not being on the cool van, is taking the "coolest" guy's spot. Even "Fun-Dips" for everyone can't redeem you.
I'm glad to hear that someone else has the spiritual gift of sweating. I'm not sure exactly how to use it yet, but once I do look out.
ReplyDeleteFYI, I also have the spiritual gift of setting up chairs and most recently moving donated school supplies. And yes, there's sweat involved with those too!
"when I pick a t-shirt to wear to my church small group." Heh heh...you aliens are funny. Jesus is probably riding in the back of the uncool kids bus entertaining the really unpopular kid nobody wants to talk to. We had fun. (grin)
ReplyDeleteAt our last youth outing, I realized that I was driving the cool SUV. The kid in me felt honored that they thought my ride was the cool ride. The adult in me realized that my ride was the newest, so as soon as another youth leader gets a newer car, my cool points'll dwindle. It's not right, but it's okay.
ReplyDeleteEveryone is trying so hard to be different, that they're actually the same.
ReplyDeleteI encourage the "uncool" kids to form meaningful relationships with other "uncool" kids. If you all are hanging out amongst yourselves and enjoying it, the "cool" kids and new kids'll notice and realize that your youth ministry has multiple groups - which is always good for new people trying to find their niche. A lot of times what happens is the "cool" kids realize you have your own clique and come over to see what you all are laughing so hard about, which helps create a more fluid caste system - which is always good.
ReplyDeleteI'd always bring a cool book or magazine - one that I knew they'd be at least quasi-interested in. That way if I ended up on the uncool van, it looked as if I wanted to read and couldnt do so on the loud van.
ReplyDeleteAs one of the cool youth leader, my qwest is to make all the uncool kids cool, so I often hang out with them hoping that it encourages the cool kids to talk to them.
ReplyDelete...of course there's the cool uncool group that doesn't embrace the just plain uncool - is there a trick for those kids??
ReplyDeleteJon- I had an idea for the blog. It's kind of the opposite of #46, "Super happy shiny Christian Radio"-- The Tearjerker song. These are songs where you feel like the songwriter is deliberately trying to make you cry. You know the ones- songs like "Butterfly Kisses" and "Cinderella". (Nothing against the guys who wrote those songs, of course.)
ReplyDeleteSOLUTION: get a bus! Like us ;]
ReplyDeleteBeing in a relatively small church, our youth group travels by means of regular vehicles, namely SUVs. I happened to stumble into the cool one by way of luck that they actually asked me to join them. It was quite the experience, it left me in some sort of a shock, and my youth leader insists that all the sudden I seem more comfortable around everyone. xD
ReplyDelete"It's not the Chevy Vandura model, which is a great van name, but it has a special place in my heart. And since it's in my heart, Jesus is at the wheel."
ReplyDeleteLOL...I think this is one of the funniest lines I've ever read! Thanks to Curtis honeycutt for that!
Nice post - along the lines of what you were first sharing regarding cool turning uncool until it's cool again but then it's in until it's out? Anyway, Frederica Mathewes-Green publishes a fabulous essay which (to me) speaks to this idea of being not just cool but 'counter-culture' or 'rebellious' (which is, oftentimes so that you will be cool - or uncool - whichever is actually cool in the mind of the perpetrator. I'm sure many may have read it before: Under the Heaven Tree http://www.frederica.com/writings/under-the-heaven-tree.html
ReplyDeleteKarin, thanks for being so nice...if you only realized how long I finely craft the exact phrasing of my comments on SCL so the internet will think I'm cool, you'd realize that I'm so-not-cool van material...I edited this comment 3 or 4 times alone.
ReplyDeleteWow! I've finally made it. I'm cool because I'm uncool! I was too cool to be popular in high school. I turned down the most popular jock in my senior class... and didn't get asked out the rest of the year...
ReplyDeletedon't do candy unless you want to be a tool.... -.-
ReplyDeleteA guy named Bill Vaughan said, "If there is anything the nonconformist hates worse than a conformist, it's another nonconformist who doesn't conform to the prevailing standard of nonconformity." The stuff about uncool being the new cool made me think of that quote. It also made me think about how, when I was in school, everyone used to complain about how our school uniforms made everyone look the same and lose their individuality. Then on the few days each year, when we could go to school wearing normal clothes, everyone would look the same anyway!
ReplyDeleteDon't be silly. You don't wear the plain-white Ts because of the sweat stains. :P
ReplyDeleteDude, the uncool van is the new cool van; you lose again. I give God the glory for my uncoolness now that it's cool to be uncool. It's all because of Him.
ReplyDeleteHaha, we did indeed have walkie talkies. That was fun.
ReplyDeleteIn my youth group the cool van was the one that still had air conditioning. We took three different vehicles to Colorado, and two of them had something wrong with them by the time we finally got there. So the boys agreed to stink and let the girls sit in the vehicle with air conditioning. Boys are nice sometimes.
Haha, we had a Vandura actually.
Oh, and did anyone else make a "Honk for Jesus" sign and hold it up in the back of the bus?
aa! the new uncool cool t-shirt! pre-pitstained white t's! We'll make a fortune on ebay...(grin)
ReplyDeleteNever wear a plain white T-shirt untucked with blue jeans in the Dallas area. It's gang clothes. Seriously. I wouldn't want you to get your bum kicked because you were being so cool.
ReplyDeleteRegarding uncoolness, yes! I call this phenomenon "Reverse Peer Pressure" and I am very vulnerable to it.
ReplyDeleteRegarding shirts -- I avoid Reverse Peer Pressure by owning and wearing exactly four shirts. I call them Blue Shirt, Brown Shirt, Black Shirt, and White Shirt! I have worn them for about a year now, and will continue to wear them until they decay. Combined with White Pants, Brown Pants, and Black Pants, this gives me twelve possible configurations. I believe I will not need to buy new clothes until 2015. I wear these clothes in the order in which they appear on the top of the pile.
I just thought you'd like to know this. <3
I made the mistake of getting in the cool van once on the way to camp. =( I had to sit next to the kid with a pencil in each hand who pretended to be a drummer for four hours. It was not awesome!
"'BODman Really Ripped Abs 8 oz Fragrance Body Spray'
ReplyDeleteYou will experience a “just out of the shower” clean with citrus notes of bergamot and mandarin orange followed by a fresh, natural outdoorsy sensation that includes crisp green sage and masculine notes of geranium and lavender. The powerful sex appeal comes from the sexy warm musk, creamy sandalwood and energizing cedarwood."
A simple Google search will confirm the truth of this ridiculousness.
I always found that getting in the vans at about half capacity, or when the loading process is at it's peak worked the best. Usually there is one or two kids who have to pee during the peak time. Which is lame because the youth pastor make it really clear that the 4 hours before loading was for going to the bathroom. Since most of the kids were getting one last purple in before the trip in which they would forever burn purple in the fire, or throw purple in the lake or local river getting their seat was pretty easy.
One of our van moments - it was actually a bus and the tire came off the back axle as we were traveling to Big Stuf...we sat in a parking lot in Kentucky all night waiting for a replacement bus.
ReplyDeleteThe following year we chose a new bus company. They showed up four hours late - sign number 1. Lost air conditioning in one, then in our bus it started to smell like sewage and then we lost air conditioning in Alabama.
The following year we chose another company and we had no problems...unless you count the crazy driver who hit our hub cap as he was racing through the parking lot in Florida...he was caught later on.
This year, we used the same company and had no problems!!! I love bus rides! Have you ever done a post on traveling with youth groups????
All in all, I wouldn't trade those experiences. I can still talk about them with the students and discuss those shared times...it's great!
Dude, my husband led his first mission trip and I drove one van and he drove another van out of 5. For the way back we assigned kids to certain vans to avoid the cliqueishness that was going on with the 30 kids.
ReplyDeleteYou would have thought we had blown up the world (not good). I'm not exaggerating when I say that the mission trip was a turning point in the group where many of the 'cool' kids stopped coming, and their parents even had a meeting with the assistant pastor to discuss why we'd ruined the trip for so many seniors that couldn't sit with their friends. Gee 8 hours in a van with someone else, that's got to just ruin the trip huh?
The next year's mission trip had 9 kids and it was one of the best ever. We had 2 vans and neither were the 'cool van' and had all of the wonderfulness you discussed (and walkie talkies!).
Blessed subtraction?
for our retreats, we only used school buses and one church van (which was only to take the band equipment up to the retreat center). but since the band usually left 2 hours earlier than the rest of the group to set up, it was always the cool van: 1) because it had all the band members (who are already cool by yg standards), 2) because all the band members were good friends with one another simply because of the amount of time spent together, and 3) because sitting cramped on the floor of the van in the back with all the equipment, inside jokes were inevitable, and we'd always have a score of them for both the ride to there and back.
ReplyDeletethe cherry on top was when we'd stop somewhere to have lunch/meal together, when everyone on the buses just rode back to church nonstop.
I have learnt not to use "Dark Temptation" body spray & smell like a candy boy.Do you know what is the result? I got candy worth $1.Nothin else.Now I learnt to get free axe samples body spray.
ReplyDeleteFlair on Facebook, white t's (Plain White T's anyone?) and being "uncool." Love it.
ReplyDeleteIn the days before a big youth group trip, I've always been a fan of plotting where I think people will sit on our van. I love the feeling that I can predict what my friends would do! Of course, bragging about this- ie "I knew you were going to sit there. Ha!" can get someone stuck on the uncool van for many camps to come
ReplyDelete***warning******
ReplyDeleteDo not be taking a drink of coffee when reading this section:
"and that the cool kids were evenly dispersed and we all got ponies and pants made of cotton candy. La, la, la."
Because the aforementioned coffee will be spewed through the nose and possibly on your keyboard and monitor. Very uncool. *grin* Otherwise, very funny stuff!
Yeah! I got to drive the cool VW "Bug" on our road trip to San Fran a couple weeks ago, and I didn't even have to bribe my girls. Just have an ipod with fun music and a convertible, it'll have all the kids beggin' to be in your car....
ReplyDelete*sigh* i agree... i totally wish there were no cliques or gossip in youth groups today... last week on the bus ride to a youth trip i sat and watched as two younger girls and A YOUTH LEADER GIRL!!! sat there and talked about some girl who wasn't on the trip... it was sad really
ReplyDeleteBUT - you did not account for the COOL SPOT.
ReplyDeleteFor instance, sometimes there is only one van, bus, whatever. Now, it comes to "where to sit?" I have found, the majority of the time the cool kids sit towards the back of the bus (to avoid authority) BUT, if there are too many "uncool" people trying to "crash the cool party" then they will unanimously sit tightly together in the middle or front.
I once got the privledge of sitting in the LAST row with my best friend amongst the cool kids...it was the greatest youth group trip of my life! I got to meet Megan, suprisingly also considered a cool kid, who was 13 and pregnant! (The "not supposed to be this way" factor was off the charts causing her to accidentally fall into the cool category.) Plus, we posted "honk if you love Jesus" signs on the back of the bus and did other super secret things I cannot discuss. There's no WAY the uncool kids could possible have as much fun!
Haha this is totally right on. I remember the days in high school youth group when I'd always try to be on the cool van. The funny thing is, these same "caste systems" hold true even when older 20 and 30-something Christians hang out. I was just at a Christian conference in England and there was a total caste strata of coolness going on. Every night the Christians at this conference would hang out at a bar, but the cooler Christians had their own side parties where they drank AND smoked (pipes mostly) apart from the main group. There will always be a 'cooler alternative' to everything.
ReplyDeletelol i agree with the "cool spot" thing. We ride a bus so we're all together, but the coolness is definately not distributed evenly amongst the bus. Most of the time the cool kids stick to the back of the bus, but when they want to switch things up a bit and throw the uncool kids off of the scent, they will inconspiciously sit in the front of the bus while the others are distracted eagerly racing toward the back of the bus. Or they will play a musical chairs of sorts, and at each stop or bathroom break they will move to a different area of the bus and of course the other kids, intimidated by their coolness, give up their seats and move without a seconds hesitation. I take this pretty seriously because the inexperienced youth-group-bus-rider will more often than not find themselves sandwiched in between two uncool kids... and trust me, even a whole zip lock bag of candy and gum does not make up for their lack of cool. Or even worse... when the uncool kids seats form an line in the middle of the bus, or an impenetrable barrier of uncool as I like to call it, so you're stuck next to the extremely talkative mother or 6th grader at the front of the bus. Your whole trip can be defined just by where you sit, so you have to play a tricky, well thought out game.
ReplyDeleteI was the snack kid, but unfortunately, so were my older brothers. And my bros were definitely "cooler" than me. So in the end, the trick wasn't to get on the cool kid van first, it was to get in the air conditioned van first. :-p
ReplyDeleteJon,
ReplyDeleteI've been a youth pastor for 18 years and your article made me laugh so hard that I had to stop reading several times. Mostly because the crying created tears in my eyes that did not allow me to read the words on the page. The reason it was funny was because I can think of hundreds of situations where I saw something similar to this going on.
Now I load a van or bus by odlest to youngest...this obvioulsy leaves out all the drama of fighting to get onto the cool bus or the back of the bus because that is where the cool kids sit. I am going to have to go back to open seating just for the laughs again. Thanks for making my day brighter.