We process things through stories. The ones we read or watch. Or write. Or remember.
The smoke of war has enveloped us the last few years, not to mention centuries. Lately: Ukraine, Palestine, Lebanon, Sudan, Myanmar, Iran.
Which makes me recall my time as a teenage busboy in an Italian restaurant in Dallas, Texas. All the other busboys were Iranian. They were nice enough to me, but I was definitely the outsider, as they all knew each other and lived in the same community and they were young men while I was still a kid. However, one of them, Ali, befriended me—and I recall the time he noticed the high stack of plates I was carrying was about to topple over and he raced to save me (or the plates) in a nick of time. Through my friendship with Ali, the others eventually welcomed me into their circle.
Through that memory, I feel a connection to the people of Iran, and I’m wishing them the best.
Which makes me think of the middle grade series by Bruce Colville I’m reading with my daughter. In the first book, My Teacher is an Alien, it turns out that the new substitute teacher is really an alien sent to Earth to “borrow” five kids the other aliens can study—a mix of the best, worst, and average. When the alien must beat a hasty retreat, it only manages to take one kid, Peter, who wants to go because his home life is not so great.

In the third book, My Teacher Glows in the Dark, Peter discovers the reason the aliens want to study the earthlings. The aliens fear what will happen once the humans discover how to travel great distances from their home planet. Humans, despite their marvelous brains, are far more destructive than any other interplanetary species. The aliens must determine how to stop humans from wreaking their deadly wars throughout the universe.
Which reminds me of the poet Rumi, who fled his home in 13th century Persia to escape the Mongol invasion. He created pearls of wisdom that have not lost their luster through time. Here’s one that applies to us writers:
Raise your words, not voice. It is rain that grows flowers, not thunder.

Alex Steele
Gotham President


