The Rear End

THE REAR END: Friends in Snow Places

we may not have much snow yet, but the frosty memories run deep

Mike Paulus, illustrated by Eva Paulus |

One of the dumbest things I’ve ever done was trying to shove my chubby little snowsuit-clad grade school body through a hastily dug tunnel in a snowbank while my friends laid on top and yelled at me.

These friends weren’t being mean, they were just screaming completely inane phrases we all found hilarious, as grade school kids are wont to do all day. I believe they yelled, “Watch for falling snow!” or something equally inspired as they shoved loose fluff off the snowbank, creating a kind of waterfall effect at the mouth of the tunnel.

As a result, no one could hear my screams of agony.

And by “agony” I mean to say “extreme annoyance tempered with a twinge of panic.” I was stuck. And I was calling for help, or at the very least, I was calling for everyone to just shut up for a second while I try to get out.

They eventually stopped yelling and climbed down off the snowbank to watch me shimmy out backwards, never completing my journey to the other side. I was all sweaty and red-faced and very much pissed off at my friends’ complete lack of concern over the fact that I just about died right there on the playground during a disastrous snow tunnel collapse – as I’m sure that tunnel was mere moments away from falling to pieces, sealing me into an icy tomb, with nothing but a pair bright blue moon boots jutting from the snowy rubble.

As it turns out, the tunnel was pretty solid. Minutes later I myself was laying on top of it, screaming, “Watch for falling snow!” like a coked-up baby walrus while my buddies crawled right through.

In other words, we had access to the freaking Himalayan Mountains at every recess. ’Twas a lofty winter wonderland allowing wee mountaineers access to amazing views of the surrounding territories. If you made the arduous journey to the top of the snow heap, you were seriously high – a good five maybe six feet off the ground. And you, my friend, were awesome.

MIKE PAULUS

All of this took place during a school recess in a long gone chilly December. My old grade school had a giant parking lot/playground running right up to the building. The snow plowers would push the snow away from the building and onto the adjacent field, forming large piles all along the edge.

In other words, we had access to the freaking Himalayan Mountains at every recess. ’Twas a lofty winter wonderland allowing wee mountaineers access to amazing views of the surrounding territories. If you made the arduous journey to the top of the snow heap, you were seriously high – a good five maybe six feet off the ground. And you, my friend, were awesome.

During the snow-less months, we used to walk right across that big field on our way to and from school. But in the wintertime, you had a tough decision to make. Should you take the long way, down the boring ol’ sidewalk and all the way around the big field? Or do you risk traveling the more direct route, straight across the frosty tundra? Sure, traversing the field offered a shorter distance, but the snow was often up to your knees, turning your “walk” into a desperate, sweaty trudge.

Some of the more naive kids – the ones who had seen too few winters and too many stroller rides to the park – took the field route, assuming the crusty snow could support their weight. Sure, they might break through once or twice, but it was still the faster path, right?

Wrong. What the hapless young students failed to realize was that once you break through the snow’s crystal outer shell, all is lost. One foot goes through and you’re up to your knee. And as you try to step out of the hole, you shift all of your weight to your other foot, causing it to pierce the shell as well. Now you’ve got two feet in and no hope for rescue. You must begin the slow slog to the other side. By the time you reach the playground, your belly is empty as your body has sucked every ounce of delicious energy from that morning’s Pop-Tart breakfast. Your legs burn from exertion. As you reach the playground, the kids are already lining up at the doors to file in. And guess what? The Himalayan snowbanks I so artfully described earlier now tower before you, saving the hardest, most soul-destroying part of the journey for last. As the winter winds howl around you, a lonely tear rolls down your cheek. It freezes.

People, as dumb as I was to climb into that tunnel that one day, I only traversed the field one, maybe two times before opting for the boring ol’ sidewalk. After all, this is the mighty Wisconsin Winter we’re talking about. And to survive, you gotta be smart.