The color blindness test involved several different puzzles that were set up on a series of different tables. There were a variety of intriguing puzzles. There were some where you had to work your way through a maze by following different color paths. There were others where cards of various colors were laid out in a grid on a table, and you had to add up all the cards of a certain color to arrive at the correct sum.
I moved from station to station, trying my best to solve each puzzle. For some of them, I even had to get up onto the table and tap the correct answer with the tip of my shoe for some reason. I was having a blast. But I sensed that my father was getting irritated with me. He didn’t see why I should be trying so hard to solve these puzzles when I already knew that I was color blind. It just seemed like wasted effort to him. I countered that the point of the tests was to see if I actually had color blindness. If I already knew the outcome, what was the point of even being there in the first place?
I thought that was a pretty compelling piece of logic. And so I moved on to the next station, where I had to get back up onto the table and match these pictures on different yellow squares by tapping them with my foot. Soon I was having a good time again, tapping and shuffling at the cards. But when I looked out over the crowd of laughing people gathered around the table, I saw that my father was gone. He had taken off and left me there.

I'm siding with your dad on this dream. If my son was tap dancing on a table (probably in pink socks he thought were black) I'd walk away too.... and I'm a mom.
ReplyDeleteHa!
Delete"Ha" as in not funny? Or "Ha" as in offended?
DeleteWell, that's not much of a choice.
DeleteHow about "Ha!" as in I thought it was funny.
(Not a big fan of "lol")
Me neither hol (ha out loud)
Delete:-) Bless you, Bryan.