I reported the theft to Principal Petersen. He offered me a form. A form . As if bureaucracy could replace the satisfying thunk of a chocolate beverage hitting a metal tray.
Here’s a short, engaging piece inspired by Young Sheldon Season 2, Episode 14 (“David, Goliath, and a Yoo-hoo from the Back”), written as if it could be a reflective journal entry or a scene summary in Sheldon’s voice. The Calculus of the Underdog young sheldon s02e14 m4a
So I took matters into my own hands. I studied the machine. I measured the angle of its coin return button. I calculated the exact force—4.7 newtons—required to dislodge a jammed dime. When that failed, I introduced a spork into the mechanism. Not out of malice, but out of applied physics. I reported the theft to Principal Petersen
The world is chaotic, irrational, and prone to theft by automated confectionary dispensers. But mathematics, unlike a Yoo-hoo, never short-changes you. As if bureaucracy could replace the satisfying thunk
But I did get a 78 on a pop quiz in that very same hallway, because in the chaos of the fire alarm I’d triggered, I’d had exactly eleven minutes to derive the quadratic formula from memory.
You would think a vending machine would be a paragon of reliability. It operates on simple physics: coin in, spring turns, snack falls. It’s cause and effect. Newton would have loved it.
While I sat in detention (for “vending machine tampering”—a charge I reject), I realized something. David didn't beat Goliath with a sling. He won because Goliath had a bad knee and poor depth perception. And that Yoo-hoo? I never got it.