YOU BLOCKHEAD!!!
What is it that makes Good Ole Charlie Brown so endearing? He’s hardly the best, the smartest, or the most attractive. So why is at that we all love him? For those of you that know me, fair enough — I’m overboard with my love of Peanuts. But let’s all admit – it’s a rare person that doesn’t like Chuck.
Why? I think it’s because we all relate to him, if not in one way, in several.
I was never picked first at recess. Neither is Charlie Brown. But he doesn’t let it get him down. No matter how many times he’s hit with the baseball while on the mound, he’s ready for another pitch. And no matter how many times Lucy swipes that football away from under his feet leaving him flat on his @#(*!#%, screaming, “You BLOCKHEAD!!”, he gets up the next time, determined he’ll succeed.
I was never the most popular girl in school. Never the one with all the boys chasing me, and certainly not the THE boy, you know the one. The one who kept me awake at night, wishing he would call, ask me on a date, and to the prom, the one whose last name I pretended that I’d someday share (don’t all teenage girls do that?). Charlie Brown has similar thoughts about the Little Red-Headed Girl. He might not write “Little Red-Headed Girl Brown” on pieces of paper and plan their wedding, but he has plans of his own. In fact, during a sleepless night in the classic, A Charlie Brown Valentine, he thinks, “I’ll tell that Little Red-Haired Girl that I love her. Then I’ll give her a big hug. Then I’ll go bungee-jumping from the moon.” Charlie Brown symbolizes eternal hope — in life and in love. I admire and believe in that hope. With good reason. Thomas and I held our wedding reception at the Schulz Museum last October.
Perhaps Mr. Schulz says it best. I found the following quote on the Charles M. Schulz Museum website (www.schulzmuseum.org) (well worth the trip in person and online):
“I like to think of Charlie Brown as being an ‘Everyman’—most people would admit to feeling a bit like him at times….”
—Charles M. Schulz
Charlie Brown keeps his head held high, regardless of his strikes, missed kicks and troubles in love. He never gives up. Neither should we. In anything we do.
Take Flight!
– Shelby Sheffield Hartmann 4/28/2010










