Jekyll & Hyde

It occurred to me today that I somehow got on the roller coaster, and now I want off.

I have always thought of myself as a pretty even-keeled person. I’ve often said, and even more often thought in my head, “I just can’t abide by those people who let every high raise them up and then let every low bring them down.” In my mind, it’s much better to let the highs and the lows of life wash over you, having no real effect on the course of the ship.

I’ve known some of those emotionally adrift people in my life, some of them very close to me in my not-so-distant past, and I have learned from my interactions with those people in particular, and from my dealings with that type of person in a general sense, that riding the “emotional roller coaster”, as I’ve often called it, has damaging side effects to one’s inner peace.

Sure, getting excited about the amazing highs of life can be so much fun, but I’m pretty convinced that you can’t have this without also then having to agree to the proposition of being brought down by the lows of life; I mean, can you imagine the real world roller coaster that allowed you to enjoy the feeling of flying through the air but spared you the feeling of falling to the ground?

And, I’ve often said that being on those emotional roller coasters is pointless; it’s so much better to try to maintain a steady course, emotionally speaking.

* * *

A couple of weeks ago, I posted something on Facebook that has gotten me in trouble. I shouldn’t have said it –regardless of how true it is– and I posted what I posted because I had something to say and I didn’t exercise the self-control necessary for keeping my mouth shut. I think that’s part of what makes self-control so difficult for me; that necessary moment that I have to take before making a decision to act or to speak, that pause that –if inserted– should allow for me to ask myself, “Is this really what you want to do?”; that pause is so often something that I neglect.

That is, I neglect it when I’m on the roller coaster.

When I am letting the lows of life bring me down –for example, when I am lamenting the generally negative qualities of human existence that I have witnessed via social media– I am more likely to be out of control of the way that I think and act. In these moments, I’m EmoPhil –> capable of saying the dumbest things out loud and of doing things that I’ll soon regret, faster than a speeding bullet.

I think it’s better when I’m SereniPhil (doesn’t that sound like a sleeping medication?!?!) –> the calm intellectual who likes to think things through and who likes to keep a cool perspective on the highs and lows of life.

I think, maybe, I’m going to have a couple of custom capes made –like Superman capes– that I can just wear around the house. One will say “EmoPhil”, and I’ll wear it –or maybe my wife can put it on me, since she notices when I change, often before I do– when I am on the roller coaster and out of control and ready to fly to the heights or drop to the depths. The other will say “SereniPhil”, and I will wear it when I feel like I am in control and life is pretty balanced and I am on the “noble path”.

* * *

I think that, the longer I live and the more I understand about life, I am starting to come to some conclusions about these two different versions of me. One of the most important things that I’ve noticed is that I am often triggered by certain parts of life, and I might just be better off avoiding these triggers as much as possible.

One of the things that my wife and I have noticed, just recently, is that social media seems to be a trigger for me. And, while I’d be happy to sit around and debate the merits and drawbacks of social media with anyone who wants to engage in such an endeavor, it is most certainly the case that there are people out there for whom social media is not a trigger –my wife being one of them. I’ve just discovered that I’m not the best me –I’m not SereniPhil– when I get too caught up in social media.

I’ve also noticed that it’s harder for me to avoid becoming EmoPhil when I am not getting enough sleep and/or exercise. Luckily, just recently, both of those parts of my world have been going well. I wonder what kind of a world we would have if everyone was getting the sleep and the exercise that they need –> maybe I’m not the only one who might find it easier to avoid the roller coaster with plenty of rest and a measure of physical fitness.

* * *

If you’ve been reading many of my other posts, you know how I prefer to try to be moderate in most things. So, where’s the middle ground, I wonder, between being a hot head and being a stolid stoic?

Or, maybe more to the point is this question: why do I seem to be doomed to be Jekyll or Hyde?

If you’ve never read “Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde”, by Robert Louis Stevenson, you really should. It’s pretty short and it’s a lot of fun, psychologically speaking. In certain respects, the story is science fiction (and I love me some sci-fi), but I think it is also an extended metaphor for just the kind of problem that I find myself struggling with sometimes. And, because of the recognizable truth in the story, certain features of the story have become part of our pop-psychology understanding.

The more I get to know me, the more I get to understand how I work and what makes me tick, the better my life is becoming.

I hope that this message reaches someone else –> get to know yourself so you can live a life that is more informed when it comes to, well, you.

Nap Time Struggles

It occurred to me, moments ago, that we struggle so hard and it’s often for nought.

I’m a bit of a baby whisperer, when it comes to nap time, and I, just moments ago, had my skills on display. And you missed it.

I’ve raised three kids, and I have three nieces and a nephew, so over the course of the last fifteen years or so, I’ve had lots of opportunities to convince toddlers and newborns that it’s time for their nap.

If you’ve ever been a part of that particular battle, you understand how it works. The convincing and conniving, the bargaining and the begging, the “I’m not tired”, followed by the trip to dreamland.

My wife and I, as we were raising our kids, understood our roles in this particular game quite well. Often times, she was the starting pitcher, who would start off the game and carry on as far into the innings as was possible, but there always comes the point in the game when you call in your closer.

That was me.

The children who fight the nap the hardest are sometimes the most tired, while others fight the nap for mere seconds before giving up the fight and caving in.

And –I’m a little ashamed to say this– I prefer to use the strong but gentle approach: holding the fighting, crying child securely in my arms until they became convinced that 1) their fight was futile, and 2) they really were getting tired. Gently patting their backs or their bottoms, shushing them quietly and rhythmically with the sound of my whispering voice, sometimes rocking them back and forth to get them to nod off.

If this approach sounds wrong, then I’m wrong, but I will once again point to my track record.

The interesting part of this whole recollection is this –> it’s often obvious to everyone except the child that they are tired and in need of a nap. And they fight it so valiantly, as if having to take a nap was the greatest of the crimes of society against the smallest among us.

Don’t even get me started on how toddlers fight naps and adults would often kill for one.

* * *

I knew, just a few moments ago, that my niece needed a nap –> I could tell because her mom told me when should would probably need one, but I also knew just by watching her eyes droop and her head bobbing, down and then back up.

So, I took her in my arms, and she fought. I knew how it was going to end, and she did fight with valor for several minutes. But, the baby whisperer –the closing pitcher who is brought in to seal the victory– won once again.

And the whole process, which I’ve been through hundreds of times, has me thinking about life and our futile struggles.

I wonder how often we get ourselves worked up about things that can’t be helped, things that are inevitable, and how many times, when we have the opportunity to accept, with a measure of composure and tranquility, the events of life that are inexorable, do we instead rail against what is coming. Rather than focusing on the way that we react to the circumstances of life, we get all hot and bothered about every twist and turn in the road.

If you’ve ever wondered at all about Buddhism, like I have, you may want to look into their belief system a little bit, especially when it comes to the Four Noble Truths and the Noble Eightfold Path. Now, I would never suggest that someone become a Buddhist, since I am a Christian, but I do believe that there is truth to be found in Buddhist beliefs and that all truth is God’s Truth.

The Four Noble Truths involve the suffering that exists in the world, and –more specifically– how our own ignorance and desires cause us to experience more suffering than what is actually necessary on the journey through life. The Noble Eightfold Path is a series of steps that a person can take to make suffering easier to manage, or even avoid altogether.

Like the toddler who, rather than accepting the inevitability of nap time and just coming to terms with it, opposes nap time and seeks to resist nap time and becomes consumed by their suffering during nap time, we are all subject to circumstances that could easily “get a rise” out of us.

But we chose to react to these circumstances. We chose to allow what’s going on in the world around us to dictate how we feel and to what extent we are able to be happy in the present moments of our lives.

And if it’s not the events of the world, it’s the people in it, who get under our skin. They say things and we lose our entire ability to control what we think about them and how badly we want to talk back to them and what we’d do to them, if no one was looking.

We chose to let those people dictate our thoughts and behaviors. In effect, we give them control over how we feel and what we say and do. I’d say that they rob us of our happiness, but it’s not even robbery, we give our happiness to them willingly.

* * *

I’ve heard the phrase a lot lately: the struggle is real. In fact, a quick Google search of the phrase gave me more memes than I could shake a stick at –> geesh!

But, the more I stop to think about it, I’m not sure that the struggle is real.

If we just accepted the circumstances of life with some humility and grace and serenity, we would get less worked up all the time.

The belief that we are constantly in the midst of some set of circumstances that should cause us to be outraged and alarmed is, more often than not, just a decision that we chose to make to get on the crazy train.

And, while it’s probably unreasonable to expect that anyone is ever going to be able to be in complete control of their reactions to the storms of this life, I think we could all aspire to being a little less “the struggle is real” and a little more “on the noble path”.

Now, you’ll have to excuse me; my niece just woke up from the nap that she told me that she didn’t need and she fought so hard to avoid.

Lunchladies

It occurred to me today that lunchladies might be screwed for reasons that are beyond them.

My wife and I, years ago, in one of our many attempts to gain insight into the best ways to parent our children, read a book called Parenting with Love and Logic. It was a great book, as I recall, and it introduced us to many good parenting concepts, one of which was a governing principle regarding what we do for our children.

The idea was pretty simple –> a parent shouldn’t do for their child what the child can do for themselves. Parents need to make an agreement to not do things for children, when the children can do for themselves, so that the children learn to be functional and autonomous. Parents who do things for their children, that the children can do for themselves, demean the children and their ability to contribute.

Many children these days are so used to having things done for them, that they lack the ability to initiate their own work or to struggle in the midst of a task on their own. Additionally, children will learn not to do certain things for themselves, if the parents are always there to do it for them, and then, that feeling of lazy helplessness starts to transfer to other areas of the child’s life, robbing the kids of any initiative that they might have shown on their own.

Quite to the contrary, a child who is expected to do what they are able to do for themselves learns responsibility for those behaviors and then becomes more likely to be successful down the line, when additional responsibility, or more complex responsibility, is expected.

* * *

If my children are responsible for making a meal for themselves, they will put together nacho chips with melted shredded cheese on top, and they will declare it a culinary masterpiece. They will try to convince you that it is the greatest thing that was ever devised by any chef anywhere.

If I make them a meal, they complain about it.

And, it’s not just that they make what they want, and I don’t make what they want, because they complain even when I make what they want, so there’s that.

And, now that we are on summer vacation, and my children are home –which, technically, they’ve been home since the middle of March, so this is just the beginning of a summer vacation that actually started, for all practical purposes, almost three months ago– they’ve decided to start taking advantage, at their discretion, of the summer meal program that the local school district runs.

The local school district provides breakfast and lunch for any school student who makes their way to the school to pick those meals up. We printed the calendar and put it on the fridge and the kids can look each day and decide whether or not they want to go to the school to get the lunch for the day, or if they want to make their own lunch, or if they want to roll the dice and see whether or not Mom or Dad is going to make something good.

The other day, I noticed that my children went to the school to get the school lunch for the day. As we all sat down at the dining room table to have lunch, I noticed that my children were complaining about the lunch that they got from the school.

The free lunch, that they didn’t have to do any work to create.

It had no value in their minds.

* * *

If you’ve ever heard the phrase, “There’s no such thing as a free lunch”, which is a phrase that means to say that everything has a price and that handouts always end up costing someone something, you might understand what I’m thinking. Here I am, thinking about free school lunches, and the funny thing about these particular free lunches is that they are of less value to my children, apparently, than a plate of nachos and cheese.

Why is it that we value less what costs us little or nothing? Shouldn’t those things that have cost us little or nothing be of greater value to us, simply because they didn’t cost us?

And these free school lunches are packed with protein and fruits and vegetables –good ones, the ones that kids actually like– and the lunchladies have included all that they can to make the meal nutritious and delicious, but my kids aren’t having it.

I think it must have something to do with the work involved for my children. My kids are always proud of the work that they do, whenever they accomplish anything at all. The sink of dishes that they washed is an act worthy of the highest praise. The sticks picked up in the back yard is a feat worthy of a made-for-TV documentary.

Maybe this is true of everyone, now that I think about it.

It is certainly the case that I have been guilty of excess pride when it wasn’t warranted. I know that I could come up with a list of adults guilty of the same thing in the past. It’s a bias, I suppose, that we over-value the work that we do, and we undervalue the work that others do.

If I ask my kids how they built the amazing plate of nachos with melted cheese, they describe it as if it were a harrowing, twelve-hour brain surgery.

But, they mock the work of the lunchladies.

* * *

When someone does something for you, assuming that it is something that you can’t do for yourself, I would hope that gratitude would be a pretty natural response for any person with any kind of decency. The understanding that you could not have accomplished the thing that someone else was able to accomplish for you, should illicit a grateful attitude.

But, something entirely different happens when someone does something for you that you could have done for yourself. They undervalue your work and are less likely to be thankful. It’s a real shame, when you stop to think about it.

I’m not really sure where this whole post was going, but it has something to do with work and gratitude, independence and interdependence.

So, let me just close with this:

At the school where I work, for several years in a row, I was responsible, at the beginning of the year, for teaching our student body about the behavioral expectations in the cafeteria. I don’t remember how I originally got assigned the responsibility, but I grew into the role, for sure.

One of the things that I did, as I was teaching our students how to act in the cafeteria, was to tell them about my mother, who was a lunchlady for thirty years. I would tell my students, year after year, about the stories that my own mother would come home and tell about how horribly she’d been treated by students at her work.

And, as I told my students this story, year after year, with tears in my eyes, I reminded them to be sure to be nice and respectful to the lunchladies, because they are worthy of respect.

Now, truth be told, my mother retired a few years back from many decades in the healthcare industry, and she’d probably be mortified to hear that she was a party to a lie that I repeatedly told to get my students to be nice to the lunchladies where I work, but I think that sometimes, the ends justify the means.

All of the words that have preceded this have meant to say: I think that lunchladies get a bad rap –> partly because they are doing a job that is undervalued, and partly because they are doing something that our students could do for themselves –although it’s hard to imagine a school of any size incorporating a system where students efficiently make their own lunches.

The next time you see a lunchlady, even if it’s a fictional lunchlady like my mom, thank them for what they do. Chances are, they are underappreciated.

Better yet, just be more thankful.

Relatively Amazing

It occurred to me today that my amazing now isn’t what my amazing used to be.

First off, I just need to start off by saying that I have been feeling more and more lately that I have made so many positive changes during the past three months –> I don’t ever want things to get “back to normal”. Now, this isn’t to say that I don’t hope that we will one day get back to something as close to what we used to have as possible, but I also think that people who think that things are going to be the way that they were don’t have their heads on straight.

Additionally, for me personally, I don’t want to go back to the me that I was, just going through the motions and fumbling through the days, previously. I wonder if my mid-life crisis and the quarantine didn’t, in fact, coincide –> to create a new Phil Brackett. More on that in a moment…

For about the past couple of weeks, I have been listening to news reports from states, who fought hard to reopen early, that are now becoming the new hot spots for corona virus cases nationwide. In fact, it was about a month ago when I wrote THIS POST about whether or not it was a good idea to rush into opening up at all. One of these states that I’ve been watching in the news is the state where my family and I are supposed to vacation in July –> that’s got me a little worried.

And, as a quick political side note –> congratulations to Governor Gretchen Whitmer on her handling of a pandemic in a state that was, initially, one of the worst hot spots, and is now one of the most exciting pandemic success stories.

Anyway, I just wonder what the rush was to get back to “normal”. I guess I can admit, with a little bit of shame, that I wasn’t living my best life before the pandemic. I was definitely too busy, which the pandemic and the quarantine pretty much took care of. I wasn’t spending as much time with my kids as I should have been. How about being locked up with them in the house for twelve weeks?!?!

But, an even bigger part of the problem was that I wasn’t pursuing my goals and my interests back then, back when things were “normal”. Now that I’ve started to re-prioritize my agenda, I don’t want to go back to the way that things were. To be honest, I’m afraid of what’s going to happen when I have to start making the tough choices between keeping these new loves that I’ve found and going back to doing what everyone else wants me to do.

Check this out:

If you take all of the blog posts that I’ve written and put them all together in one document, it’s the equivalent length of a two-hundred page novel.

If you’d asked me on March 13th, the last day that I had a classroom full of students in front of me, if I was going to be able to write a two-hundred page novel in 2020, I would’ve laughed in your face.

If you’d asked me on March 13th, the last day that I had a classroom full of students in front of me, if I was going to be able to run a 10K distance this year, I would have said something like, “I sure hope so.”

I’ve run two 10K distances this week, my first two 10K distances ever.

And I can tell you one thing, as I sit here and type these things out; I’M NOT GOING BACK TO THE WAY THINGS WERE –> THAT “NORMAL” IS NOT WORTH GOING BACK TO.

* * *

I think that I’ve discovered that my current concept of “amazing” isn’t what it used to be, because I’ve advanced. I am capable of doing what I would have previously considered amazing, because of these advancements, so now, I need to be looking further down the road.

Wouldn’t it be amazing if I ran a half-marathon? Wouldn’t it be amazing if I got a book published? Wouldn’t it be amazing if my doctor was impressed with my physical fitness at my next physical? Wouldn’t it be amazing if I signed a book deal?

These are my new “amazings”. These are the new goals. I’ve taken the first bite of the entree, and it tastes SOOOOOO good, and now I am looking forward to the next bite, and the next, and the next.

I’m not going back to waiting in the entryway, hoping to be seated.

Earlier, I mentioned my mid-life crisis and the quarantine coinciding, and I was partly kidding, but I’m also partly serious. I’ve taken a look at who I was and compared it to who I want to be and I decided that it was time to make some changes.

You should try it.

I know that, on the average day, there aren’t that many people reading these posts, and it doesn’t really bother me that there aren’t. But, I do know that there are a few people –sometimes random guests and sometimes faithful readers– who read my posts everyday.

In fact, a couple of weeks ago, I got a comment on one of my posts from someone named Pengobatan Sipilis, and they told me that something that I’d written in a post was helpful for them.

I’d have to say, that’s relatively amazing to me!

I hope that you can all look at what your current “amazings” are and say that you are closer to them than you were previously. I hope that you all are in a place where what you’ve accomplished is what you would have previously hoped to accomplish, and that you are reaching for the next level of amazing.

I saw a meme on social media the other day that said something like, “Don’t live the same year seventy or eighty times and call that ‘a life’.”

Agreed.

Dumped

My wife and I, the other night, were entertaining some guests, and the group of us got to talking about our romantic pasts. As we shared our stories, some of us told stories of shy and awkward dealings in romance, while others seemed to have taken the experience more “in stride”; some had lucky tales involving relatively few stepping stones between them and true love, while others seemed to have blazed a swath of destruction through the dating world.

During this conversation, I revealed the fact that I’ve never dumped anyone. At no point in my life have I ever been the person responsible for ending the romantic relationship. Even my own wife dumped me, but more on that in a minute.

If you think about the phrase “being dumped”, it is simultaneously A) a phrase that sounds unpleasant enough so that people would avoid wanting to “be dumped”, and B) an accurate description of the experience. Believe me; I should know.

* * *

My wife and I have been married for more than nineteen years. We’ve been together, as a couple for more than twenty-six. Those first seven-plus years, from March of 1994 to May of 2001, we were dating.

Well… almost that whole time.

The last person who ever dumped me was my wife, in the Fall of 1994.

For, you see, my wife and I started dating when I was a senior and she was a sophomore. I was eighteen at the time, and she was sixteen. What that lead up to, as spring turned to summer and summer faded into fall, was a high-school junior dating a college freshman. Now, luckily for me, my first undergraduate degree came from a university just down the street a little bit, so it wasn’t that hard for me to get back home to keep the fires burning, so to speak. But, the fact that my wife was dating a college freshman was a point of contention with her parents.

And, what possible chance would I have had –if I had been made aware of the concern in advance of my then-girlfriend deciding to take action– in trying to convince her that her parents, who’d raised her and cared for her for her entire life, the very people with whom she shared her home, were wrong and our relationship was right?

I would have had no chance. So, looking back, I guess it was fine that it came at me out of a clear blue sky.

I was at my then-girlfriend’s house on what was –no doubt– a weekend evening, and she and I were watching television. It was a movie, converted to television (back in the day, when they used to do that kind of stuff), with the racy parts removed to make space for the proper number of television commercials. The movie was The Pelican Brief, starring Julia Roberts and Denzel Washington. I only remember because, like so many of the other details of that evening, it is burnt onto my brain.

During one of the commercial breaks of the movie, when the network gave several moments to a certain number of advertisers, working on behalf of a certain number of corporations, to try to sell my then-girlfriend and I a certain number of products, we spent the time, instead, breaking up.

I got dumped during a commercial break in a movie-edited-for-television.

As a side note, to this day, I have not seen the ending of the movie; I am afraid of what might come, were I to try.

I got in my Plymouth Horizon (I think it was an ’87), and I drove as far down the road as I could get before my vision, through my tears, got so bad that I had to pull over. As it turns out, that wasn’t very far. I wondered, only after the fact, if the sound of me, beating on the hood of my car in frustration and pain, made it all the way back to my then-girlfriend’s house.

Thus began the long dark winter of my soul… ahem, ahem.

To be completely honest, the months that passed between the time when we broke up, in the fall, and when we got back together in the spring, were lost to me in the fog of my freshman year at a university where twenty percent of the freshmen never made it to sophomore year –or so the story went back then. I was so deep in textbooks and lecture notes, trying to keep my hopes of becoming an engineer alive, it was probably better for the both of us, not to be attached.

In the spring, when my then-girlfriend needed a date to her junior prom, she asked me. We’d been able, over those months, to stay in touch and to remain friends. To hear her tell the story, that time involved –for her– a couple of dates with some other guys who weren’t suitable replacements for me.

For, you see, part of the problem was this: I was my then-girlfriend’s first boyfriend. I’d called her, to ask her to go to the movies with me coincidentally, on the day before her sixteenth birthday, and –unbeknownst to me– she’d been prohibited from dating until she was sixteen. On Wednesday night, March 30th, 1994, I needed a date, because my best friend was busting my chops to go on a double-date with him and his girlfriend. So, despite the fact that she was, at the time, 15.997 years old, her parents gave their permission and we went to see The Mighty Ducks 2, which had premiered the weekend before.

I can’t fault my then-girlfriend’s parents –my current in-laws– for feeling the way that they did, at the time. Now that I have not one, but two teenage daughters (they had three, which is to say that I have two sisters-in-law), I’m not sure how I’d feel about them getting exceedingly exclusive with any particular guy in the near future.

In any case, it all worked out in the end; it was a bump in a road that has otherwise been fairly smooth.

Twenty-six years, give or take about six or seven months, is a great run, so far.

User Manual

It occurred to me today that I’ve been missing the user manual… for life.

I have, at multiple times during my life, wished that there was a user manual. For example, right after I got married, I remember wondering to myself what I was supposed to be doing as a new husband, aside from the things that occurred to me to do, naturally, as part of my growing relationship with my wife. I let her choose which side of the bed she wanted to sleep on, and I made sure to compliment her cooking, and I let her choose which parking spot she wanted in the garage; basically, we figured it out, but it would have been great to have a user manual.

Or, right after my first child was born, I remember thinking that I was lost without some kind of set of instructions as to what was expected of me. Who gets up in the middle of the night when the baby cries? How am I supposed to know what the baby wants? How warm should a bottle of formula be? My wife and I had so many questions, and again, we just figured it out.

* * *

During both of these occasions, I remember going to my parents and asking them for advice. And, for whatever reasons they may have had –maybe they didn’t have much advice to give (which I don’t believe), or maybe they thought it was a bad idea to steer me with their device, or maybe they wanted to make me “figure it out” like they’d had to– they were less than forthcoming with the information that I was looking for.

Call me crazy, but I am still harboring a little bit of frustration over those failed exchanges. Surely, despite having done some things wrong and others right, they could have spared what advice they thought had piloted them well through the times when things turned out correctly?

However, I can honestly say that I can see the issue from both sides. If my parents were hoping to make me strong by making me work for the right answers, rather than just giving me the answers, I could see how that approach might have been successful. Who’s to say whether or not I would be the same person that I am today, if I had been given the answers by my parents, or by a user manual of some kind.

But, that argument –that I wouldn’t be who I am today without having had to work for knowledge– goes both ways. Maybe, the “me” I could have been would have been better, if I’d been steered even a little bit with some quality advice. With a user manual, I could have started with a certain set of basic info, and then, having had those initial steps “given to me”, I could have then advanced beyond the basic level of knowledge to more advanced levels.

My wife and I, along the way in our marriage, have read a lot of really great marriage counseling books together, many of them in the environment of a marriage, small group, Bible study that we used to lead. So, the advice that I didn’t get on marriage, initially, I ended up getting somewhere else.

And, as far as my kids are concerned, maybe I haven’t been an awful parent, despite not having any advice –good, bad, or otherwise– to work with. I wonder if I would have done a better job, though, if I’d know a little more, starting out.

* * *

My daughter, early on when I started writing this blog, told me that she was reading them. She’s thirteen. Just recently, I asked if she was still reading them, and she said, “No. Most of them are boring.”

Advice that’s not solicited has a certain stink to it that makes it hard for us to find much value in it. When someone comes and seeks your advice, I guess it would be hard to make a decision at to whether or not to give it.

I often think of families that I know, where the parents have been wonderfully successful in their lives and their children have turned out to be wonderfully successful as well, and I think that maybe there’s a leg-up that some people are getting their hands on.

I also think about the history of humanity, whereby many generations of people have come and gone and I’m not sure how far we’ve gotten, as a species, as a society, for having spent so much time living and dying and leaving our kids to “figure it out”, in the same way that we just “figured it out”.

Have you ever seen the movie or the television show where the parent is set to die and they create some letters/videos/recordings of some kind, to be able to direct and advise their child after their death? Don’t those movies just get you in the feels?!?!

I wonder if my kids will ever read anything that I’ve written some day and get from it something that will help them to get further than I got?

Feelin’ It

It occurred to me today that, sometimes, I’m just not feelin’ it.

I have a board on Pinterest (if you don’t know what Pinterest is, check it out) that is full of running motivation. It has pictures of runners in full stride on beautifully scenic roads or paths, combined with sayings that are supposedly motivational. And, when there is a part of me that wants to run, that part of me –that intrinsic motivation, psychologically speaking– can partner with the motivational phrases and sayings on my Pinterest board and it’s enough to get me “up and at ’em”.

But, there are other times, when I’m just not feelin’ it, when the last thing that I want to do is to get all dressed up in my moisture-wicking workout clothes and to lace up the shoes and to do all of the other stuff that I have to do before a run. The intrinsic motivation is harder to find.

On those days, I think about how I will feel if I skip my run. I think about the regret that I’ll feel for the rest of the day, about how I’ll be beating myself up for being lazy, about how I’ve never regretted a work out but that I’ve often regretted skipping a workout. And, I think about the motivational pin –that’s what you call a piece of interest in Pinterest– that I have that says, “Discipline means doing the thing that you don’t want to do.” That extrinsic motivation, paired with the motivation that is inside me, but is sometimes hard to find, and I have what I need to get “up and at ’em”.

Discipline is something that I’m not good at.

Or, take this post, for example. I don’t really feel like I want to write right now. I got to looking at my other “draft” posts and none of them were “calling my name”, and I thought to myself, “What if I just skip this one?” But, it’s a little bit different with writing, somehow; it’s doubly hard to push myself into writing something when I am lacking the inspiration as to what I should write about.

So, I sat down to write this post, via the discipline that I’m not very good at, and because of the dedication that I have to becoming a better writer –via the practice that I often don’t want to do.

I wrote a post a few days back about pianos, and in that post I talked about piano practice when I was a kid and how much I hated it. Part of the problem with that was that I never wanted to become a better pianist. My mom wanted me to become a better pianist, and my piano teacher wanted me to become a better pianist, but it wasn’t inside me.

What is inside me, at least these days, is a desire to become a better runner and to become a better writer.

I ran my first ever 10K distance on Monday, and I am still jazzed about it. I am still excited about the fact that the past versions of me had always dreamed of being in the place where I could run a 10K distance. The past versions of me wanted to be –with enough conviction and discipline and dedication to run when it was hard for them to run a mile or two miles– who I am today. I don’t know if I can express how it feels to be the person that you used to want to be.

The funny thing is, it’s not going how I imagined.

I imagined, all of those years ago, that the me that would be able to run a 10K distance would be muscular and attractive. I imagined that the 10K me would have a six-pack and biceps and pectorals. And, while I am who I wanted to be, inasmuch as I can run the 10K distance, I am still not who I wanted to be.

And so, the dream continues…

Visions of the future are funny like that. In 1989, the movie Back to the Future II envisioned the year 2015 with hoverboards and flying cars. 2015 didn’t turn out that way. In the 1990s, the Star Trek franchise of the day envisioned the twenty-fourth century with tablets that looked bulky and antique compared with the tablet that my wife plays canasta on in our twenty-first century living room.

It’s hard to imagine the future correctly, but the best way to do it is to make the future that you envision occur.

I want to be a writer one day. I want to be able to walk into a Barnes & Noble –somewhere, someday– and pull my books off of one of their shelves. And whether or not I’m going to make my way to the shelf on a hoverboard, I can, through my dedication and discipline and conviction right now, do my best to make part of that vision of the future a reality.

If you’ve ever run in an organized race, there are various distances for which you can register. I’ve run in the local Sunburst race three times, and each of those times, I registered for the 5K. Now that I can run the 10K distance, I guess it’s time to look forward to my next goal distance. Maybe someday, I’ll be able to run a half-marathon –probably not any day soon, however.

Well, anyway, I guess I’ve written all of this to say a couple of things: motivation to do something, especially when you don’t want to, can come from a larger dream, a larger vision of the future. If that vision isn’t there, discipline and dedication are going to be weak, at best. And, when you tap into the power of that larger vision, it can be significantly helpful in overcoming those moments when you may be less than enthusiastic.

I mean, look at me, I just whipped out a thousand words, and I wasn’t even feeling it.

The Journey, Cont.

It occurred to me today why parenting is so frustrating for me.

Did you hear the one about the tomato family?!?! What did the mother tomato say to the baby tomato? Why won’t you ketchup?

It’s frustrating when my kids aren’t where I want them to be, or where I am. This frustration, no doubt, results from the fact that I’m mostly a selfish person and, while my child is in the process of learning to do something, I’m just focused on me and where I’m at and why can’t my child just be at the same level as me.

This frustration has been coming out most recently in the process of my son learning to drive. I wish he was as good at making turns, as I and my wife are. I wish he could brake more smoothly and accelerate more gradually, like my wife and I do. When he can’t drive the way that my wife and I drive, and all I can do is sit next to him and try to be patient (and mostly fail at that), I know that I am focused on me, rather than being focused on him, and where he’s at, and what he needs.

Of course, I understand how this works, and how it is that my parents were most likely frustrated by me and where I was, as a child, and where they wanted to me to be. I wouldn’t be the kind of driver that I am today if it weren’t for the thousands upon thousands of hours that I’ve spent practicing. I know that those initial hours were not pleasant hours to be in a car with me.

My daughter played her first trumpet solo at church this past weekend. She played so well, and I was so proud of how well she performed and how much practice she’d put in. But, let me tell you, as the father of, not one, but two trumpet players, the initial stages of someone learning to play the trumpet are some irksome moments. All you really have during those initial days, when their trumpet playing sounds more like someone strangling an elephant, is hope.

I also understand that it’s my job to get the kids to where I wish them to be, by training them and teaching them and parenting them. Being frustrated with where they’re at now, without having done anything to advance them, is me being frustrated with what I haven’t done –the kids are just innocent bystanders in the tragedy of how I often fail as a parent.

I think of myself as intelligent, but it’s a crying shame that I didn’t figure this simple fact out much sooner. I guess I’m ahead of those parents who still haven’t figured this out and behind those parents who have been watching me, wondering what the heck I’m doing to my children.

We’re all on the road, just at different places on the road. And, there’s always hope.

* * *

That list bit comes from Dr. Rita Pierson. Dr. Pierson was a world-class educator and school administrator with a deep heart for kids and for the profession of teaching.

At the school district where I teach, every few years, a TED talk featuring Dr. Pierson makes its rounds. The TED talk is entitled “Every Kid Needs A Champion”. In it, Dr. Pierson talks about the connections that teachers need to have with their students and how important it is for students to feel like they have that connection with their teachers. In the TED talk, Dr. Pierson recalls an interaction with a student who’d performed poorly on an assessment. Dr. Pierson chose to celebrate what the student accomplished on the assessment, rather than highlighting their failures. In this interaction, Dr. Pierson recalled telling the student, “You’re on the road!”

* * *

I think waiting until my forties to try to get back in shape was a mistake.  I am writing this portion of the post for anyone in their thirties who’s thinking to themselves, “I still got time before I need to get serious about all of that.” To you, my friend, I say, “Start now.”

I guess I could have put it off until my fifties, and that would have been worse.

It occurred to me yesterday that I think I am in the best shape of my life, including my varsity soccer days back in high school. In fact, I will take a moment to brag –> I ran my first 10K yesterday, and to my surprise, I ran the whole thing without stopping.

For me, the journey toward physical fitness has been about five or six years of fits and starts. But, I’m proud to say, “I’m on the road.”

And, while the road has other people on it that I know who are further down the road, and I often find myself being jealous of them and chasing after them, I realize that there are still other people on the road who are behind me, looking at me and thinking the same things about me and where I’m at.

The truly mind-bending thing is this: if I could ever become capable of quitting the comparison game, quitting the jealousy of others and the envy of what they have that I don’t have, I’d look at the road and see that there are many different versions of me on this road, past versions and future versions. The versions of me on this road that are behind me, in my past, are looking at me and thinking, “I want to get there some day”, while the current me is looking down the road, at possible future versions of me, and hoping, “I want to get there some day”.

And there’s always hope.

* * *

I’m forty-four years old, and I’m embarrassed to say that I am still learning things that I should have known years ago. Only recently have I learned the concept of progress. I’ve spent too much time, too many years, not moving forward. While I’m frustrated when I think of all that wasted time –all that time standing in the same spot on the road– I’m choosing to not to dwell on that. I feel like it’s time for me to start the process of continuing in my journey.

 

 

Somethin’ for Nothin’

It occurred to me today that I have been screwing myself, and possibly others, for years, and I never even knew I was doing it.

I am a computer guy, which means that I’m the guy that people call when their computers/phones/tablets don’t work because they want me to fix the thing.

I even tried to make a business out of it, a few years back. Put together really professional looking invoices and created a Facebook business page (which is probably still out there, now that I think about it). I even put together a rate-scale and made my services reasonably affordable.

And, back when I was starting out –or trying to, at least– word started to get around a little bit. But, it never really took off and I stopped trying, at least partly because it was going to be a drain on my time if things ever were successful, and I wasn’t even sure that I wanted that to happen.

During the venture, and even before it and since, I’ve always refused to charge my family and friends for computer repairs. This, I suppose in hindsight, could have been one of the most significant reasons that I wasn’t ever able to make the business a success. In the end, I was hoping that it would be the case that my family and friends –getting their repairs for free– would then turn around and recommend my services to their family and their friends (word of mouth), resulting in the eventual business I was hoping to get.

It never ended up working out that way.

These days, the business, which never really was a business, consists of me continuing to do the repair work, for free, for my family and friends.

* * *

One lady in particular, who I will refer to as Sarah, to protect her identity, seems to bring me her computer every few months. It shouldn’t be the case that Sarah is able to mess up her computer that often, but she does. She’ll download and install something off of the internet that mucks things up, or she’ll add some software to her browser that makes her browsing ultra-slow. Since Sarah doesn’t really know what she’s doing when it comes to her computer, her ignorance leads her to making these same mistakes over and over again. I suppose I could take the time to try to teach her to avoid doing the things that get her into trouble every time, but I never do.

Instead, every time she does it, she drops it off at my house, and I fix it.

And it occurred to me that there are no consequences for her actions. I realized this the other day as I was finishing the fixes on her computer. There are no negative ramifications for Sarah when she messes up her computer, because she doesn’t have to pay me to fix it.

Maybe, if I started charging her, she’d be a little more careful?

One of the reasons I thought about going into business all of those years ago was because so many people I knew back then were taking their computers to Best Buy to get them repaired and Best Buy was (and still does, from what I understand) charging people an arm and a leg for such repairs. I thought back then that it was reprehensible that they would do such a thing. I told people to avoid Best Buy like the plague, back then, because I used to think of them as unfairly taking advantage of the public.

Maybe I’ve been doing a greater disservice than Best Buy?

If, in a free market society like ours, people assign value based on what they have to pay for something, my service has been of no value to any of the family and friends that I’ve assisted along the way. How sad of a thought is that?!?!

Now, I know this isn’t true because, even though I’ve not charged a good number of people in my life for the assistance that I’ve given them, a good number of that good number of people have paid me back in other ways. I have a cousin whose computers come to me regularly and she’s paid me in gifts or in gifts for my kids. I have coworkers whose own personal computers I’ve fixed, who’ve paid me in books (I love to read). I know that these people value the work that I do for them because they feel this obligation to repay the favor.

But, does Best Buy actually help people by gouging them? One might think so: if that customer, who ends up paying dearly for a computer repair, gets their computer back, and then goes about some different set of behaviors to keep from having to pay so dearly ever again, then Best Buy –through some subliminal free market educational process– teaches people to be more careful.

What have I been teaching Sarah?

Truth be told, I’ve always been opposed to the concept of welfare (as a loyal conservative, I’m supposed to be), but as a Christian, I have always felt that it’s the right thing to do to help people. I think welfare creates an unhealthy dependency, whereas helping people involves coming alongside someone to assist them in what they are doing.

A hand-up vs. a hand-out.

But, as I think about Sarah, and what I’ve been doing with her over the years, I’m not even sure I’ve been helping her –of course, she would say I have been, but I’m no longer sure. I suspect that I’ve been giving her hand-outs and not hand-ups. It’s easy for me to fix her computer each time she “breaks” it –it usually doesn’t cost me more than a few minutes of my time– but I think the real work that needs to be done is a hand-up.

I need to come alongside Sarah and sit down with her and teach her what it is that she’s doing to her computer each time, so she can stop doing it. This would be a significantly greater investment of my time –I would imagine– and the less easy thing for me.

Come to think of it, I would be paying –through the investment of my time with Sarah– to have me fix her computer. Wrap your head around that!

Perhaps, each of the times that I’ve fixed her computer over the years, the sum of all of that time that I’ve spent, starts to become a more substantial investment than the one that I fear I would be making if I sat down with her to teach her how to do things right.

If all of my hand-outs to Sarah haven’t resulted in a change in her behavior, I wonder how often welfare works to assist people in making changes in their life. The cycle of dependency becomes stronger and stronger, and it persists until someone decides to step in and replace the hand-outs with hand-ups. And, while it’s not the easy thing to do when you consider it on its face, it might be, in the longer run, the less expensive option, in terms of time and money spent.

I guess I know what I need to do with Sarah. I’ll cut this off here so I can go schedule some time with her.

Sheep

It occurred to me today that it’s pretty damn frustrating when the crowd isn’t worth following.

My son is learning to drive, and while this has come with its own set of frustrations for his mother and me (an upcoming blog post, for sure), it has also allowed for us to have a different window into the the kind of person that he is and how he interacts with others.

A perfect example of this is my son’s frustration with other drivers and to what extent those drivers are, or are not, following the traffic rules. Having recently learned the rules, via Driver’s Education, my son is ultra-aware of what other drivers are doing and whether or not they are doing what they ought.

Now, admittedly, the vast majority of today’s drivers fall on a middle ground between A) a rigid adherence to all traffic laws, and B) a reckless abandon of safety and concern. My son, fresh out of driving school, has not found his way to the middle of the road yet.

Yesterday, he was getting frustrated with the number of people who were passing him and/or tailgating him. This regularly happens, because my son, who believes that the traffic rules are holy laws from up above, tends to obey speed limits in an unyielding fashion –unlike most people (including me). Earlier in the week, he got angry when someone honked at him, from behind, for taking his time making a turn off of the road.

And so, I explained to my son yesterday that people don’t follow the rules or obey the speed limits with the same loyalty that he does. I told him that he can continue to expect that, as long as he is following the rules of the road, people around him that don’t follow the rules are going to behave differently.

And then, I got to thinking…

…about sheep.

* * *

Someone called me a sheep on Facebook about a month ago –or maybe it was two; hard to keep track these days– because I was talking about wearing a face mask in public and that I thought it was the right thing to do. This person, who deserves to be nameless in this recollection, tried convincing me that I was just a follower and that I was only doing it because I was being made to do it by “the man”.

BLAH BLAH BLAH BLAH.

I don’t know if you know much about sheep, but they are dumb. They wander off, getting themselves into trouble, getting lost, and then they wind up in need of a shepherd.

Sometimes, that definitely describes me.

But, more often than not, I think a lot about the decisions I’m making and the choices that lie before me. Anyone who really knows me knows that I tend to overthink things, as a matter of fact. But, because I was making a choice that this person on Facebook thought was the wrong one, I was the sheep.

This idea, at least in my mind, is related to the concept of herd mentality, also referred to in social psychology as mob mentality, in which people tend to do what it is that other people around them are doing, just because everyone else is doing it, without much regard to the thought that should accompany all of our decisions to act.

I think you see a lot of herd mentality going on in the world these days, and the people who would prefer to think before taking action are becoming a rare breed. Additionally, introducing a layer of complexity that muddies the waters, there are many herds who seem to be rising up to offer individuals the comfort of having a group of people to follow in whatever behavior the group decides to espouse.

If you have any trouble thinking of an example of such groups working in our society these days, I’ll give you a hint: donkeys and elephants. If you’ve been paying any attention to the donkeys and the elephants lately, things are –or maybe they’ve long been this way– starting to get nasty. And this behavior, really all behavior where groups of people get nasty with other groups of people, reminds me of Bertrand Russell.

Bertrand Russell, one of the preeminent thinkers of the twentieth century, and winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature (1950), wrote about herd mentality; “Collective fear stimulates herd instinct, and tends to produce ferocity toward those who are not regarded as members of the herd.”

I’ve been noticing a lot of “ferocity” lately.

* * *

My son’s frustrations with the fact that people just don’t seem to obey traffic laws like they should is a reminder to me that I am often frustrated by the world and its failure to abide by certain previously agreed upon codes. I think that at least part of the frustration is that people who follow the rules don’t seem to get anything for doing so, while those who don’t follow the rules only rarely seems to draw any reproof.

Truly though, the strength that is necessary for anyone to make a decision to act contrary to what the rest of the world is doing, is a strength that has to come from within, even if that decision is simply a decision to follow the rules when no one else seems to be.

I think every parent has, at some point or another, encouraged their children to fight against the herd mentality approach to life with the world-famous, “Would you set yourself on fire/throw yourself off of a bridge/jump off of a cliff just because everybody else was doing it?!?!” argument. I know I have.

And, I’m actually proud of my son for following the rules when no one else seems to be. I hope he continues that throughout his whole life.