Have you ever been out with someone who treats a clerk or server as if he/she is of a lesser kind or is "in the way"? It's uncomfortable for you, isn't it? Super uncomfortable. Like telling-your-friend-that-you-didn't-really-care-for-the-ex-only-to-find-out-they're-back-together uncomfortable (trust me). Or riding-in-a-car-with-your-parents-and-pulling-up-to-a-stoplight-next-to-someone-loudly-playing-vulgar-rap-music-with-his-windows-down uncomfortable (again, trust me). Or wearing-a-wool-thong-in-July uncomfortable (I'm only guessing here, honest!)
On the other hand, have you ever been out with someone who couldn't possibly be more amicable and more respectful to a clerk or server, as if that someone always turns an otherwise meaningless transaction into a memorable encounter?
The latter type of "someone" is my parents. My mom is so to a more rational degree -- pleasant and accommodating -- while my dad wants to be your friend right then and there. Either way, pleasantly friendly or over-the-top friendly, is welcomed, and either is fun to watch unfold.
And welcomed is how everyone feels around my parents. Whether a complete stranger or a family friend of decades, you are guaranteed to feel welcomed around my parents. My mom wants to get you something to drink and make sure the room temperature is okay for you while my dad wants to sit in a chair and ask you about your career and passions and unique traits.
Taking it a step further (as my dad does with most things), in his daily conversations that are otherwise unnotable with them, my dad gives people what they presumably don't get in most other areas of their life: kindness and attention. It honestly doesn't matter who the person is -- a colleague at the office, a bagger at the grocery store, a server at a restaurant, a teller at the bank, a doctor in the ER -- I've seen him treat each with equal patience and sincere interest.
When my dad asks you a question, it's because he genuinely wants to hear your response. He wants to know what happened, or why you think that, or how you feel about something, or what it is you would do in that situation of topic. He has a gift of gab, no doubt, but he also has a gift of listening and caring. Most people who can talk well do so with the intent to get a self-serving end result (e.g. buy something; come around to their line of thinking; steer you into a one-way conversation about themselves); my dad just wants to talk so that he can learn about someone and trade stories.
He also talks to people because he knows a lot of those interactions are ones the other people likely don't get a lot of, if at all. To sound like an old curmudgeon for a moment, between all the advancements in smartphones and social media, it often feels as if we're gradually losing our attention for each other and our ability to hold focused, uninterrupted in-person conversations. And there exists an abundance of broken homes and silent families and surface-level-only workplace relationships. It all makes for a life oftentimes devoid of real human touch. My parents, primarily my dad, give that absent, real human touch to people. And they give it time and time again.
It's for this and countless other reasons why I've never caught word of anyone saying a single bad word about either of my parents (or at least I know of). Seriously, never once. (While I'm like my parents in multiple facets, this is certainly not one of them.) They're just two loving people who want to make everyone around them feel similarly loved and taken care of.
That's not to say my parents are pushovers. Being kind doesn't mean you're a wuss who can't stand up for yourself; it means considering others, taking others into account. It means being respectfully ingenuous, honest but not brash. It means putting others before you, making yourself the least important topic of conversation or person present. It means saying an uplifting word, positively impacting someone when it's least expected but much needed and well-deserved.
Kindness is not something my parents do; rather, it's something they live. A kind parent is the kind of parent we should all be so fortunate to have.
Saturday, May 25, 2013
Sunday, March 31, 2013
Lesson #6: Put Family First – and Second and Third
My dad is a man.
I realize that may not come as a great shock. Biologically, it's a bit of a given. But let's put aside the male aspect for a moment. The guy exudes manliness.
Can he fix a car? Not exactly, no.
Is he handy around the house? I think I saw him wield a plunger around a couple times growing up, but otherwise no.
Does he have a tattoo? I've never known him to, and based on the chastisements he'd sternly issue me whenever I joked in my teens about getting one, I think it's relatively safe to say he doesn't.
Does he own a motorcycle? Are you kidding me? Try talking him into flying somewhere first.
Forget all that – Martin Anderson is a man. A working man. A family man. A wise man. A good man. He puts the needs of his family first and of himself last and straight up takes care of business to ensure those priorities never alter.
As previously divulged, I've never once had a need in life that wasn't met, all of childhood included. We certainly weren't anywhere in the zip code of wealthy, but we weren't poor. We were somewhere in the middle class, perhaps favoring the lesser side, but that was nevertheless a whole class better than my dad knew in his childhood. Not to mention our status and literal "needlessness" stemmed nearly exclusively from his single income, save for my mom's occasional venture into part-time work.
In every aspect, my dad is a provider. His history paints that picture plainly. Wherever a financial demand has arisen (cars, home, my college, my recreational activities... the list is endless), so has he to that occasion, often occupationally stretching himself beyond what any one man should – and certainly beyond what many husbands and fathers are willing to. That by zero means translates to I – or anyone in the family – always got what I/we wanted (which to me is a good thing). But it does mean I lived a childhood and young adulthood free of actual concerns until I was firmly established on my own, and the significant portion of credit goes to him.
In college (a rather expensive, private one, for which I only got a "half ride," at that), I found myself nearing the end of a four-year pursuit of a teacher certification, eyeing a future in teaching high school English, a career choice I grew less excited about with each semester. And then in the latter part of my junior year, I realized that waiting on me in my senior year was a semester of student-teaching, which made me even less excited. Always having a predisposed adoration for all things London, I decided to ditch the student-teaching idea and the teaching career altogether and study abroad the following fall semester – quite possibly the wisest decision I ever made for my future. But nothing about London, or really studying abroad anywhere, comes cheaply.
In steps The Man, The Provider, who with the extremely generous, checkbooked assistance of other family members (high five to you, Mommo, Aunt Phil, and anyone else I've unforgivably overlooked), paid my entire trip by picking up a second job. And a third job.
Three jobs, people. The man worked three jobs – one of which was a freaking convenience store clerk – to fly me to, from, and all over Europe; to allow me to indulge my senses with foreign foods and sights; to immerse me in cultural education and, subsequently, several crash courses in survival and self-development; to let me, in the truest sense of the word, carelessly enjoy a three-and-a-half-month experience I'd otherwise never get to in life.
What else did those three jobs do? Pay for my scholarship-less half of college. My dad wanted me to start my post-college life debt-free. A man who came from one of the smallest houses in Georgetown, Kentucky, and who carried around debt for decades of his life, wanted me to begin my adulthood with a clean slate. That is a gift I'll always treasure and of which I'll always be in awe. It's also one I, to the best of my ability, will always honor by staying out of debt (save for a mortgage – homes are expensive, folks).
This is just one example of Lord knows how many ways in which my dad, as the family provider, has sacrificed his desires for the betterment and happiness of the family. He is the definition of selflessness. Sure, he treats himself to the occasional luxury (why that man owns more sets of golf clubs than I own pairs of shoes is beyond me), but on the whole he and his personal wants and time without hesitation willfully take a backseat if it means his wife or sons can have or experience something we otherwise couldn't. Simply put, his commitment to the good of the family is never in question.
Honestly, I don't see how it gets any manlier than that.
I realize that may not come as a great shock. Biologically, it's a bit of a given. But let's put aside the male aspect for a moment. The guy exudes manliness.
Can he fix a car? Not exactly, no.
Is he handy around the house? I think I saw him wield a plunger around a couple times growing up, but otherwise no.
Does he have a tattoo? I've never known him to, and based on the chastisements he'd sternly issue me whenever I joked in my teens about getting one, I think it's relatively safe to say he doesn't.
Does he own a motorcycle? Are you kidding me? Try talking him into flying somewhere first.
Forget all that – Martin Anderson is a man. A working man. A family man. A wise man. A good man. He puts the needs of his family first and of himself last and straight up takes care of business to ensure those priorities never alter.
As previously divulged, I've never once had a need in life that wasn't met, all of childhood included. We certainly weren't anywhere in the zip code of wealthy, but we weren't poor. We were somewhere in the middle class, perhaps favoring the lesser side, but that was nevertheless a whole class better than my dad knew in his childhood. Not to mention our status and literal "needlessness" stemmed nearly exclusively from his single income, save for my mom's occasional venture into part-time work.
In every aspect, my dad is a provider. His history paints that picture plainly. Wherever a financial demand has arisen (cars, home, my college, my recreational activities... the list is endless), so has he to that occasion, often occupationally stretching himself beyond what any one man should – and certainly beyond what many husbands and fathers are willing to. That by zero means translates to I – or anyone in the family – always got what I/we wanted (which to me is a good thing). But it does mean I lived a childhood and young adulthood free of actual concerns until I was firmly established on my own, and the significant portion of credit goes to him.
In college (a rather expensive, private one, for which I only got a "half ride," at that), I found myself nearing the end of a four-year pursuit of a teacher certification, eyeing a future in teaching high school English, a career choice I grew less excited about with each semester. And then in the latter part of my junior year, I realized that waiting on me in my senior year was a semester of student-teaching, which made me even less excited. Always having a predisposed adoration for all things London, I decided to ditch the student-teaching idea and the teaching career altogether and study abroad the following fall semester – quite possibly the wisest decision I ever made for my future. But nothing about London, or really studying abroad anywhere, comes cheaply.
In steps The Man, The Provider, who with the extremely generous, checkbooked assistance of other family members (high five to you, Mommo, Aunt Phil, and anyone else I've unforgivably overlooked), paid my entire trip by picking up a second job. And a third job.
Three jobs, people. The man worked three jobs – one of which was a freaking convenience store clerk – to fly me to, from, and all over Europe; to allow me to indulge my senses with foreign foods and sights; to immerse me in cultural education and, subsequently, several crash courses in survival and self-development; to let me, in the truest sense of the word, carelessly enjoy a three-and-a-half-month experience I'd otherwise never get to in life.
What else did those three jobs do? Pay for my scholarship-less half of college. My dad wanted me to start my post-college life debt-free. A man who came from one of the smallest houses in Georgetown, Kentucky, and who carried around debt for decades of his life, wanted me to begin my adulthood with a clean slate. That is a gift I'll always treasure and of which I'll always be in awe. It's also one I, to the best of my ability, will always honor by staying out of debt (save for a mortgage – homes are expensive, folks).
This is just one example of Lord knows how many ways in which my dad, as the family provider, has sacrificed his desires for the betterment and happiness of the family. He is the definition of selflessness. Sure, he treats himself to the occasional luxury (why that man owns more sets of golf clubs than I own pairs of shoes is beyond me), but on the whole he and his personal wants and time without hesitation willfully take a backseat if it means his wife or sons can have or experience something we otherwise couldn't. Simply put, his commitment to the good of the family is never in question.
Honestly, I don't see how it gets any manlier than that.
Monday, February 18, 2013
Lesson #5: Take Time, Make Time
A year or so ago the pastor of the church I attend delivered a revealing message that could be boiled down to the assertion that whatever it is to which you give the majority of your time is arguably what you care about the most. In other words, if you ranked the activities that, and people who, comprise your average week by time allotted, it would likely resemble the level of concern and importance you assign them, whether you like it or not.
Now, like everything in life, there are certainly exceptions. Sometimes work schedules conflict – we don't all live the Dolly Parton 9-to-5 lifestyle (or probably any Dolly Parton-related lifestyle, unless of course you own a theme park that bears your name, or you're still getting nipped and tucked at 65+) – so even if you fiercely tried, it might be simply unfeasible to be around a cherished one for more hours than you each work. Or in my current case, I live 400 miles away from my parents, so while we communicate multiple times each week, the aggregate time given them overwhelmingly pales in comparison to the 40 hours per week I give my employer – but that's hardly a fair representation of my priorities (sorry, Turner – let's keep things professional).
The rare exceptions aside, that principle holds more veracity than is comfortable accepting. And it makes sense, right? I mean, the more you enjoy something/someone, or the higher value and regard you give something/someone, the more time you'll naturally give it/him/her/them.
Well, thank the Lord my parents understood this little nugget of truth and ensured they apportioned their time according to their life concerns.
I often tell people that I never had a need growing up that wasn't met. Sure, I had plenty of wants that went unfulfilled – a trampoline, a slip-n-slide, a Power Wheels truck (but, hey, that's what neighborhood friends are for, right?) – and of course plenty of them were granted, but I always had a meal prepared, I always had clothes to wear, I always had the school supplies demanded, and most importantly I always had the time and attention of my parents.
I'm a fervent believer that time and attention trump all tangibles you can give someone. They're also the easiest things you can give someone – and, oh hey, they're free. Yet we colossally suck at giving either to anyone. Sadly, I don't see that changing, as technology and social media continue to evolve in a way that chiefly leads to the wasting of our time and diversion of our attention to the constant buzzing and beeping and tweeting about principally meaningless matters that we nevertheless feel warrant our immediate focus. (Are my eyebrows getting wiry? I feel like Andy Rooney.)
All that to say my parents served me up all the time and attention I could ask for on a silver platter. And is there a childhood need greater than those two offerings? My dad tossed baseball with me in the backyard. My mom read with me on the couch. My dad played rounds of golf with me. My mom taught me at home from fourth through eighth grade. My dad battled against me in chess and checkers. My mom battled against me in games from the '70s you’ve never heard of, like Flinch and Pente. They both took me shopping; attended 99% of my baseball games, no matter how many counties or states away the baseball fields were; and just talked, listened, asked, and advised.
I can't recall a single time I came to them with a request, a question, a need to talk, or a want to do something and hearing a "no." There were no replies of "I've got too much work to do" or "I'm watching TV right now" or "I don't really feel like it." Rather, I felt assured that their time was my time, that I was their priority, and that, true or not, their desire to watch another Gene Kelly flick or read another David McCullough biography or sketch another art piece unfailingly took a backseat to throwing baseball with me or building hotels on Park Place and Marvin Gardens with me.
We just don't have much time here. And the everydayness of life demands our coveted attention. So giving either of those precious, limited commodities to the key folks in our lives is the ultimate display of love and respect. It's how you show people they matter, where they rank in your priorities.
Thankfully I'm perpetually left unquestioning where I rank with my parents' priorities. Hope that backseat is comfortable, Gene Kelly and every program on the History Channel.
Now, like everything in life, there are certainly exceptions. Sometimes work schedules conflict – we don't all live the Dolly Parton 9-to-5 lifestyle (or probably any Dolly Parton-related lifestyle, unless of course you own a theme park that bears your name, or you're still getting nipped and tucked at 65+) – so even if you fiercely tried, it might be simply unfeasible to be around a cherished one for more hours than you each work. Or in my current case, I live 400 miles away from my parents, so while we communicate multiple times each week, the aggregate time given them overwhelmingly pales in comparison to the 40 hours per week I give my employer – but that's hardly a fair representation of my priorities (sorry, Turner – let's keep things professional).
The rare exceptions aside, that principle holds more veracity than is comfortable accepting. And it makes sense, right? I mean, the more you enjoy something/someone, or the higher value and regard you give something/someone, the more time you'll naturally give it/him/her/them.
Well, thank the Lord my parents understood this little nugget of truth and ensured they apportioned their time according to their life concerns.
I often tell people that I never had a need growing up that wasn't met. Sure, I had plenty of wants that went unfulfilled – a trampoline, a slip-n-slide, a Power Wheels truck (but, hey, that's what neighborhood friends are for, right?) – and of course plenty of them were granted, but I always had a meal prepared, I always had clothes to wear, I always had the school supplies demanded, and most importantly I always had the time and attention of my parents.
I'm a fervent believer that time and attention trump all tangibles you can give someone. They're also the easiest things you can give someone – and, oh hey, they're free. Yet we colossally suck at giving either to anyone. Sadly, I don't see that changing, as technology and social media continue to evolve in a way that chiefly leads to the wasting of our time and diversion of our attention to the constant buzzing and beeping and tweeting about principally meaningless matters that we nevertheless feel warrant our immediate focus. (Are my eyebrows getting wiry? I feel like Andy Rooney.)
All that to say my parents served me up all the time and attention I could ask for on a silver platter. And is there a childhood need greater than those two offerings? My dad tossed baseball with me in the backyard. My mom read with me on the couch. My dad played rounds of golf with me. My mom taught me at home from fourth through eighth grade. My dad battled against me in chess and checkers. My mom battled against me in games from the '70s you’ve never heard of, like Flinch and Pente. They both took me shopping; attended 99% of my baseball games, no matter how many counties or states away the baseball fields were; and just talked, listened, asked, and advised.
I can't recall a single time I came to them with a request, a question, a need to talk, or a want to do something and hearing a "no." There were no replies of "I've got too much work to do" or "I'm watching TV right now" or "I don't really feel like it." Rather, I felt assured that their time was my time, that I was their priority, and that, true or not, their desire to watch another Gene Kelly flick or read another David McCullough biography or sketch another art piece unfailingly took a backseat to throwing baseball with me or building hotels on Park Place and Marvin Gardens with me.
We just don't have much time here. And the everydayness of life demands our coveted attention. So giving either of those precious, limited commodities to the key folks in our lives is the ultimate display of love and respect. It's how you show people they matter, where they rank in your priorities.
Thankfully I'm perpetually left unquestioning where I rank with my parents' priorities. Hope that backseat is comfortable, Gene Kelly and every program on the History Channel.
Sunday, February 3, 2013
Lesson #4: Give a Little Bit
My parents are no dummies – it didn't take long for them to learn how to get me to surrender and comply to whatever was asked of me, and do so with minimal complaining. All it took was the promise of food.
Go to swim lessons at the YMCA? Buy me a TV dinner at the grocery store on the way home.
Go to baseball practices and games and give it my all? Reward me with drive-thru junk food for each great play.
Go to Tuesday night Pentecostal church services that could range from anywhere between three to six hours? Give me a $2 spending spree at any fast-food chain afterwards. (Hey, in a time when McDonald's hamburgers were just 49 cents, two bucks was jackpot city.)
I'm not kidding. For better or worse, I'm that easy.
That agreement extended to volunteering, which is something for which my mom has always strongly advocated and hammered into my brother and my brain. Whether it was Ehrler's ice cream in Louisville or something salty and greasy from just about any establishment with a drive thru, my mom knew how to tug at myheart stomach strings and lure me in to whatever volunteerism she lined up for us, be it working at a soup kitchen, picking up carelessly disposed trash along roadsides, or feeding hungry soldiers.
Look, I'm not gonna lie and say I did any of these things out of the goodness of my heart. Quite contrarily, it was solely for the promised food that followed. So even in volunteering, it was all about me, me, me. Or at least that's how each volunteer opportunity started.
A couple hours in to serving plates of hotdogs and Ruffles chips or stabbing at old, littered Coke bottles, after my initial childish complacence finally wore off, the feeling that my not-exactly-voluntary labor might yield a reward greater and more satisfying than fatty calories for my spoiled self would indubitably sink in. Did I want to go into that soup kitchen and prep food for, and make small talk with, a bunch of homeless people who looked "funny" and smelled "funny"? Nope. Did I want to walk up and down a highway and make someone's irresponsible litter my sudden responsibility to clean up? Not in the least. Did I want to go all the way to Louisville every other Saturday night and spend hours setting up the same rows of chairs for, serving the same meals to, and hearing the same jokes and performances for hundreds of uniformed men and women as part of a ministry program to appreciate those in the military? God no. Absolutely zero of any of those things sounded remotely appealing. My time would be better spent watching a movie or building a town out of Legos.
That's how I felt beforehand. But then when I unfolded my arms and took my stuck-up nose out of the air and actually got to work, a conflicting feeling overtook me time and time again: I felt small for always thinking I was above meaningful work that positively impacted others, yet I felt big because I was contributing – willfully or otherwise – to something that was bigger than me. I thank my mom for that, for coercing me to give my time and efforts to others, for allowing me to see what my contributions could produce, especially in conjunction with others' contributions.
My mom didn't stop there, however. With her checkbook (my dad, too) she loudly demonstrated the equal importance in giving – and doing so cheerfully – from a monetary perspective, that organizations that serve and contribute deserve financial support from those of us who are blessed enough to provide such funds – and that true giving is giving because you want to and not because someone in power mandates it.
This isn't meant to be a self-righteous, hey-look-at-me statement whatsoever, but as a Christian, I'm an ardent tither to my church, because I feel led to, blessed to, and confident enough in how my church uses those funds to serve the many needs in my community to know that they're doing right by the money I offer up. Now, if you don't believe in tithing, or if you find the organized assembly of people before God to be evil and corrupt across the board, that's cool – there is a plethora of non-religious ways in which you can contribute your time, sweat, and/or money to people, charities, or other organizations in need.
She might not know she did, but my mom successfully taught me how giving in any facet is a privilege, something of which to be appreciative to even be able to do. It's an honor to give. I know that because the elated feeling and general satisfaction afterwards can't be matched.
And for the record, I haven't changed much; I'm pretty much a meal's bribe away from doing or attending just about whatever dreadful thing you want me to.
Go to swim lessons at the YMCA? Buy me a TV dinner at the grocery store on the way home.
Go to baseball practices and games and give it my all? Reward me with drive-thru junk food for each great play.
Go to Tuesday night Pentecostal church services that could range from anywhere between three to six hours? Give me a $2 spending spree at any fast-food chain afterwards. (Hey, in a time when McDonald's hamburgers were just 49 cents, two bucks was jackpot city.)
I'm not kidding. For better or worse, I'm that easy.
That agreement extended to volunteering, which is something for which my mom has always strongly advocated and hammered into my brother and my brain. Whether it was Ehrler's ice cream in Louisville or something salty and greasy from just about any establishment with a drive thru, my mom knew how to tug at my
Look, I'm not gonna lie and say I did any of these things out of the goodness of my heart. Quite contrarily, it was solely for the promised food that followed. So even in volunteering, it was all about me, me, me. Or at least that's how each volunteer opportunity started.
A couple hours in to serving plates of hotdogs and Ruffles chips or stabbing at old, littered Coke bottles, after my initial childish complacence finally wore off, the feeling that my not-exactly-voluntary labor might yield a reward greater and more satisfying than fatty calories for my spoiled self would indubitably sink in. Did I want to go into that soup kitchen and prep food for, and make small talk with, a bunch of homeless people who looked "funny" and smelled "funny"? Nope. Did I want to walk up and down a highway and make someone's irresponsible litter my sudden responsibility to clean up? Not in the least. Did I want to go all the way to Louisville every other Saturday night and spend hours setting up the same rows of chairs for, serving the same meals to, and hearing the same jokes and performances for hundreds of uniformed men and women as part of a ministry program to appreciate those in the military? God no. Absolutely zero of any of those things sounded remotely appealing. My time would be better spent watching a movie or building a town out of Legos.
That's how I felt beforehand. But then when I unfolded my arms and took my stuck-up nose out of the air and actually got to work, a conflicting feeling overtook me time and time again: I felt small for always thinking I was above meaningful work that positively impacted others, yet I felt big because I was contributing – willfully or otherwise – to something that was bigger than me. I thank my mom for that, for coercing me to give my time and efforts to others, for allowing me to see what my contributions could produce, especially in conjunction with others' contributions.
My mom didn't stop there, however. With her checkbook (my dad, too) she loudly demonstrated the equal importance in giving – and doing so cheerfully – from a monetary perspective, that organizations that serve and contribute deserve financial support from those of us who are blessed enough to provide such funds – and that true giving is giving because you want to and not because someone in power mandates it.
This isn't meant to be a self-righteous, hey-look-at-me statement whatsoever, but as a Christian, I'm an ardent tither to my church, because I feel led to, blessed to, and confident enough in how my church uses those funds to serve the many needs in my community to know that they're doing right by the money I offer up. Now, if you don't believe in tithing, or if you find the organized assembly of people before God to be evil and corrupt across the board, that's cool – there is a plethora of non-religious ways in which you can contribute your time, sweat, and/or money to people, charities, or other organizations in need.
She might not know she did, but my mom successfully taught me how giving in any facet is a privilege, something of which to be appreciative to even be able to do. It's an honor to give. I know that because the elated feeling and general satisfaction afterwards can't be matched.
And for the record, I haven't changed much; I'm pretty much a meal's bribe away from doing or attending just about whatever dreadful thing you want me to.
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