Friday, December 18, 2020

Yes! But Who's Doing the Dishes?

Thread One:

When we had our first child, 12 years ago, I remember reading every parenting book I could get my hands on. Research article exploring the most effective way to raise kind, happy, confident kids? I'm on it! Newest studies, profoundly thought-provoking columns, how-to guides? Check, check, and check. 

Now, shoulder-deep in kids--four boys whose energy never seems to calibrate at anything lower than ZENITH POINT THRESHHOLD--a thought that began percolating back when I read all those books and articles comes circling back: why does it seem like a lot of white men are writing these volumes on parenting and general hot-to advice regarding children and their development? 

And furthermore, I began to wonder--12 years ago, and the question forms a through-line to today--about a second question: how are they finding so much time to write, travel, speak, lecture, attend so many conferences, give so many interviews and podcasts and so on?

Essentially, the overarching question my mind and heart couldn't square with everything I was seeing and reading was--and is!--essentially this: who's actually raising the kids? 

Thread Two:

I remember reading a fascinating interview with Ruth Graham about her famed evangelist husband, Billy, and how he came home from one of his marathon speaking tours. one of their kids asked Mom, "Who's that?" and the reply--given in a sense of humor but recalled by me with a strain of fascinating sadness--was, "That's your father." 

His speaking and traveling had caused crowds to surge and his fame to skyrocket, but had also caused him to become somewhat of a stranger in his own home. 

Thread Three:

And now, as I consider so many well-meaning men making a name for themselves in this world--seeking to bridge farther gaps, reach bigger audiences, share inspiring speeches, and striving to grow their influences, the question emerges: Yes! But Who's doing the dishes?

The Rope:

As a father of four sons, I want my kids to strive to pursue their dreams. I want them to chase their deepest passions, especially in the hopes that those passions can meet a need in the world, to paraphrase Frederick Buechner. 

However, what I desperately do not want to teach them is to pursue their own goals and dreams while assuming that someone else will change the diapers, or do the dishes, or fold the laundry, or vacuum the carpet, or shovel the driveway. 

And now, having just turned 40, I can scan the last twenty years of my own life and see a somewhat slow shift towards this place where I now stand. At twenty, I craved to write a bestselling book, give a speech that would move mountains, craft a new educational theory that would shake the public education system, be everywhere. I wanted to give a keynote at a major conference, be invited to Ted, and write another bestselling book (and then another and another and another). 

At 32, the best job I could obtain while living abroad was to be a paperboy. That dose of humility was much-needed, and in a beautiful sense of irony, it is the job that has most profoundly helped me become who I now am. 

At 40, I no longer crave major significance, nor for recognition or to be on the stage or the subject of any viral podcast--but rather I do crave to, yes, do the dishes. Give baths to the kids. Change the diapers. Teach a great class for the students whom I deeply care for and want to see become inspiring educators. Help fold a load of laundry. Shovel the driveway. 

At the risk of boiling down the deeply complex waters of pursuing one's passions and chasing dreams, I am in no way suggesting that wanting to give a crowd-roaring speech or writing a bestselling book is wrong. I am in no way claiming, here, that the pursuit of significance inevitably unfolds on shaky ground. 

However, I do want to ask the question of myself, consistently, in the face of any dreams that involves me under the lights: Yes! But who's doing the dishes?

And I want to ask my sons the same thing. I want them to strive not for any sense of deserving praise, but rather to curtail entitlement and instead help them see the beauty of service. I want to help them see the profound joy in being fully present to the people around them, rather than always seeking to impact strangers whom they can't see--especially when that impact might masquerade as beneficent service but really involves the enlargement of the male ego. 

To return to those parenting and childhood books written by the experts, or the many speakers who travel countless circuits to talk about issues that may displace them from the places in which they might actually face those very issues--the lingering question is not about denying oneself, but rather about noticing whose work gets, well, noticed

Whose work--and what work--gets valued? 

I do want to change the world. I want to make it better. I want to contribute something of meaning to the people with whom I interact. But I do not want to do so through the mechanism of an entitled expectation that others will do the dishes, the laundry, the diapers, the driveway. I want to make an impact not by enlarging my own ego, but by learning to do the meaningful work that lies, waiting, right in front of my face. Not because it gets applauded, but because it, too, matters. And because it helps to curtail my own need for applause. It helps to situate my own soul in a place of service and love, and perhaps--too--enables others to shine. Especially others who may have been prevented from doing so because of unjust structures, or status quo expectations that encouraged me, as a white male, to chase my dreams, while simultaneously discouraged others from chasing theirs. 

Thursday, August 27, 2020

Graduation Address, The Bromfield School, 2020 (7/31/20)

Below is the transcript of the commencement address I gave at The Bromfield School, to graduating seniors whom I had taught years before in 7th grade. 

Five years ago, I welcomed you to 7th grade English with a picture of an iceberg on our wall and told you that it was super cool to be PERSPICACIOUS. I challenged you to be kind, bold, and honest.

Today, I want to remind you of those same principles—but with one additional caveat: each is a lifelong process, and we can only triumph in their pursuit if we are willing to trust the process of our own journeys, especially when life doesn’t proceed as we had once hoped it would. 

Like now. 

If you are confused, you are not alone. 

If you are afraid, you are not alone. 

If you are angry or worried or uncertain, you are not alone.

The good news is that by being honest about where you’re at, and how you’re struggling, you allow kindness to blossom. You allow other people in, instead of pretending that all is well. 

I have four sons now, ages 11 years through 7 months, and it is fascinating to watch how each handles their emotions. My two-year old, Joshua, has no qualms about being precisely honest about how he feels—especially to a variety of older women who live in our neighborhood and whom he sees when we go for early morning walks. 

He loves calling out the names of the various older women as we pass by their houses. 

“Daddy, that’s Linda’s house! HI LINDA!” 

When Linda does not immediately emerge, he’ll ask, “Where’s Linda?”

“She’s sleeping Joshua. It’s still super early, only five-thrity in the morning,” I will sagely reply, thinking we’ve settled that. 

“LINDA! WAKE UP BECAUSE I WANT TO SEE YOU WHY ARE YOU STILL SLEEPING THE SUN IS SHINING SO I WANT TO SEE YOU AND I AM SAD WAKE UP LINDA!”

And he repeats the process for Gladys, and Carol, and Annie, and Florence, whose houses we pass as we venture forth.

In return, these kind older women shower Joshua and our other boys with animal crackers and veggies sticks and chocolate and Twizzlers and old toys. 

But honesty isn’t always so easy as we get older. Talking about how we really, deeply feel and what we really, deeply need, we fear, won’t commandeer us animal crackers and cool toys. It’s harder. We fear more, share less. The emotions get complex, their roots webbed, and their resolutions obscured. 

But by refraining from honesty we deprive others of the ability to show us kindness. We convince ourselves that we are the only ones who think or feel a certain way. We are not. 

And by sharing who we really are, we give other people the chance to see, accept, and love us. As you go from here, please be willing to share that you are sad, or hopeful, or excited, or scared, or giddy, or grateful. It’s the only way you’ll find the Lindas in your life, willing to come to their doors at 6am, groggy and half-asleep, but ready to see you for who you are. 

So: be honest, and when others take that leap to be honest with you, be kind.

But there’s one more challenge I have to give you—and it’s a hard one: be bold. It’s hard because we so often believe a lot of lies about courage and what it really is.

Maya Angelou said that “Courage is the most important of all the virtues because without courage, you can't practice any other virtue consistently.” This means that courage, or being bold, is never a single act, but rather a practice. It embodies the way we live—the thousand seemingly mundane decisions we make every day, that actually forge who we become. 

When that same Linda-loving son, Joshua, was born, he died. He came out blue with no heartbeat. And instead of letting my wife and I hold him, we heard intercom shouts of emergency codes, and saw dozens of medical staff rush our hospital room.

I held my wife’s hand and wept. 

I was thinking the worst as every second slugged past with no hope and no sound from our third son.

After forever, I heard the most beautiful noise I think I ever will: a shrill cry which made me laugh with joy. The doctor who shocked our son back to life, though, bewildered me. I will never forget our conversation after all had calmed down. 

It was clear to me that what I saw as incredible courage and heroism in that doctor was another small action he and the other nurses had taken. The doctor was decidedly calm and matter of fact about the whole thing. Mundane.

What if the actions you deem normal and mundane could actually save someone’s life? The small smile you give, the kind text, the picked up piece of trash, the band aid you offer, the song you sing, the catch you have with a kid, the lunch you buy for someone, the hello wave, the goodbye hug, the sign you hold, the words you use, the way your eyes light up when someone walks into a room or your life. 

It matters. It all matters. And when we give and receive enough of these small moments—-these tiny acts of courage and boldness—we build a life. 

Today, I challenge and encourage you to build a life that is kind, bold, and honest. It will not be perfect. It will be, like me and all of us, a work in progress. But while it will never be perfect, you will also never be truly alone. 

You will indeed find those with animal crackers or electromagnetic shocks, ready to meet you exactly where you’re at. And what’s more, you’ll do the same for others. Thank you, and congratulations.