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Things Are Only Things

 

When I was eighteen I took the thousand-dollar inheritance from my grandmother, added some of my own savings, and bought my first car—a brand new metallic blue VW Bug.

Since my father always parked his car in the garage, I had to park mine on the street. A few weeks after my big purchase, I walked out of the house toward my beautiful new car and my jaw dropped. My precious VW had been sideswiped, leaving two ugly black scratches on its left rear fender. I was furious. My brand new car was ruined.

After a month of fuming I realized that I was allowing my life to be ruined by those two horrible scratches, and that my anger wasn’t doing me a bit of good. It couldn’t help me to find or punish the culprit. It couldn’t transform my car back to its original pristine condition.

A car, no matter how expensive or how beautiful, is only a thing. So I decided to let go of my anger, and for the rest of my life to never be upset about things. I resolved to reserve my emotional energy exclusively for people. Things can be fixed. Things can be replaced. People cannot.

And I am pleased to report that from that day to this I have lived by my decision. I have not darkened my mood or my life with anger or regret about a thing.

I recently scratched a van I now own. I refuse to be angry. I will just pay to have it fixed. When she was seventeen one of my daughters was diagnosed with Type 1 Diabetes. As I write this, her condition can be treated but it cannot be fixed. I am concerned about her, not the van.


We must rapidly begin the shift from a “thing-oriented” society to a “person-oriented” society
Martin Luther King, Jr.


I once traveled with my family to Australia where more than 95 percent of the world’s gem-quality opals are mined. One afternoon in Sydney, after a boat tour of its beautiful harbor, we stepped into a shop which our guide said was the best in Australia for buying opals.

 

My wife collects rings, and the ring she picked out was drop-dead gorgeous. It was also drop-dead expensive, and probably cost as much as half of the other rings in her collection combined. But after some brief negotiation and hesitation I bought it for her.

Daveen wore her green and blue opal consistently for two weeks after we returned.

Until we went to the theater. . .

When the curtain fell and the lights rose after the first act of Dirty Rotten Scoundrels the musical playing at Hollywood’s Pantages Theater, Daveen gasped.

“My ring!”

I looked at her hand, and saw the thin gold outline of a ring, but no gemstone.

“Your orange stone?” I asked.

“No! My opal!”

Daveen doesn’t panic easily, but her response reminded me of how I felt when I first saw those ugly scratches on my VW Bug.

We searched the floor. We searched the seats. Five ushers helped us during intermission. No opal.

After the show was over we searched the theater again, this time with eight or ten ushers helping out. Still no opal.

I certainly don’t like to lose anything. Even more, I don’t like someone else to lose a gift that I’ve given them, especially when the gift was expensive. But gone is gone and I refuse to be upset about the loss or destruction of a thing. So we gave our name and telephone number to the manager of the theater and left for home.

The drive home was silent. While we both thought that we had seen the last of the opal, I am pleased to report that the mini-disaster did not spoil the rest of our evening. Daveen, to her credit, seemed to put her anguish aside.

The next morning life went on and the new day was not to be marred by a missing thing.  We were both able to weather this potential storm by using what has come to be one of my favorite People Tools: Things Are Only Things.


Love can come to everyone, The best things in life are free.
Buddy DeSylva


Do you like happy endings? I do.

Immediately after I arrived at work the next day, I called Daveen:

“Hi, Daveen.”

“Hi.”

“I found the opal.”

“What!?

“It was on my desk. It probably fell out when you picked me up at the office last night.  The cleaning crew must have found it and put it on my desk.”

Silence. Then, “Thank goodness.”

I love Daveen. I like, but do not love, any ring, or any car, no matter how expensive or how beautiful.

Alan

 

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Belt Buckle: Actions Always Speak Louder Than Words

 

“It’s simple,” the all-star defensive lineman explained.

“The great ball carriers like Jim Brown or Gale Sayers fake with their eyes, they fake with their heads, fake with their shoulders. But they can’t fake with their belt buckle. Wherever that’s going, that’s where they’re going.

“I just watch their belt buckle.”

When I was young I asked many girls at my high school to go out with me. Since I was not every woman’s dream date—all right, I was president of the chess club—my invitations were refused, often indirectly.

“Oh, I’m so sorry, but I’m busy next Friday night.”

“How about Saturday night?”

“Let’s see. No, I guess I’m busy then, too.”

“A week from Saturday?”

“I really can’t commit that far in advance.”

I cringe now when I think of how many years it took me to realize that while her words were polite, each woman’s belt buckle just wasn’t going to head into my VW Bug.

With this realization I started down the path to understanding that words, including words of promise, are not the same as performance.

It’s human nature to avoid a situation you think might be unpleasant, especially, for me, direct confrontation. That’s why words and actions often diverge.

“The check is in the mail” is not the same as the check itself.

“I’ll call you tomorrow” is not the same as calling tomorrow.

I’m sure you have had similar experiences, and may have reached a similar conclusion. On a deeper level, which we may not even be consciously aware of, when words and actions diverge there is an injury on both sides of the belt buckle. How many times can my actions fail to line up with my words before the sum of my small deceits takes its toll? How often can I dodge the truth of my own intentions by saying to myself, “Oh, I didn’t want to hurt her feelings,” before I lose the connection with my own heart?  Before I become a living contradiction?

Why do we act this way? Why aren’t we forthright, with our words and actions (our belt buckle) moving in sync?

It’s clear to me that we avoid saying our own truths out loud because we attempt to avoid rejection and allow our personal insecurities to overrule the silent truths that always live in our hearts.

I want to rely on both your words and your actions.  I focus on your belt buckle because I want to be safe. I want to banish the unknown and accurately predict my future with you.

My dad says that if you’re willing to promise something you should be willing to write it down and sign your name to it.

I am grateful for my relationship with my father.  Dad’s belt buckle often rode in my VW Bug with me. In fact, he was there simply because I thought about him and felt his presence. Relationships are like that. They are always with you. Harmony of thought and action, repeated over the years, nurture strong relationships. We have the opportunity to know ourselves more and more as we make our way in this world, and injuries can heal if we are not reinjured by constant reappearance of small or large deceptions.

I sometimes wonder if, for a week, I should write down all of my promises. How high would that stack of stated intentions be, and how often would my actions match that stack? Consciously or not, we each wrestle with this problem. We can duck and weave, fake with our eyes, our shoulders, and especially our words as that opposing lineman of truth looms over us, but the belt buckle always reveals the authentic tale of who you and I really are.

I can be tricked by words, but I’m seldom fooled by actions. Be careful, Jim Brown. I’m watching your belt buckle.

Alan

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If the Yolk Breaks, Fry Another Egg

When it comes to breakfast I am a creature of habit. Years ago every morning I fried one “over easy” egg for myself. I liked the yolk medium, not hard. One morning, as I dropped the egg into the frying pan, the shell punctured the yolk, which broke. I frowned, and resigned myself to another unhappy breakfast because I knew that when I turned the egg over the yolk would become hard.

I glared at the offending egg. I tried to console myself by thinking about lunch. Then a thought popped into my head. “This egg costs about twenty cents. I can throw it away and cook another egg exactly the way I like it—‘over easy.’”

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