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Throw Your Stereotypes in the Wastebasket

wastebasket_1As a child, I adopted many chiseled-in-granite ideas about how an adult should live. That wisdom included:

1. A couple should marry in their early twenties and spend every night together for the rest of their lives.

2. A good father plays baseball with his sons and takes his children to picnics in the park.

3. A woman stays home and cooks. A man handles the money.

4. If you’re going to college, you have to start immediately after high school and continue your education without interruption until you finish.

5. If you ever accumulate a large amount of money it will eventually disappear.

6. When you praise people they lose all incentive to perform well.

7. Other people are out to get you.

8. Length of life is more important than quality of life.

9. Work is unpleasant and should be avoided as much as possible.

10. If you are too smart, other people will dislike you.

Where did I learn these rules? From my family, as well as my schools, teachers, and other children. In short, from the cultural stereotypes of my childhood.

My early beliefs were not entirely wrong. Quite the contrary. Many fathers play baseball with their sons and enjoy taking their children to the park for a picnic. Many women cook, and many men handle money. Some couples marry in their early twenties and live reasonably happily together ever after.

But living solely by stereotype can be treacherous because it often masks your own personal needs. One size does not fit all.

Those ten particular rules didn’t work for me as an adult and I don’t believe them anymore. Specifically:

1. I first married when I was twenty-one. Now, for more than thirty years, I have enjoyed my third marriage. I also admit that I enjoy an occasional overnight business trip alone.

2. I have two adult sons who are doing well in the world but I don’t recall playing baseball with them. I do remember picnics in the park.

3. My wife seldom cooks. We each handle money well.

4. Many years after completing my basic college education I returned to earn additional degrees.  My wife started college when she was twenty-four and graduated when she was twenty-nine.

5. As a lawyer I discovered that many people die leaving a large estate. Their wealth did not vanish before they did.

6. Praise motivates and criticism discourages.

7. Most people, including teachers, doctors, and friends, are actually out to do me good.

8. While the length of life is more easily measured, the quality of life is more important.

9. Work can be fun and fulfilling.

10. People used to dislike me not because I was smart but because I was obnoxious and sarcastic.

Gradually, over the years, I have discarded many of those “truths” I grew up with. I put them in my mental and wastebasket_2emotional wastebasket, because they didn’t work for me anymore.

Many stereotypes of “how to be” exist largely in our own heads.  Some beliefs work for us but many do not. We grow. We change. The world changes. What satisfies me may not satisfy you and vice versa. This is why I use the People Tool of the Wastebasket to throw out those ideas or values that do not work for me today, which is the only day I have.

Whatever your beliefs, act on what your judgment tells you is appropriate today. Discard those “truths” that may have been helpful yesterday. You can always change your mind tomorrow, when circumstances may be different.

And use today to build new, more useful beliefs. Throw your obsolete, rusty tools into the Wastebasket. That’s what it’s for.

Alan

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Be like Socrates: Get to Know Thyself

 

socrates_1If Socrates were an answer on Jeopardy, “know thyself” might be the question.

Actually maxim “know thyself” was already established wisdom long before Socrates used it. In Egypt the ancient temple of Luxor bore the inscription “Man, know thyself . . . and thou shalt know the gods.”

I trust words of wisdom, which for more than two thousand years have survived war, famine, and literary critics. In fact, of all the People Tools that I use in my life, Socrates’ “Know Thyself” tops the list.

You have to know yourself—your likes, dislikes, abilities, disabilities, experiences, and goals—in order to decide what other tools to use in your life, just as a carpenter has to know his project in order to select the appropriate saw. He or she would use different tools to produce a door than to construct a piano.

My mother visited museums in every city she traveled to. My father preferred to sit in a motel room and watch TV. One day, my father asked my mother if she would like to visit a local museum with him. Startled by his sudden interest, she agreed. Together they spent several hours viewing the exhibits.

Later, in their motel room, my father said that he hoped she had enjoyed herself because he did it to please her. My mother said that she was tired, but because she thought that he was interested in that specific museum she had actually endured the visit for him. Both my mother and father ended up at a museum that neither of them wanted to see.

When you know and express yourself accurately you will seldom suffer through activities you don’t like.

Each of us is unique. Your needs, life experience, and resources are different from mine, so we each start from a different place. It makes sense that often your choice of tools will be different from mine, which means that Socrates is the single tool which each of us needs to enable us to effectively rummage in our tool box. You have to know who you are, what you like, and what you dislike.

I used to believe that intelligence was a single global concept which could be reduced to a single number called “IQ.” What could be simpler than the idea that a person who tests at 150 is “smarter” than a person who tests at 110? But I always wondered why people with a high IQ make so many dumb mistakes while those with a lower IQ perform quite well in many situations. The explanation to this seeming inconsistency was published a number of years ago by the outstanding educator Howard Gardner, who, in his book Frames of Mind, concluded that there are seven distinct varieties of intelligence which he identified as:

  1. Linguistic.
  2. Musical.
  3. Logical/mathematical.
  4. Spatial.
  5. Bodily/kinesthetic.
  6. Intrapersonal knowledge.
  7. Interpersonal relationships.

“Aha,” I thought as I read his chapters. I remembered Pam, an undergraduate at UCLA, who was a genius in social situations, even though her grades barely hovered above a “C.” I have always been comfortable with numbers and in exploring my own internal process, but I completely blank out when I face a foreign language or, heaven forbid, when my car won’t start.

How can you know yourself?

First, take a look at your tendencies and actions (aka Belt Buckle). My personal trainer works out with four or five clients a day, and in the evening visits the gym for his own workout. I would rather sit. I like to eat, often more than I need. My friend Jim has to think about when he last ate before he knows whether or not he wants to join me for lunch. I hate to offend people. The character Archie Bunker on the long-running TV show All in the Family didn’t mind offending everyone.

socrates_2Next, think of previous experiences. What did you do? How did you decide? Did you like or dislike the result? Patterns Persist, but if your previous decision-making is flawed in a given area you must be aware of that so you can change it. Have someone else make the decision. Whenever I come to National Boulevard in West Los Angeles I always turn the wrong way. I’m very consistent about that. Now I ask my iPhone which way to turn.

Get help in discovering yourself. Ask friends how they really see you. Take a class, hire a therapist, read a self-help book. Oh, yes, you are.

Know thyself. Then believe what you know, and act on it.

Alan

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Do I Dare Disturb the Universe

 

universe-mind-peopletoolsA hundred years ago, one of my favorite poems, “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock” by T. S. Eliot, was published in the June, 1915 issue of Poetry: A Magazine of Verse.

While the poem has now become quite influential in the world of modern poetry, its significance was initially overlooked by critics. In London on June 21, 1917, The Times Literary Supplement printed the following unsigned review:

“The fact that these things occurred to the mind of Mr. Eliot is surely of the very smallest importance to anyone, even to himself.  They certainly have no relation to poetry.”

One of the “things” that occurred to the mind of Mr. Eliot was the question:

Do I dare
Disturb the universe?

This question has haunted me ever since I read it many years ago. It speaks to the very essence of my life – do I dare to fully live?

Do I dare to sit in the front row of a class even though the teacher might ask me a question for which I am not prepared to give an answer?

Do I dare say, “I love you” first even if my beloved might explode into a confetti of derisive laughter?

Do I dare submit a poem for publication even if it might be rejected a hundred times and, if published, might be reviewed as badly as Mr. Eliot’s?

The answer is yes. I do dare to do these things. It is when I have taken the greatest risks in my life that I have achieved the greatest success.

After working for another attorney for a year or two I took the risk of opening my own law practice, with a partner.  We had to pay the rent, the telephone bill, and the salary of our secretary before we had even a dollar with which to take care of our own families.

More than forty-five years ago I borrowed what was, and still is, a huge amount of money to invest in real estate even though I could have later faced the very real possibility of bankruptcy.

Twenty years ago I began to publish the poetry journal Rattle, following only my own taste to help me decide what poems to publish. I began a series of conversations with noted poets even though I felt awkward and knew very little about how to conduct an interview.

These are three successes which would not have been possible if I had continued as an employee of another attorney, refused to borrow money from several banks, or declined to take the risk of disturbing the universe with poetry I liked.

But success is not the point.  As a young attorney I invested in a billiard hall, which failed.  The manager stole most of the money.  I invested in three oil wells in Ohio and three farms in Nebraska.  My investments were lost.  More recently I ended a friendship of more than ten years when I discovered that my “friend” had been cheating me financially.

Falling-back-peopletoolsSo the question is not whether you will flourish or flop.  The question is whether you will stretch yourself and try.  If you do, sometimes you will succeed and other times you will fail.  But, in the process, you will also truly live.

On the one hundredth anniversary of the publication of his first important work, I would like to honor the risk that T. S. Eliot took in publishing Prufrock, by suggesting to you a slight shift in his overwhelming question.

Do I dare
Not disturb the universe?

Alan

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