OK…..so
I missed the deadline for getting a column out about Christmas….I’m not perfect.
So, sue me….It’s just as well since I really didn’t have anything new to say about
the holiday. Perhaps it’s the economy, but I’ve noticed a severe shortage of Christmas
cards this year, as well as cars with real trees tied down on top. The cards I
can understand, it may be that more people are mad at me this year and just aren’t
sending out any cards. Of course my loving wife should have gotten some by now,
nobody can be mad at her.
It’s just as well that I don’t have the time
to send you a little holiday cheer since I’m not finished writing about topics
that I think we need to discuss. I still have four or five items of importance
(at least in my mind) for the rest of the year and only a couple of weeks left
before the new year arrives. I’ll have to hurry.
This week I’d like to
talk about role models. Now, before we get all wound up over Tiger Woods and his
problems, let’s step back and consider a few things. First off, why is it in this
country we seem to place so much emphasis on the conduct of celebrities? These
happen to be ordinary people with sometimes extraordinary talents, but still they
are humans and have human faults. Just because someone is successful at some sport
or profession does not automatically make them into a flawless super human being
capable of being everything to everyone.
Certainly what Mr. Woods did
or does tends to change our opinion of him. However I guess my question is this…did
we set our expectations too high for him or look too distant for a role model?
By role model I am referring to someone we admire or whose activities and principles
our kids would want to emulate. By Wood’s activities being ‘too distant’ I’m meaning
that Woods or other celebrities or leaders are not in the range of our everyday
relationships. It’s fine for someone to become president or make it big in business,
but how close can most of us get to that person and is the person we read about
or see on television the real person?
Perhaps so, perhaps not.
The media has long been known to gloss over and cover up flaws in famous people.
President Roosevelt was crippled by polio yet it wasn’t widely reported in the
news. I could list many more along these lines, but the point is simply this:
The role models we need to follow (in my humble opinion) are the ones closest
to us. Next door to us, across the street, in our churches and in our own homes.
The teachers in our schools, firemen, doctors, police officers and last but certainly
not least… ourselves. We need to be the role models for our kids, our family as
well as ourselves. We need to live lives that are examples to others, not look
to some superstar living on the other side of the world who may have a dark side
which is never seen. Being
a role model for someone is hard work and requires a commitment to strive to do
the proper and correct things in our everyday life. Someone once told me that
your character is determined by what you do when no one else can see you. The
famous people we read about in the news or other media outlets are just that….people.
No different from you and me. They may have money and fame, but do they have character?
If money was the benchmark for character, why do so many wealthy people
seem to have so many divorces or substance abuse issues? No, character is built
from the inside out, not the other way around. In order for role models to be
established and maintained in our society, they must start with ourselves and
those we can communicate with in our circle of relationships. What I do as a human
being has an effect upon you as do your actions upon me. We need to keep this
in mind as we go into another year and always remember there is someone out there,
both young and old who is probably counting on us to point the way for them to
succeed in their lives. We cannot nor should not choose to ignore this awesome
responsibility.
© Peary Perry
Letters
From North America - December 23, 2009 column Syndicated weekly
in 80 newspapers Comments go to pperry@austin.rr.com
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