How-cool-is-this!!!
Robert Hruzek of Middle Zone Musings sent out an email to a few close friends about a series he writes monthly.
Robert’s been thinking, and he’s decided to make a challenge. He said he wouldn’t mind if I shared that challenge with you. So, here’s an excerpt from that email.
Over the last couple of days I’ve posted a two-part series at Middle Zone Musings on the subject of change, and got so inspired it prompted me to do something crazy (I mean, more than usual). So, go ahead and call me crazy if you like, but here it is: I’ve decided to change the world!
OK, I can hear it now; a chorus of, “Well, that’s just crazy!” (See; told ya!) But I don’t mind; I’m still goin’ for it! But, I really need your help (sound of stampede to the door).
I don’t know about you, but I’ve always been inspired by Liz Strauss’s Change The World series of posts. It always amazed me to realize just how much a single person can change the world, given the right circumstances. So I said to myself, “Self, why don’t you change the world?” Amazingly enough, me, myself and I agreed to quit talking about it and actually do something! (After all, it’s so rare that we all agree on something! I mean, besides ice cream; ice cream is always good.)
With that audacious goal in mind, I’ve just kicked off a Special Edition of our usual monthly What I Learned From… writing project with a two part post (yesterday’s and today’s) on the topic of Change. Yes, I know it’s a bit early – usually it starts on the first Monday of every month, but this time we’re going to need a few more days.
Please do me a favor and drop by the Zone, read these posts, and consider the challenge. Then, if you’d like to change the world with me, then by all means, let’s do it!
So, what do you think? Are you up to a challenge?
Will you change the world?
You, me, Robert . . . we can change the world, just like that.
–ME “Liz” Strauss
Change the World: Be Disarming
The Power of a Smile
Patrick was a 6-year-old white kid, who lived in the inner city — possibly the red light district — he walked to school, where I was a student teacher.
It was a rough school in a rough neighborhood. The kids were full of energy and life. About 700 students filled five classrooms at each grade level from 4 years old (pre-Kindergarten) through 10 years old (5th grade). In that group of students, only 10 kids were Caucasian. The rest of the school was African American. Of those 10 Caucasian kids, 9 of them got beat up or hassled daily. Not Patrick.
I was working on my honors thesis. So I did a histogram. Patrick turned to be the most admired — academically and socially — among his classmates. He was the one they would all ask to a party. He was the would all ask for help with their homework.
What was it about Patrick? Patrick had something special. Everyone liked him.
It was his way of being. It was his attitude about life and himself. It was his charming, disarming smile, that said, “What? Pick on me? I’m a little kid, only six years old. You must be kidding!” Everyone liked Patrick. It was impossible not to.
He soothed the savaged beasts and charmed all of the teachers.
He was bright love and sunshine in the inner city. I smile to remember him.
He was only six years old then, but Patrick is still a role model for me.
We can change the world — just like that.
–ME “Liz” Strauss
Change the World: Ask for What You Need
In a Dirty Shirt
Richard was the boy in my first grade class who never had quite enough for lunch. He made his way to school alone along the back path on foot. He told stories no one believed, and he always wore the same wrinkled and stained shirt. Unless they had reason, the other kids left him alone.
Every morning as writing practice, I wrote a sentence starter on the board. The kids would copy it down. Then they’d finish the sentence with their own words and continue writing on. The language they wrote in, a special one called First Gradian, was one only they could decode, but the practice of putting a message in text was an important. So after they wrote, I asked each child to read his or her missive aloud.
On this morning, the sentence starter was What I really want is . . .
It was a big class for a first grade, and so there were many answers. One by one, the children came up to read their papers. They asked for a bike, a trip to the circus, a video game, the latest doll — all were innocent dreams of children with no worries. All except one.
Richard’s paper showed only more two words longer than those I had written down. He stood by my desk turned toward the group and read.
What I want is . . . a hug.
A child in the front came up and gave him one. Then came another. Soon a room of first graders was hugging each other.
Richard was brave and vulnerable. He knew what he needed, and he asked.
We can change the world — just like that.
–ME “Liz” Strauss
Change the World: Let Them Discover
It’s about Them
It happens something like this. I meet a person who intrigues me. I rush in where the proverbial fool would fear to go. I want that person to see my value. I put it out there. I don’t realize that my thinking is all about me.
“Look at me behavior” is what I call it. The subtext of what I do is something like “I want you to see what I know, think, understand, have accomplished. I want you to see how worthy I am. I want you to see me.
The irony is that whenever I make things about me, it’s not me who shows up to tell the story.
I end up saying things in ways that aren’t my way of saying them. I hear myself handing over my weaknessess as I tout my strengths.
When I am lucky, when I have my wits about me and my heart in the right, relevant place, I know that the other person doesn’t know or even suspect. I’m only ludicrous facts that I’m spouting without context.
It’s so silly, We all know that folks discover the things they need to know.
When I choose to trust the person I’m talking to, I find that the right parts of me show through — without effort, within the bigger story of who I am. I find that my defensive self promotion falls away like water falling down a moutatin cliff.
When I trust in the thoughts of others, I am who I am.
When I trust the thoughts and humanity of others, the rest happens rightly more often than not. It’s so much easier to let them discover wht I am.
We can change the world — just like that.
–ME “Liz” Strauss
Change the World: Learn How to Be Alone
Alone
I sit back in my chair, exhausted. I stare. Silence is all around me. It’s a fine, harmonious sound. It’s broad and clear. I can hear myself. I can hear myself thinking.
A cell phone wouldn’t dare interrupt.
A loud voice doesn’t exist.
I can feel my heart. I can feel my heart beating.
I remember when I used to not like to be alone.
Then I learned how.
Learning how to be alone is as easy as learning how to feed yourself
and just as messy at first.
I think of the softly lit stars. I feel the silence of their being. I feel a home in the universe. I’m hospitable, joyful, forgiving, and generous.
A friend once said, “The universe shall not be thwarted.” So I stopped trying to rearrange it, stopped trying to change it, stopped trying to put myself in the center.
Instead I sat in the dark and listened. Silence is a harmonious sound.
I can hear myself. I can hear myself thinking.
I can feel my heart. I can feel my heart beating.
I’m reflective, thoughtful, and filled with meaning.
I learn how to be alone.
It makes me better when I am with other people.
We can change the world — just like that.
–ME “Liz” Strauss
Change the World: Give Someone Perspective
Some What Ifs Are What Awfuls
When life gets out of control, we get fearful. It’s a scary thing not to know where everything is headed. Because we need direction, we imagine the end of the story — the story is really a plan for disaster. Doing that is human, but it’s not usually helpful.
Imagining disaster is negative. It steals focus. Yet. we all seem to draw and detail disasters at the slightest loss of control,. especially when we’re in unknown territory.
That looming disaster. We worry our “what if” into a “what awful,” and the worrying makes it horrible. In no time, we have a visual with a film on television news at 11. Often we plan what to do when the disaster happens. Our plans are sometimes violent or vengeful, negative actions. Negatives get the wrong body chemistry going. Charged up, we’re likely to cause a minor disaster of our own.
In such situations, for me, it’s almost automatic to think of one man. I didn’t know him. Once, long ago, he replaced a worry with a comprehendible vision, and he put my world back in my control. It happened when I was no more than five years old.
My dad and I were at the carnival grounds of the Illinois State Fair. Lights were colorful and everywhere. My father’s hand was in my own. He walked me three stories up to the top of the biggest slide I could ever have imagined. No. Bigger. Taller . . . and more frightful.
From the top of that slide, I could see the whole carnival. It was so high, that it had to turn and turn going down to fit in a reasonable footprint on the fairgrounds. A steel canopy covered the top one third, like that on a covered wagon. Standing on the platform at the top. I could see how far down the ground was.
No one else was up there with me and my dad. I was smart. I did the math.
The slide wasn’t wide enough for my dad to go with me. I would have to go alone. The stairs were equally scary. I was a frightened little girl, who didn’t know what scared me.
The carnival man had tattoos on his arms and was dark from the sun. But his clear as water blues were kind against the tanned face they shone out from. His smile showed respect and understanding for a child. He put down the woven mat I would sit on.
I had no courage. I was too shy to explain how afraid I was. He knew just how to frame the situation. I can’t say this is what he said, but I can tell you, it’s exactly what I heard.
“It’s up to you,” he said looking right in my eyes. “You can stay up here with me. We’ll tell stories. But I have to tell you, going down the slide is easy. You just sit on the mat and go. Of course, since you’re an especially smart one, I could make you a deal. . . . If you fall off the slide and break your arm before you reach the bottom, I’ll give you the whole carnival and $15.00.”
Even then, I knew a great business deal when I heard one. After all, I had to get to the bottom sooner or later. I could see there was no bathroom. With this deal, I might get to own a whole carnival. AND every kid knows that no one ever dies from a plain, old broken arm. So I decided to go. We shook hands on the contract.
I was disappointed when I made it to the bottom unharmed. I can’t say which I missed more — owning the whole carnival or the $15.00.
That guy with the blue eyes, the smile, and the respect for a child gave something unforgettable. It was more than courage to ride down a slide. He gave me perspective that has lasted a lifetime.
Now when I start to write my disaster story, I tell myself I’m not the one who was meant to own the carnival. Then I start thinking about how I might have used $15.00 when I was less than five years old.
We can change the world — just like that.
–ME “Liz” Strauss
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