Introduction
I am vaguely aware that there is,
coming up, some kind of “graduation” ceremony for my older daughter’s middle
school. I’m still waiting to hear the
details, such as when and what this actually is. One thing I know for certain: nobody has asked me to give a speech at the
event.
The nice thing about being a blogger
is that nobody has to ask. Here is my
unsolicited commencement speech for all eighth-graders—and their
parents—everywhere. I encourage you to give
this speech at the dinner table tonight, like I’m going to do.
(By the way, this speech is not based
on the performance and behaviors of my own eighth-grader, who is perfect. Everything in here is completely hypothetical
and/or archetypal.)
Middle school “graduation” speech ... from a dad
Of course I’ve never given a speech
like this before. I’m not even sure why
middle schools have such ceremonies,
since middle school is just a stepping-stone anyway. But I could say the same thing about high
school, which has itself become a mere waypoint on the way to college.
As I hope you’ve already heard,
middle school (or junior high, as I knew it) is actually the hard part. If you’ve done a halfway decent job of making
the transition from largely irresponsible, clueless child to basically
self-sufficient (albeit exasperated) teenager, high school shouldn’t be a difficult
transition. Moreover, kids seem to
mellow out in high school, as their brains catch up to their hormone-ravaged bodies. So, since you matriculating middle-schoolers
are all going to be just fine, I’m going to focus this speech on what you can do
for your poor parents over the next four years.
There’s solid precedent for thinking
of your parents on this momentous occasion, even when all the fuss seems to be
about you. I suppose at my high school
graduation somebody must have given a speech, but I don’t remember it. What I do remember is what my physics teacher
said during the last week of school. He
gave what struck me as kind of the antithesis of a commencement speech. Here is my best recollection of what he said:
Look, a lot of fuss is about to be made over all of you. You’ll wear this fancy cap and gown and attend this big ceremony with all these people watching. But don’t get too excited. In the big scheme of things, graduating from high school isn’t that big an achievement. It basically means you showed up for four years. And if you really think about it, most of you could figure out a more fun way to spend your afternoon than dressing up and standing around through a bunch of speeches. Try to appreciate that this ceremony isn’t actually for you. It’s for your parents, and your grandparents, so please honor their ceremony by not decorating your mortarboard with stickers and whatnot, and justifying this misbehavior by saying it’s your ceremony. Instead, behave respectfully, go where you’re told, and try not to do anything to disturb the event. You have the rest of the summer to screw around and do as you please.
Of course, there aren’t any caps or
gowns at today’s ceremony, and since kids
your age aren’t organized or devious enough to smuggle in beer or inflatable
dolls, like the students at my high school graduation did [wait for laughter], I’m
going to give you some guidelines on how to advance your development as
thinking, considerate, and mature beings in your day-to-day life. If you follow this advice you might start to
feel a bit less anxious about grades, popularity, life changes, and the ten
other things that I, as a parent, could never understand.
Guideline #1: Honor your
commitments! No excuses!
This does not mean “Prioritize your
commitments and honor the most important ones.”
It means you should not commit to doing something unless you know you
will have the time, resources, ability, discipline, and commitment to do it, as
promised and on time. You must honor
every commitment you make, no matter whom you made it to.
When you’re in high school, you will
have all kinds of distractions—some of them of the “hanging out” variety, but
also a great number of worthy extracurricular activities. That’s great—but you shouldn’t, say, skip
practicing the piano because you have to write a student election speech. If you cannot honor all your obligations, you are overscheduled and need to scale back. Commitments come first; leisure comes second. That said, before committing to something,
ensure you will still have time to set aside for leisure. It’s important, too.
Remember that extracurricular activities
shouldn’t be sacrificed at the altar of good grades. If you’re on a sports team, your teammates
rightfully expect a certain level of participation, even if you have a big test
coming up (and after all, who doesn’t?).
It is more important to learn to be reliable, balanced, and responsible
than to get straight As. Many great
scholars totally wash out in real life, and not all successful people were top
students.
There is almost never a good excuse
for failing to honor a commitment. For
example, to say “I ran out of time” means a) “I did not manage my time well,”
b) “I did not prioritize this commitment to you,” and c) “By making this excuse
I am demonstrating a willingness to let this happen again.” Remember, nobody wants to hear an
excuse. Often, an excuse functions as
the opposite of an apology. It suggests
that you’re not holding yourself responsible for your failure.
Guideline #2: “Own” your problems
You must recognize when something is your problem, and don’t try to make it into your parents’ problem. Say, for example,
you forgot to get up extra early for a student council meeting, and now you’re
about to be late for it. Don’t yell at
your mom or dad, “You gotta drive me! You gotta!” After all, you made the commitment to attend that early meeting, not your
parents. It is unpleasant and offensive for
them to be shrieked at by somebody who has made a mistake and behaves as though
it’s his or her parent’s job to fix it.
Sometimes you will fail. Everybody does. Fail gracefully, without dragging down the
people around you, particularly your parents who suffer (if only silently)
whenever you do. Yes, of course you can always
go to your parents to be consoled, but resist the impulse to implicate them in
your mistake. Learn how to accept a
setback as stoically as you can; try to learn from it; then move on.
Guideline #3: Understand the role
of your parents
Most of you kids probably dream of
having the cool kind of parents, who are a combination of personal assistant,
chauffeur, purveyor of booze, and ATM.
Well, I hate to break it to you, but that’s not what your parents signed
up for. And all those hundreds of loaded
diapers you stuck them with have probably exhausted your parents’ patience.
There are all kinds of ways your parents
can support your efforts, but not all of them are actually helpful. Should they be available to help with
homework? Of course (unless it’s something
like calculus that your parents put behind them decades ago). Is it right for your mom or dad to bend over
backwards to get you out of a tough spot, when you’re behind on an assignment due
to procrastination and/or disorganization?
Perhaps not. If they help you out of such a bind, perhaps
they’re sending the wrong message, such as “It’s okay to fly by the seat of
your pants, since you’ll always have a parent to pick up the slack.” (You won’t.)
As important as that school assignment seems now, the bigger education
is in managing your time. This never
seems obvious in the moment, but it’s better for your mom or dad to let you
fail now—and thus learn self-sufficiency the hard way—than for them to leave
you stranded later, when you’re truly on your own.
There is more to parenting than helping
a child succeed. A good parent strives
to teach his or her child to be helpful to others. Many of us parents are trying to instill
character, which is rarer and more valuable than the ability to succeed.
Of course this development takes
time. Infants are practically useless;
grade-school kids are often clueless; teenagers often feel overwhelmed. Self-sufficiency is an evolution. You are now at an age where you can and
should be taking on as much as you can: setting
and adhering to your routines, cleaning up after yourself, getting yourself
where you need to go, and knowing what to do and when to do it without being
reminded.
I hope that most of you have already managed
to climb well into the purple tier of the developmental triangle I’ve presented
here. This is a simplistic schematic;
the colors should blend m ore, to convey that even before being totally
self-sufficient, a person can still be helpful to others.
Remember that you are not yet an
independent adult, free to pursue only what is important to you. So long as you are dependent on your parents,
you should expect them to be involved in setting your priorities. When you set goals for yourself, work to keep
them aligned with the goals your parents have for you. And when you ask your mom or dad for support,
remember that you do not have the big picture; gracefully accept it when the answer
is no.
Not all the help your parents give
you is solicited; for example, they are justified in giving you unsolicited
advice. That’s part of their job. And even though you didn’t ask for advice,
you’re expected to follow it. It’s
exasperating to your parents when you don’t, and then they have to deal with the
consequences ... which brings me to my next guideline, which is a sore point
with so many parents.
Guideline #4: GET ORGANIZED! STAY ORGANIZED!
Why don’t the greatest mathematicians
do everything in their heads? It’s
because they need pencil and paper to organize their thoughts. Why was written language invented? It’s because oral communication is too
imprecise, unreliable, and ungainly. Writing
something down frees your brain up for bigger, better thoughts, while keeping
tasks from being forgotten. As your life
continues to get more complicated it will be impossible for you to honor all
your commitments without systematically recording what is due and when. So get a pocket calendar you can bring to
school with you. Record your commitments
in it. Keep it handy. Look it over frequently. Document deadlines well in advance. Check things off as you complete them.
This calendar is only one of your
tools. Figure out everything you’ll need
and keep it handy. I’m talking about
your wristwatch, your textbook, your homework, that permission slip, your house
key, your gym shorts, your glasses, and the ten other things that I as a parent
hope to be blissfully unaware of because they’re your problem, not mine.
Imagine if David had shown up to duel
Goliath and forgot his sling: “Dude, I
couldn’t find my weapon, we’ll have to reschedule.” That’s not gonna happen. Goliath’s gonna kick your ass. So, select a single best place in your home to store each of your life tools,
and store them only in this place! If
you leave these tools lying around, they will be in people’s way, and they’ll get
squirreled away and/or buried, and you won’t have them when you need them ...
and then, if you complain to your parents about this, well, you’re in clear
violation of Guideline #2 above. (Don’t
tell me you forgot Guideline #2! Pay
attention, there’ll be a test later!)
Guideline #5: Figure out
guidelines of your own
I don’t claim to be some world
authority on all this. Perhaps the most
important skill for you to develop is a sense of being in charge of your own
life, becoming self-sufficient, and figuring out—usually when something doesn’t
work—what you need to do to become more effective. Periodically step back, look at your life,
and ask the question, “How can I make this work better? What is falling through the cracks? How can I keep that from happening?” If you create the right habits and systems,
you will get more done and avoid all kinds of strife as you go along.
I’ll leave you with this refreshingly
non-didactic thought: as systematic and
prescriptive as all this seems, everybody is just winging it, and that’s
okay. You’re all amateurs. There’s no such thing as a professional
high-schooler, and if there were, we’d see all kinds of malpractice suits.
1 comment:
If you find yourself laughing at the naivety demonstrated by the above essay, rest assured ... so am I. If you should ever encounter a teenager who could follow the guidelines above, I'd like to meet that wunderkind....
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