Archive for ‘Voice’

April 23, 2010

A challenge to young girls……

by Rod Smith

Begin now, today, to be the kind of woman you want to become in the future:

1. Stand up for yourself without pushing anyone else over. Speak your mind. Say what you want to say. See what you see. Say what you see you see.

2. Be your own “virus protection” program by keeping the “bad” out and let the good in. Bad: gossip, unfriendliness, rudeness, lies, unnecessarily excluding others. Good: standing up for what is right, good, and just, being “open” and not “closed” to others, being welcoming and friendly to more than just your closest friends.

3. Decide to be a kind and good person even when you see people being mean to others.

4. Choose to be an agent of healing when others are hurt.

5. Don’t surrender your power to anyone – it is always yours to foster, protect, and use, first for your own good, then for the good of others.

April 15, 2010

Lies

by Rod Smith

I have told quite a few lies in my life. One from a long time ago was to my fifth grade teacher. Her name was Mrs. Hornsby. She definitely had horns. When I studied her face I could see them. If she was calm, they boiled and bubbled beneath the red blotches of her wide forehead. When she was angry, which was nearly always, they’d burst accusingly from her face. One day, she was really angry with me. After that, I didn’t matter to her. Most people who knew Mrs. Hornsby will know what I mean. Some will run to her rescue and say she had a good heart and say she was the best teacher that they ever had and all that kind of nonsense. I stand by my description. Mrs. Hornsby was a nasty, horned, witch.

Every day for weeks, she gave us tiresome lists of rules about how and when to use her favorite thing: a dipping pen. We had to chant in unison while standing next to our desks, following her hand motions as she danced trance-like with a giant dipping pen only she could see:

“Dip gently in the ink well,
Press down below the line,
Long curves lightly lifting,
DIPPING PENS are very fine.

Dip gently in the ink well
Lightly press to dot the ‘i,’
Cross your ‘t’s with little effort,
DIPPING PENS are very fine.”

After the slow and deliberate chant we had to take a vow, almost drawing blood that we would never use ballpoint pens in our composition books.

“Never, ever, ever!” as we all nodded our heads in a silent wide-eyed chorus of fear.

Hornsby said, with her face twisted in disdain, ballpoint pens were messy, even evil. She said only common people used them. Her voice flattened every time she saw a ballpoint pen on a desk. Even when she said, “dipping-pen” I could tell she love them. It brought a lilt to her voice. This passion for dipping pens confused me. Dipping pens smudged far more easily than was ever possible with ballpoint pens. Ballpoint pens were neater and much more practical as far as I could tell. I preferred ballpoint pens. But that’s the way she was—with a fixed opinion about everything, she alone, knew everything. To every question, she alone had the correct and complete answer. If we ever had the correct answer, she added to it to prove no ten-year-old could quite get it. The final word always remained securely in the hands of Mrs. Know-It-All-Hornsby-Witch.

We couldn’t relax around her even for a moment. It was “forbidden.” To “keep us on our toes,” questions flew from her in all directions about any of the subjects she taught us. She would stand back after a volley of fire and look at us with contentment when she confirmed our ignorance. Often she’d expect us to repeat our promises about where to write the date and when to leave a line and how to rule off our work. She taught these rules as if lives would be lost on distant battlefields if one of us ever did something different from what she commanded.

One day when it came time to do my homework, I used a ballpoint pen in my composition book. When I handed in my book after walking to the front of the classroom, I slipped my book to the bottom of the pile. I did this so she would get to it when she was at home rather than discover my crime while I was within reach. My whole afternoon was ruined as the ramifications of my transgression plagued me. I imagined her opening my book and seeing the worst possible thing any boy could do. I could see her staring at my work in utter disbelief. She would shriek in anger and goose-step up and down her house. She would break valued possessions as she ranted and raved about the evil child who would dare use a ballpoint pen in his composition book.

I don’t know what she did at home when she read my composition book. I do know that the next day, while the whole class was working quietly she shrilled, “Rodney Ernest Smith, come to my table!” and startled the whole building. She might as well have used the megaphone the school had for fire drill. Everyone looked up from his or her work, passers-by peered in at the windows and all eyes were fixed upon me taking the long, dreaded, slow march towards her table.

“Did you use a dipping pen in your composition book?”

“Yes.”

She held the book as far from her eyes as her arms would allow. She looked through her thick glasses. She looked over her thick glasses. She screwed up her face. She pushed her back against her chair. The chair screeched on the wooden floor. She got even further from the book. She rose from her chair and her shoulders turned towards me. She doubled in size and volume:

“Did you use a dipping pen in your composition book?”

“Yes.”

I shifted my weight side to side. My knees always looked so small in my ridiculous short school pants. My ears were too large. I hated my shaved haircut. I hated the striped tie that was always too short with a fat and bulging lopsided knot. It crunched my collar around my skinny neck. My protruding eyes were red and inflamed. They declared my lie. My eyes couldn’t focus on her. Tears watered down my cheeks. I longed for small, dry and clear eyes. I longed for a reasonable haircut like every other boy and wished I had a small neat knot in my tie. Heat swirled about my face. My legs wanted to climb each other. I wanted to urinate. I corkscrewed. I made my body rigid. I swayed nervously. With her face twisting and in a voiceless whisper, I heard the sounds of dry air scraping against the wall of her throat. It wheezed through her flaring nostrils. My throat dried instantly:

“Did you use a dipping pen in your composition book?”

“Yes,” I gasped with no intent to mimic her.

She didn’t ever blink. She had no eyelids. She huffed and blew up her cheeks. Blue protruding veins pushed her horns together on her forehead until the big red, glowing, wet and slimy horns pointed at me. I felt the walls move. Windows shattered. Traffic halted. Phone lines jammed. Bridges collapsed. Airports closed. Governments tumbled. Oceans drained.

She looked again in my direction, this time gazing ten feet over my head. She breathed deeply. Held it. Sighed, long and slow. She swallowed from the middle of her chest to lubricate her convulsing throat before she asked again:

“Did you use a dipping pen in your composition book?”

“Yes.”

She stood up, turned to face the door, held my book with both hands, stretched out her arms, leaned her body forward, thrust her head back and was gone down the hallway. Swish!

Pressure eased. The world economy settled. The class twitter began with quiet squeaks and giggles. I thought of the air force, the infantry and the navy gearing up for war against a neighboring nation. I thought of urgent peace treaties and dignitaries deployed to foreign countries because I used a ballpoint pen in my composition book.

Distant rumblings returned the class to silence and the barometer burst into a million pieces. She flew through the door and howled, with the evil echoes of an eerie cave:

“Did you use a dipping pen in your composition book?”

“Yes.”

“Sit down.”

I did. So did she.

My crime was never referred to again. To Mrs. Hornsby, I was the worst liar in the world. I became invisible to her and not deserving of her efforts.

While I was on the way out of the school grounds and somewhere between the last of the red brick building s and the first of the trees which lined the long road to the school gate, I discovered I had learned a new way of walking. I moved forcefully forward cuffing my black shoes purposefully against the curb with each step marring the polished finish. I pulled the knot in my tie from my neck so the tie dangled untidily at my second shirt button. I pulled my brown school cap, with its noble badge and Latin idiom, off-center. Then, casually, in front of many other boys in their gleaming white shirts and green and brown striped ties and caps displayed proudly on their heads, and girls in their white dresses and green trimmed hats, as if I had been saying it for many years, for the very first time in my whole life, out loud, fearlessly, I said F#@K!

February 25, 2010

Explosive 16 year old. Help!

by Rod Smith

“My son (16) has from very young displayed the most unvelievable stubbornness on some issues. We have come to understand it as being inflexible explosive behaviour that it is incredibly difficult to work with. Usually there is a pattern and there are times when one is able to reason and resolve, other times there is no warning and the explosion or meltdown occurs. It is usually because he has not been able to get his own way despite our explanations. He indulges in defiant behaviour such as in this last instance, staying his bedroom for 25 hours and sleeping most of the time. Upon arising my attempts to talk to him are met with a blank. How does one handle someone who resorts to defiant behaviour when he doesn’t get his own way? I believe it is time for him to find alternate, more mature ways of dealing with issues – or am I expecting too much from a 16 yr old?” (Edited)

While I could say “take him by suprise” or “change the rules” I am going to resist suggesting the solution is easily found. He sounds depressed perhaps relating to some broader matters. I am hereby asking readers to express their opinions and experience before I tackle your question again in a few days.

Yesterday’s column clearly hit a hot button. Here are two of may responses…

“I was amazed at the description of the stubborn 16 year old. It could have been a description of a family member of mine who has been diagnosed as depressed. For a long time we all thought it was purely a self-centred nature or a short fuse. Based on learning the hard way my advice to the parent would be to stand up to his behaviour. If an explosion occurs walk out of the room. Do not try to reason or explain. Being depressed does not give anyone the right to abuse others. The depressed individual is quick to see a pattern forming: ‘If I have a tantrum everyone will do as I wish, out of fear, or just to keep the peace.’ If you fall into this trap you are setting yourself up for much misery and are not doing your depressed family member any favours by playing to their brattish behaviour.”

“My first impression was that the boy suffered from a lack of discipline. However, the problem appears to have existed from a very young age and appears to be a more deeply rooted problem. If I was in the shoes of the parents I would consult a psychologist/psychiatrist as Bi-polar comes to mind.”

One reader’s view regarding the defiant 16-year-old….

“The story of the stubborn, defiant 16-year old makes me smile. The mother has waited 16 years too long to start disciplining her son. One of my daughters had this same strong will, it was not an iron will, it was stainless steel! Her first few years made life very difficult for us, until I started reading books about the strong willed child. When she was old enough to begin understanding that her tantrums were not acceptable we began teaching her. Whenever we told her to stop whatever was unacceptable, and when I counted to 10 and she did not stop I would give her a smack with my wooden spoon on ‘the seat of learning’. After about 6 weeks the truth sank in, and I only had to warn her: the wooden spoon treatment became now very rare. She grew up into a delightful woman. The Bible tells us to spare the rod and spoil the child. Unfortunately this has now become forbidden in many countries.”

Rod Smith, MSMFT

Apparently your experience ends happily. I’d welcome a comment from your daughter whom you say is a “delightful woman” – and hear her comments on your discipline.

I fear she might be too afraid to tell her truth.

February 20, 2010

Don’t hold me accountable until you do that with your bratty kid!

by Rod Smith

“I have a daughter (5) and I have been with my partner for over a year. My daughter stays with her grandparents during the week to help me with gas. My partner does not work and I pay all the bills. He gets angry with me because he believes that I do not hold my daughter accountable. I don’t hit my child but I do talk to her so she has an

Rod Smith, MSMFT

understanding what she is doing is wrong. I do not want my daughter to fear me, I want her to respect me. He has a drinking problem and surrounds with people that are no good. When I bring up my concern he says, ‘Don’t hold me accountable until you do that with your own bratty kid.’ What am I to do? I want to leave but I feel as though he would fail himself and put himself in situations that will jeopordize his life and well being. I love him but I believe that things will never change.”

This will go nowhere worth going for you until you love yourself more than you love your daughter and you love your daughter more than you love him. I’d suggest you devise an immediate escape plan. Your daughter, not this manipulator, is your responsibility.

Jean Hatton

I think being ‘held accountable’ is a good idea, but not concerning him. I would ask you to consider that you have brought this man into your home and by so doing, have put yourself and your daughter’s well being at risk. It sounds like he has done nothing but add stress and guilt to your life as he makes demands on you to keep him happy. Loving your daughter is your priority. Be accountable for the decision that you made to bring this angry controlling man into your lives — and choose the healthy way out.

February 20, 2010

I don’t want to lose him….

by Rod Smith

Rod Smith, MSMFT

“I am 26 and have been living with the father of my children for five years. We are not married and he has been cheating on me ever since. He claims to be a changed person now but I don’t trust that. He still goes onto ‘Mxit’ and chats to uknown females and I am uncomfortable with that. I have been through this so many times but I haven’t moved out the house. He has been horrible towards me and he seems to be doing it all over again. I am really afraid to lose him. I don’t want my kids to grow up without their dad, like I did. Please can you help me?”

Probably not. Until you change your behavior and refuse victimhood matters will deteriorate. You desire relief from pain without spending the necessary “clean” pain to get there. Insight is useless when people are unwilling to change and, something in this sad scenario works for you – or you would have moved on years ago.

Yes. You are uncomfortable, but apparently not sufficiently uncomfortable to plan a major move. About losing him? That’s already occurred.

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February 15, 2010

Letter to a young dad….

by Rod Smith

Love her mother....

Durban’s own Grant Fraser (former Durban City soccer star) wrote to me this week. Celebrating the joys of parenting of his infant daughter triggered his reminiscing: “You never taught me how to do this,” said his brief note referring to when I was his school teacher. You are correct, Grant. There isn’t curriculum that can effectively teach you to be a dad. Nonetheless Grant, here are a few challenges:

1. Dedicate yourself to your daughter to the same degree you enjoyed the dedication of your own mother and father. You could not have had better parents.
2. Love, serve, and honor your partner. Loving your child’s mother is the single most powerful way you can love your daughter.
3. Be as committed to honesty with your child as you were with others when you were a boy.
4. Don’t let the mundane, but necessary, tasks wear the joy out of you. Babies need fun more than they need clean nappies.
5. Go away for an overnight and a full day often with your daughter – just the two of you. Get no help packing or planning from anyone.
6. Finally, leave the teaching to your daughter. She will teach you how to be her dad more effectively anything you will ever teach her.

(Name used with permission)

February 11, 2010

Muslim / Christian marriage – please repond via comments…..

by Rod Smith

I am Muslim and my husband (5 years) is Christian. Initially I was crying all the time – about why my family don’t they accept my husband –feeling guilty about how I made others feel and hurting my family in the process. Recently I planned a party for our child and wondered if my family would come. Days before I got messages from cousins declining. It really hurt us. My husband called the party off and in the tenth hour I managed to secure some family and friends to save the day. One cousin said I put the family in an awkward position by inviting them. My own mum won’t come to my house but is all nice when my husband gets to her home. Her not coming to my home annoys me. I cannot have that hard conversation with her because I’m afraid of where it will land up. Since last year I decided to make my own nuclear family work for me and I haven’t missed the extended family too much. Should I write them off? Should I invest more heartache or must I continue with my husband and two kids? (Letter shortened)

Jean Hatton

What a courageous couple you and your husband are to join your lives, coming from two totally different cultures, beliefs, and histories. You must love each other very much! You probably didn’t realize exactly what you were getting into when you married, did you? It sounds like your family is having so much difficulty adjusting to something they never thought they would have to deal with. Religion and culture are two powerful and influential foundations in our lives. Your family must feel that you have moved to another planet where they do not belong. That’s part of the cost of the choice you made to marry a Christian. I commend you for your choice of ‘making your own nuclear family work for you.

I would suggest that you not ‘write your extended family off’ but look at their struggle realistically and accept them in the battles that they are going through. Don’t stop inviting them to important family gatherings and celebrations, but always give them a choice about attending, and then accept their decisions…drop your expectations on their seeing and accepting you and your family like you want them to.

It is far from easy for them. Heartache and energy have to do with expectations which will set you up for more and more disappointments.

You won’t be able to change them.

It might be a good idea if you asked your family if you they would like to continue receiving invitations – perhaps they would welcome the response of you knowing how difficult it must be for them and be released from ‘having to attend’.

A Muslim man writes: When I read your letter, I felt great disheartenment, I have neither met you nor do I know you from a bar of soap, I felt the way I did simply because you are a Muslim and I am striving to be a Muslim. We have no other connection. From your family’s point of view they must feel a hundred times more sadness than me.

I don’t think you should ignore your family and “carry on”. There is a problem, you have sought help, follow through and resolve the issue. There is an ideological disagreement between Islam and Christianity, without going into great comparison between the 2 systems of belief…the 2 cannot co-exist in a single family unit. I think that you might not be “living” Islam, you might acknowledge it’s teachings but have not fully implemented it in your daily life…this is why you have been able to remain married for 5 years.

The solution is to engage your husband in what he believes, he must do the same with you, until the 2 of you come to an agreement on which is the best path. Ask questions of each other and if you do not know, seek out the answer from people who have knowledge. You haven’t said anything about your children, what do you want them to believe in? The path they choose is up to them, but certainly you want them to believe in 1 system of belief or the other. I must state that you should take my advise with a pinch of salt, as I want to be a Muslim, I am prejudiced in favour of Islam.

A Muslim woman writes: My sister who is a muslim has a Christian boyfriend. She wants to marry him, but not in a church. Islam will not recognise their union whether in a court of law or in the church, neither will it sanction a marriage between a christian man & the muslim lady. The Muslim lady who “married” the Christian man knows this. She was already ready to accept this when she married the man.Why does she want approval from her muslim mother who understands the law of Islam.She made a decision which had nothing to do with religion but a love for a man.Why does she frustrates herself in wanting to force her mother to go against her Islamic beliefs.

Religion is one of the biggest conntributors of quarrels. However for most of us who are staunch in our beliefs, we are not going to go against it. My advise to the Muslim lady, is live your life however you want with your set of values, but do not infringe your so called values on others and expect them to shun the teachings of the Quran for your happiness.You know better.

February 6, 2010

Marriage isn’t easy…..

by Rod Smith

ACT, Australia

Marriage, for a start, isn’t easy. Putting our hope for happiness in another doesn’t work.

I (we) have come to 42 years of marriage years because:

1. I took responsibility for my own life and own happiness and stopped depending on my husband to make me happy.
2. I began to discover who I was in the relationship…and stopped becoming what my husband wanted me to be.
3. I gave myself permission to have a ‘voice’ – and listened to the person inside me – the one who had never been listened to before – and in that way, I began to discover my value as an individual. I wasn’t just a wife and mother but a unique individual with gifts and talents, strengths and weaknesses.
4. I also sought help from a professional because the things that I just described to you, I couldn’t do on my own. I needed help. The person I saw gave me another perspective of my life that I had never seen before. It was in that place that I found hope and a new beginning as a new world opened up before me.

Marriage is still work for us but I discovered that the relationship, no matter how difficult, can also be a way to grow and learn more about myself as well as give to my spouse what he needs in our relationship. Both of us by the way came from dysfunctional homes where we hadn’t learned how to relate in a healthy way.

February 1, 2010

Adult-to-adult relationship – when one is the parent and the other is the adult son or daughter……

by Rod Smith

1. We are mutual and respectful in every way and treat each other as we would treat any valued friend.
2. We talk respectfully to each other and we talk respectfully about each other.
3. We do not feel pressure to tell each other more (or less) than we’d reveal to other treasured friends.
4. We are friends, sometimes companions, who also happen to be parent and adult son or daughter.
5. We do not barge into each others lives, presume availability, or assume willingness to spend time together, just because we are related.
6. We contact each other, we talk on the phone, and drop in on each other while also fully acknowledging that each of us has a full life outside of each other.
7. We respect each others freedom to interpret the past as he or she sees necessary.
8. We offer each other the freedom to plan a future that might represent a radical departure from the way things have been.
9. We offer absolute respect to the people we each choose to love.
10. We seldom, if ever, tell each other what the other “should”, “ought”, “need”, or “must” do.

January 25, 2010

Adult son writes to his mother….

by Rod Smith

Dear Mother:

I am 40 and I really am no longer “your baby.” Please try not to refer to me in this manner. It sounds completely ridiculous even though I know what you mean. I am a married man and the father of two children.

While I am at it, let me remind you that I adore my wife and would really appreciate it if you worked harder at not treating her as if she were some kind of outsider, intruder, servant, or secretary. Remember? You were at our wedding. She’s very much part of our family – and I am part of hers.

By the way, her parents are not “those people” but a man and woman whom I love and who have embraced me far more successfully than I think you have embraced their daughter.

I know you are going to resent hearing this but I have to say it: I cannot drop everything and run to your assistance every time you phone. Mother, there are plumbers, electricians, doctors, lawyers, bankers, and an endless list of places for you to get your car repaired – and really, there’s very little you cannot afford.

With love (yes, love),
Your son