May 11, 2024

Mothers Days are not easy for us….

by Rod Smith

Mother’s Day. 

It’s here. 

Again. 

Beautiful and brutal. 

Gut wrenching for the Smiths from a dozen angles while also displaying a vast array of flowers, tropical, indoor-outdoor whites, greens, shades of purple, yellows, sturdy, strong and luscious, endless developing beauty — reaching for sunlight, proclaiming life and charisma  — even within our motherless home. 

It’s the early 2000s and Mother’s Day: the boys wake, wander into my room, at least one son is aware of the day given the many things he had to draw, cut, glue and color at school for me, his dad-mom. He’s also performed in “Mother’s Day Bunny ” where I was the only dad in attendance. The school’s admirable efforts to include us, or rather efforts to never exclude us,  get a little ridiculous but I play along lest some real mother get whiff that my children be faced with the truth that they don’t know their mothers, a reality from which we, in the privacy of our home, have always openly addressed. Blanket strewn over his shoulders and with an inspiring attempt at positivity, he says, “Happy Mama-Day, Dadda,” and I embrace him and then his brother trailing dutifully behind and I leave it at that. 

We meander through the morning, sometimes sluggishly, but with momentary caffeine-stirred urges to “make it memorable for the boys.” 

At lunch the restaurant tables are packed with girls-and-boys-with-mothers and flowers and gifts piled high with color and sweetness. Octogenarian mothers swoop in to hug multiple generations vying for hug-inclusion as raucous laughter buzzes through the air. 

Friends see us and platitudes flow as they do when people don’t know how to talk about loss or abandonment or death while attempting kindness to quell their glaring uneasiness. 

“You’re in a better place.” 

“God knew your dad could be both.” 

“You know it’s extra special to be ‘chosen,’” a mother says to my son as if she’s the first to offer adoption this spin.

I’m uncertain. Should I laugh, cry or lead the boys out the door and flee the overload of the boys don’t have? 

Instead, we’re three-strand strong, and face it as if nothing can touch the Smith-bulwark. 

It’s Mother’s Day and about 2015: my first-born off-handedly reports he’s going to make a gift for his mom and, his car loaded with equipment, he leaves. Mid-afternoon he returns, buries himself in his room to emerge hours later with a 4-or-so minute movie that still blows my mind every time I watch it. I don’t know if his mother ever saw her gift on YouTube but within 24 hours he was interviewed on a local news station and his “letter” had traveled the world. I have a hunch his mother did see it but I know she did not respond. A few years later he reached out very directly to her to be firmly and gently rebuffed. 

“Adoption is a very powerful tool,” I whispered into his ear as I tried to comfort my distraught son as he sobbed and sobbed. 

“Thank you for the choice you made. I didn’t mean to upset you,” he wrote, time-stamped seconds after his biological mother expressed her wish not to hear from him again. The boy was ashen, disoriented, for days.

Yes. Adoption is a powerful tool. 

Rest assured, my boys’ mothers, despite their physical absence, have been more than present in our lives. They are not sitting proud at our all-male out-of-the-way Mother’s Day table, but they are ever-present guests as we steel ourselves for life together. 

Nate did not learn his gentleness from me. He did not get his unflappable nature from me. I’ve spent much of my life in a hurry, and, apart from when on sports fields or a basketball court, he’s never rushed a moment in his life, not even when chasing the dog. I didn’t teach him to anticipate when I’m not feeling well and to silently — late in the night — enter my bedroom and place ice water next to my bed in the event I may want it. 

I like to think we as a family are generally kind people, but, I tell you, Thulani’s natural kindness cannot be taught, tutored or trained. 

He was born kind. 

Kindness tumbled down through generations of his kin despite the traumas and brutality they knew. Kindness flowed into my boy from unknown generations like the mother’s milk he never tasted. 

My sons’ mothers may not be at the table with us on Mother’s Day but I meet them every day in the beauty with which each of the generous women stamped their claim on the lives of our shared, fabulous sons. 

Had I an opportunity to reunite with my sons’ mothers I’d say a deep and welled up “thank you” for the gifts of two magnificent humans with whom I’ve shared the last 26 years. I’d say “thank you” for the bravery it took each woman to make her generous choice. 

I salute you, your bravery, your untold story, your capacity to engage in enduring, long-distance and painful, love. 

Happy Mother’s Day to birth moms everywhere. 

May 7, 2024

A letter that made my year!

by Rod Smith

May 3, 2024

Dear Gary 

Your email has made my day, week, month, year.

Thank you. 

I shall reply more fully soon. I’m at a wedding in the midlands and quite busy with family.

I will be in a position for a better reply soon.

May I publish your letter on my website. If yes, do you want your name, or any other details withheld?

Rod Smith

————

May 7, 2024 

Dear Rod

I am pleased that my sharing with you of the changes in my destiny, have been a joy for you, Rod!

I can compare this message to a sermon – one is never sure whether the seed has fallen on rich soil or fallow ground/rocks.

You have my permission to publish my letter on your website – with no withholding of any of the content, nor any changes needed. 

I notice that the family wedding in the Midlands, is followed by a busy programme being imminent!

Regards,

Gary

—————-

May 3, 2024

Dear Rod

Earlier this week I read your response to the fund-raising decision on behalf of Dale College, by the new incoming Northwood headmaster, Dr Garth Shaw. 

Your comment mirrored the many pearls of wisdom which I have read since your first contributions (2001) to the column in the Mercury.

After 38 years in the banking world, and aged 58 years, I was not happy to ride out another huge change with a Barclays, UK, takeover looming over Absa Bank.

It was amazing how a colleague anonymously dropped off your article dated 4/4/2001.

Question: I’m tired of the “rat race” yet too poor to retire. Any suggestions?

Answer: If all you have is money, indeed you are poor.

Your message was very clear to me!

As one of the leaders in the province, I was aware of the enormity of the early retirement, by 5 years, a decision which I needed to embrace.

That was a turning point in my life, and career – and I have you and your message to thank, as I approach my 80th birthday this weekend.

Early in 2002 I retired, and I was well looked after by my employer.

My wife and I spent the next 10 months converting our family home at 71 Old Mill Way, Durban North, into what was ultimately a large 4-star bed and breakfast – Cornerstone! It was biblically named, and over the next 13 years we hosted 13 Heartbeat Healing ministry weekends, on behalf of St Martin’s church, in Chelsea Drive.

It was time to move on, and late in 2016 we sold the house and business, and moved to Doone Retirement Village in Manors, Pinetown.

Suffice to say we are very active in numerous activities and ministries – “Here I am, send me” is our witness.

Both of our grandsons are at Northwood, They will enjoy and benefit from the quality leadership of Dr Shaw, from the beginning of the 3rd term.

Thank you for your words of truth and wisdom, which changed my life path for the better!

Regards,

Gary White

Umhlanga Lighthouse
May 6, 2024

Behold, your Mother

by Rod Smith

Behold your mother…..this coming Sunday. 

Behold — look closely, observe, see, acknowledge, identify — your Mother.  

We all have or had one.

No matter what your memory, treasured for its overwhelming sense of love and acceptance and unconditional positive regard, or the sad antithesis of all that is good and associated with good mothers and mothering: behold your mother. 

Consider your mother as you would fine and treasured art, a masterpiece and, then, give thanks. 

Remember the good times. 

Recall the hard times, recall the challenges you gave to your mother and the challenges your mother brought to you. 

The woman you called mother brought to the unique relationship with you, experiences and heartbreaks and history of which you, as a child would know nothing. 

Yet, you’d know and experience and benefit, and even suffer the impact of it all, all she is, or was.

Behold, living or dead, known or unknown, behold, appreciate your mother. 

There is something wildly healthy about doing so be your mother saint or villain, victor or victim, well or unwell.

Emotional Wellness and Living An Authentic Life will be my topics at The Westville Bowling Club on May 9, 2024. Please email Shirley@ShirleyWilliams.co.za for details in the event you’d like to attend. 

——-

Sunday, May 12, 2024 I shall have the privilege of delivering the Mothers Day sermon at the two morning services (7:30 and 9:15am) at Musgrave Methodist Church on the Berea.

———

Saturday 11th from 9-12 with Terry Angelos at ST. Michael’s in Umhlanga…..

May 1, 2024

Something beautiful

by Rod Smith

I saw something beautiful today, an expression of true leadership, at a crowded domestic airport restaurant.

The Springbok Rugby Captain, #SiyaKolisi the athlete who led the team to win the recent Rugby World Cup, sat facing away from the crowds, trying to have a peaceful breakfast.

I counted. Twenty five people of all ages — in groups and alone — asked for selfies, autographs, books to be signed, and for photographs with their children. He hugged, laughed, chatted, and gave time to people, especially the young lads wanting to engage. At one point fans began lining up.

The gentleman was a model of grace and kindness, expressing zero frustration or annoyance at the multiple interruptions to his breakfast and the phone calls he was apparently trying to make.

Kolisi was the perfect contrast to the baseball hall-of-fame star I witnessed chase a child away with “I don’t sign autographs” to a young man whose face I saw light up on seeing his hero.

Jennifer Arthur (my sister) – meets the Double back-to-back Springbok winning Rugby World Cup Captain.

Kindly contact Shirley@ShirleyWilliams.co.za in the if you desire to attend one of multiple events I’ll be participating in next week.

April 29, 2024

My son’s changes…..

by Rod Smith

April 28, 2024

Dear Rod,

I hope you are doing well!  I love watching your travels, reading your posts.  I am curious if you could touch on one topic for me. It can be a post so others who are struggling can also read it.  

Will you please put into perspective why someone my son’s personality and challenges tends to stay to himself and struggle with anxiety. He has lost 5 schoolmates to gun violence since 2020. One was a best friend (since they were 3) who lived across the street from us until his death. Since that death, my son has been more angry, sad, irritated with me and one of his brothers. He is not hateful, just different. He also gave up competitive sport after his friend’s death. He still hugs, loves, smiles, but something is gone from inside him. You know my son and that’s why I am asking you. As a mom, I am so sad. 

This is the first time I am sharing this.

Thanks.

Name withheld

Dear Mother

Yes. I know your son. And, I know you. 

I grieve reading about the extent of your loss; your family’s loss, and specifically your son’s multiple losses. 

I can only imagine the impact this has had on all of your caring, lovely family. 

By nature, your now-adult son was/is a very private person, even though his athleticism placed him front and center of large crowds. I could be wrong but I think he was/is naturally shy despite the bravado required of his sport. 

I recall his quest for academic successes and sports successes seemed to “push” him into arenas my hunch suggested he’d have rather avoided. You may also recall he was sometimes anxious about belonging and wanting really good grades. 

I do. 

That your son is not hateful after all he has witnessed and endured and has had to accept does not surprise me. 

He very easily, readily, openly often expressed his love for his parents and brothers and extended family and is most unlikely to turn to hate.

There is not a hateful bone in his body. 

Yet, I am not at all surprised he is sometimes “angry, sad, irritated” with those who are close to him. Youth funerals leave me the same way even when I read about them, let alone know the victims and he knew the multiple victims of gun violence well.    

Loss has robbed all of you but he was/is closer to the young men – I think they are all male – now gone. 

I know you embody the ultimate loving and caring mom and so I also know you give him a lot of room for his varying emotions, much privacy, and encouragement to engage about these deep matters on his terms. 

Your son is a quiet fighter, one who loves his friends very deeply. 

Although he never expressed this to me, or if he did I have forgotten, I think he was one to feel as if he was wanting and loving his friends more than his friends were seeking him. 

The boy we all knew (usually loving and warm and full of life and humor and joy) will soon be the fully present grown-man-version of himself.

Nothing is gone or lost. 

It is resting. Recovering. Re-juvinating. 

Re-routing. 

Like Jem, in the book your son read with me word-for-word in the classroom, despite all the trauma, his former and full self will return. 

Ask him about that reference. I am sure he will remember.

By the way, I will meet with him at the drop of a hat if he’d find that useful.

Offer him my number.

By the way, thank you for being mom and present for so many, many young people as I know  you are as you fulfill your role in your chosen career.

Rod       

April 28, 2024

Read, watch, hear, with care…..

by Rod Smith

Before you judge others by looks or clothing or demeanor or attitude:

You do not know their story, the hardships faced, the history lived, the moves, the changes and challenges faced. You do not know the heartaches, the heartbreaks, the longings, the broken  promises or the losses faced and endured.  

Tread carefully. 

You do not know what they are hiding in embarrassment and shame with the clothes they choose to wear or what statement they are trying to make. You do not know what violence they may have endured which appear to demand clothing themselves for rejection or protection. 

Read the signs with empathy.

People tell their stories – voluntarily and involuntarily – with their every move and every word and every mood and every decision. They do the same with their language, responses, the anger they hide and the anger they display. 

Read, see, hear, with compassion, or resist the urge to read at all.

————

Terry Angelos – best selling author of “White Trash” – and I will be in conversation about her work and what we can learn about ourselves and our families from her work and principles of Family Therapy. Please contact Shirley@ShirleyWilliams.co.za if you would like to attend.     

Western Cape Sunset.
April 24, 2024

On the road again – Namibia

by Rod Smith

“Headed for Namibia,” I texted a friend.

Instantly, he replied, with a link to nine varieties of venomous snakes inhabiting Namibia. The communication left me with the distinct impression I’d be tripping over nesting pythons, wrestling extended families of puff-adders, fending off multiple varieties of mambas at every turn. 

Ours was the only flight coming into Hosea Kutako International Airport, Windhoek, for a few hours. The immigration officials appeared rather pleased to stamp the Boeing 737-load of us in. I was more than pleased to be admitted after the 20 minute walk from the parked Airlink aircraft to the airport buildings. The African sun blazes, I tell you. 

Airlink, I understand is a rather new South African carrier, an airline I have found to be friendly and efficient. It’s interesting that even on the quick domestic hauls — at least the flights I’ve enjoyed— Airlink finds it possible and profitable to serve all passengers delightfully boxed meals in recently sealed time-stamped containers each with fresh fruit and an “African dessert.” The part I most enjoy is washing it down with a traditionally served hot cup of tea – while there remains a selection of wines freely available.  

Namibia, formerly South West Africa until 1990, is large, mostly desert, and Windhoek, one of the major cities is a two hour flight almost directly north South Africa’s “Mother City,” Cape Town. My immediate impression: Windhoek is as vibrant and modern as any large metropolitan city anywhere in the west, while rural Namibia is as rural as I have known on this fabulous continent.

The “Foundations of Counseling Ministries” students and facilitating staff whom I am teaching for the week make a full classroom of 20 hailing from 7 nations: Kenya, Zimbabwe, Namibia, Netherlands, Switzerland, South Africa, and Tanzania. Each student is in a different part of his or her journey towards a degree from The University of The Nations. 

Next week I will be back in South Africa and in my home town. I will attend the wedding of my great niece and speak at a few public gatherings, one of which will be a live, three hour discussion with Terry Angelos, the best selling author of “White Trash” subtitled “My Year As a High Class Call Girl.” The memoir is as graphic and tough to read as it is redemptive and full of hope and joy. 

If you follow my “On The Road” series of columns, you may have noticed that this time I have not written about the long flight from Newark to Cape Town or the inconveniences that come with international travel. 

Here’s why: the teacher for the week in a parallel class offered on this Namibian rural campus, which is 840 acres of sprawling bush with a settlement of houses and classrooms sitting somewhere in the middle,  arrived between 2 and 3am on Monday after a 9 hour public bus ride — think Greyhound — from a town in northern Namibia. 

Bishop Leonard was up and teaching within a few hours. 

I am over complaining about the inconveniences of Boeing and Airbus travel, thank you, Bishop Leonard.  

At least for now.

April 21, 2024

Grace upon grace

by Rod Smith

While life as we know it is impossible without Divine Grace, Grace extended to all. I am particularly interested in the interpersonal grace we each can generously offer all other people, from intimates to total strangers.

Yes, we can be agents of grace.

I have seen it powerfully at work for many years.

It includes:

• Giving others a very wide berth, room to make mistakes, to be opinionated, to be socially clumsy, without my interference or my thinking, feeling I should offer my guidance, correction, or opinion.

• Extending “grace-in-reverse” by not allowing any person’s past errors, tough, dark, or even sordid history, to hinder my perceptions, my experience of who and what they are in the present. This acknowledges people really can grow and change.

• Allowing others to own their story and to tell it in their way, without interruption, without uninvited interpretation, and certainly without being “one-upped” by something from my own life, something usually bigger, stronger, better, or more dramatic.

• Forgiving from the outset, without necessarily receiving an apology or explanation, and for that forgiveness to be unconditional and complete.

• Exercising radical hospitality. This is embracing fully (not limited to a hug) others who are not like us!

How do I know about such grace?

It’s been offered to me, time and again. The challenge is to give it to others.

I miss the boys when I travel
April 16, 2024

Uber serendipities….

by Rod Smith

On days when I feel like a local adventure I drive for Uber. I have to believe there is something powerful at play when it comes to coincidences.

This week I picked up a passenger from an obscure petrol station in a busy truck stop. The gentleman headed for the front passenger door, which I have noticed, only South Africans and Australians tend to do. The rider revealed he’s from KZN, specifically Isipingo. I immediately practiced my limited Zulu with him and we are both taken aback by the serendipitous nature of our meeting. On the same day, hours later, another passenger informs me that he goes regularly to visit the elephants at Thula Thula Game Park in KZN — and spends a few days in Umhlanga on the way! 

KZN’s own best selling author Terry Angelos and I will have a morning together where we talk about her memoir “White Trash.” We will discuss her powerful work and its themes of redemption and reconciliation. You are welcome to attend. Terry will talk about her book and I hope to show how Terry has unintentionally revealed several fundamental principles of Family Therapy, applicable to all families of all cultures. Join us please for this 3 hour morning session on May 11, 2024. Shirley@ShirleyWilliams.co.za has all the details. 

April 15, 2024

What does day-to-day love look like?

by Rod Smith

Take a deep breath. Theses sentences are long.

Love is….

It’s doing what’s good and right to the best of your awareness, as limited as your awareness may be, for the greatest number of people possible in your immediate circle of influence, including those whom you don’t know and even those who may have rejected you or may even hate you. 

It’s gathering your strength and harvesting your latent patience and shopping at your store of inner kindness when others test you your many daily contexts, and then being strong and patient and kind even if it feels like you’re surrounded by people who don’t appear to think very much, and, if they do, their thinking appears limited to considering only what pertains to themselves alone. 

It’s paying for someone’s groceries or petrol (gas) or electricity, but it’s also stopping to consider why it is that you are able to and trying to understand what circumstances have placed the recipients of your generosity in such vulnerable, often humiliating situations, that they need your help and thinking these things through without resorting to low-hanging stereotypes like “I’ve worked hard and ‘they’ have not.”

It’s seeing people’s faces, acknowledging their unique stories, accepting that all people want to be seen, heard and included, even if their day-to-day behavior suggests volumes of evidence to the contrary.