February 13, 2024

Happy Valentines Day…..

by Rod Smith

“There are two potential tragedies in life and dying isn’t one of them,” wrote Ronald Rolheiser, the Catholic theologian. “What’s tragic is to go through life without loving and without expressing love and affection toward those whom we do love.”

What great thoughts to ponder and then motivate us to action beyond romance on Valentine’s Day.

Let’s not fall victim to either of the tragedies — not today, tomorrow, not forever.

One of the great things about life for most of us is that we get more than a few chances at most things, even things we fouled up in the past. Failing at love yesterday doesn’t mean we have to fail again.

While the holiday is Hallmark-driven and its history buried in 5th century Rome, it’s up to us to push love to the limits, to go beyond Valentine, beyond Hallmark, beyond Cupid, beyond Eros, red balloons and red sweaters and candy. It’s up to us to take Rolheiser’s caution to heart.

Let’s express love in tangible ways to all those whom we love.

Loving is more than breakfast in bed. Say what you want to say without leaving it to another day. Don’t wait, don’t avoid it, and don’t run from it. Act upon the love you feel in measurable ways, express it in ways that are new and unique for you.

Love your family by encouraging the expression of the unique voice of every person. Enlarge their freedom, oust all jealousy.

Listen, and wait to speak. Try to hear even the things you’d rather not hear. Learn things about members of your family even if it has been so long that it is hard to remember a time when you did not share life.

Loving people celebrate strength, encourage freedom and admire the talent of others.

Then, in loving and being loved, compromise yourself, your talents and skills for no one.

True love will never steal your voice, your brain, your heart or your body.

Minimizing who you are in the name of love will not make you more lovable or make your family a happier or healthier place. It is never worth it. It is never loving. It is those with dark motives, who seek for you to be less, minimized, diminished or silenced. Reject such small-mindedness, such evil, even if doing so is very costly.

In your loving, deal a deadly blow to love’s bitter enemies of resentment, anger and bitterness. These close cousins, if permitted, will hold hands within your psychology and dance a woeful dance. They will make you blind to all things beautiful. Angry, bitter and resentful people, no matter what their justification, become increasingly unreasonable and difficult to live with.

Bitterness will have a soul for breakfast. It’ll chew you up, spit you out, and then get you some more. That’s its nature. It has no regard for you, except in your destruction.

Make the most powerful decision a person can make and forgive everyone, everything. Forgiving others completely for everything real or imagined done against you, will give you a degree of personal liberation heretofore unknown. Such forgiveness, offered from and within our human frailty, releases the spirit beyond comprehension.

When people forgive each other, they wear divine clothing, and the prison doors of their own hearts become unlocked and the miserable trio of anger, bitterness and resentment are set free to do their work elsewhere.

“There are two potential tragedies in life,” wrote Rolheiser, and today we each decide the extent of their power in each of our lives. Happy Valentine’s Day.

February 11, 2024

First cousins

by Rod Smith

When first cousins Grace and Mercy show up from within you (they live rent free without exception within us all) and reveal their natural beautiful ways, human encounters get an added touch of the divine.

The cousins are hard at work and always ready to assist any person who wants to participate in acts of unmerited kindness. They play a willing hand in every expression of goodness and delight in participating in all moments of empathy. Mercy and Grace become especially evident and empowering when you express even a smidgeon of desire to offer forgiveness and generosity as a way of life. When we want them to influence and become “a way of life” they dance a little jig of joy. 

When you and I permit Grace and Mercy to do their thing within us — they are always ready for an opportunity — no matter what may be our proclaimed faith or the absence or even the denial of one, we come face-to-face with our divine imprint.

Grace and Mercy will steadily reveal what wonderful tenants they are and transform any willing host of their counter-culturally subversive, loving ways.

May the sisters dance and have their way. 

They will make you even more beautiful than you already are. 

They make people free.

February 6, 2024

Grace

by Rod Smith

Grace has no qualifiers. 

If it has to be earned, or can be traded or leveraged – it is not grace. 

The millisecond an exchange of what is supposed to be full of Grace is tagged with expectation and is not freely given, it becomes something other than grace. It may be a bargaining chip, an attempt to control another, or something deployed in hopeful attempts to fix or change another, but, once it is currency of any sort, what is being “offered” is something other than Grace. 

Grace is about the giver. 

It is a reflection of the heart of the person – group, church, organization – freely giving it. It is not about the person or people on the receiving end. Is it not about whether it’s deserved or not, fair or not, or any one of those typical things people will say when someone has been the unlikely recipient of authentic grace.

Grace, with Listening (“You have my full attention”) and Presence (“I am here with you and for you”) are among the most powerful gifts we can offer each other.

Life itself tries to teach Grace to the willing learner. 

May the learning curve be smooth and kind and gentle for you and for me.

Atlanta bound
February 5, 2024

Sticks and stones

by Rod Smith

The Mercury – Thursday

The Power of Encouragement

“Sticks and stones will break my bones but words will never harm me,” says the well-known little song, despite its vast inaccuracies.

Bones heal. Bones, I believe, can become stronger as a result of healing.

Harsh words, hard, misspoken comments, put-downs, slams, insults, double-edged “compliments” can stay with a recipient forever. They can be replayed, chorus-like, all through a person’s life. I have known people to be inflicted with fresh pain years after a toxic volley has been delivered.

Of course this is so!

I bet you can recall word-for-word what some misguided teacher yelled at you when you were knee high to a grasshopper. You might not still carry the pain, but some do. I’ve met them.

Responsible, accurate, sincere affirmations can inspire a child, guide an adolescent, motivate a young adult, and be a scaffold of continued success throughout a life-time for some people.

Mr. Richard Morey of Northlands Boys’ High School (now Northwood) did this for me.

On day and when I was about 14, he took a minute portion of an essay I had written, circled it, and said, in his dry manner, “Here, do more of this.”

I treasured that red circle, that moment of encouragement, for a very long time and, well, built much of my career on it.

Three years my teacher, made us write for 5 minutes everyday!
February 4, 2024

Applying brakes…..

by Rod Smith

Many adults struggle with maintaining good and healthy boundaries. 

It’s part of the human condition. 

Knowing where I “end” and where you “begin” is not always easy. 

Knowing what is my responsibility, and what is not my responsibility is often fuzzy, sometimes ambiguous. 

Knowing when and how to draw my “line in the sand” when it comes to loving others and parenting children is certainly not for the faint hearted. 

Establishing and maintaining healthy boundaries – is a life-long challenge.

Another challenge, which seems less frequently addressed, and integral to having good boundaries, is the matter of also having good brakes. 

It is important to know when to “apply the brakes,” when to slow down, and to know when to stop. 

Knowing when “enough is enough” would save a lot of heartbreak. 

Persons with fuzzy boundaries often seem to have no, or at least poor, brakes. 

They tend to go overboard, to buy too much, to give too much, talk too much, to pursue too much.

Here is the challenge: work as always, on your boundaries. Then, sharpen your awareness of when it is time to apply the brakes. Resist over-giving, over-loving, indulging, chasing, buying, showering with attention — when it comes to those whom you say you love.

Sometimes enough really is enough.

February 4, 2024

Ezra

by Rod Smith

“Ezra. My name is Ezra. I’m 18,” said a young man. 

“You have a whole book of the Bible with your name,” I said introducing myself. 

“I know,” he says, “my grandmother says that all the time.” 

The boy is chatty. 

“My dad made me play sports. He always checked my homework.”

“Sounds like you and your dad are close.”

“He’s dead. Murdered. A year ago. It’s ok. I am used to it. I cried once about it – on the day, but never again. No one talks about him.”

“Ezra, it is not ok,” I said, “listen to yourself.”

“What do you mean?”

“You tell me about your dad and sports and then that your dad was murdered — as if you’re talking about the weather. Ezra, it is not ok. You may be ‘used’ to your dad being dead but it is not ok. You have suffered great loss. I’m really really sorry this has happened to you and your family.”

“It’s ok. You know so far I have been offered scholarships to about 5 universities. I am not sure which one to choose. I wish my dad was here to help.”

February 2, 2024

Hold on….

by Rod Smith

When it seems that things are coming at you from all sides….

Hold onto yourself. 

Even if you are surrounded by supportive loved ones, you are all you’ve got. 

You are your own constant companion and your relationship with yourself is the longest relationship you will ever have – so you might as well be best friends.

You might as well learn to enjoy yourself.   

How you treat yourself is (already) the platform from which you see others and it forms the lens through which you see all things. 

When under pressure, don’t talk to everyone about what you are facing. 

It’s a hopeful myth that all talking is helpful.

It’s not.  

Choose a few trusted people and talk only to them

Spewing – freely-recalling, random mumblings, blaming others, yelling,  speaking from a place of confusion or anger  – has limited and few benefits. 

Holding onto yourself involves planning what you will and will not share.

You are allowed to keep things to yourself. 

You are allowed to plan and decide how you will behave, who you will be. 

All this, and more, is all part of learning to hold onto yourself.

When you hold onto yourself, some will tell you are being selfish.

Self-awareness and selfishness are poles apart. 

[I will be in Durban in February and April — not March — and would love to speak at your church, school, or fundraising event — make contact by email or private message.]

From a recent lunch in Cuba — note the hat and cigar. This vegetarian did not partake!
February 1, 2024

For discussion at home or at work or your place of worship

by Rod Smith

Suggestions for discussion among your immediate family, friends, fellow faith seekers, and co-workers: 

What’s important? What do people really want and need in order to establish a healthy sense of peace. Please, add your insights: 

  • A safe place to make and call home. A healthy and diverse diet. Regular exercise. Outdoor time.
  • Fulfilling and growing relationships. Someone to listen. Someone to hear. The trust of others and people to trust.
  • Meaningful work. Measurable goals. Long term ambitions. Short term successes. A community of like-minded colleagues.
  • On-going and life-giving connections with blood family and family of choice. Opportunity to enjoy long-established friendships, even friends from early childhood. 
  • A meaningful role in a faith or service community. Engagement in a beautiful vision.

What do people really not need? What undermines peace? 

  • Threats, real or imagined, to safety and security. Growing financial stresses.
  • Ambiguous relationships, those that are conditional, a trade, tight-rope, unpredictable relationships. Come-here, go-away “friendships.”
  • Responsibility without authority. Shifting goal-posts. Being blamed.
  • Working under fragile or sensitive leadership — a threatened boss. Leaders or bosses who have favorites, Leaders who bring fragile domestic circumstances to work.
  • A faith community with controlling leadership, rigid rules, operating from gross or subtle platforms of manipulation and blame. 
Apparently a very good novel….. a trusted source tells me!
January 31, 2024

Things to start…..

by Rod Smith

Things to start if you have not already….

Open a savings account. Put some money away every month. Never touch it. You have never heard anyone say they’ve saved too much money. 

Talk to your mother and father as much as possible. Do this even if it is difficult and even if they are. You seldom hear anyone say he or she regrets being close to their parents. 

Tip well. Tip often. Be friendly. Compliment friendliness. Generosity is a life-style. It’s a habit worth developing. It’s rare to hear people complain that they spent their lives being open-hearted and generous.

Open doors and opportunities for others. Alert others to possibilities. Do this even if it means they will get ahead of you (whatever that means). Be the shoulders someone else can trust and stand on. Very few successful people are afflicted by helping others to succeed. 

Refuse to talk about people who are not present to defend themselves or present their side of any story. This is, of course, unless you are lavishing someone with genuine compliments.

On a personal note….

I am deeply encouraged and flattered by the invitations I have received to speak at your church, school, or event in February. I know it is late notice but let me know via email if I may be of service to your cause.

One of my all-time favorite photographs of my son Nate.
January 28, 2024

Eavesdrop

by Rod Smith

Listen to your conversations, yes, eavesdrop on yourself.

I try to do this and I am often embarrassed how regularly I’m on auto-play. I hear the same stuff – the same stories and one-liners – coming out of me over and over again. 

It is as if I am bored with myself and those who are part of the “conversation.”

I don’t like this about me and I don’t particularly like it when I’m caught in someone else’s well-worn loop.    

Sometimes I hear traces of contempt and sarcasm in my conversations.

I am very careful about avoiding swearing and blasphemy, yet there are times I am apparently okay with using words as clubs and bullying others with snarky sarcasm. These verbal habits are surely at least as toxic as possessing a foul mouth.

The gift of thoughtful conversations, where people listen without waiting to talk and people hear what is really being said is something to which I deeply aspire despite what sometimes comes out of my mouth. 

By the way, I am heading to Duban during much of February. 

I would be delighted to speak at your school, church, business, or club – and I promise to watch my mouth. 

Drop me an email if you are interested. 

Let’s see what time permits.

Two new pieces in our home — picked up in Lome, Togo and framed locally.