June 8, 2023

There’s still time to prepare

by Rod Smith

I know it’s a week away: 

Your dad may try to give the impression that Father’s Day doesn’t mean much.  I’d suggest you ignore his resistance. Make a big deal out of it. It’s not the gift or the card that he receives from you that’s important to him, it’s that you phoned and chatted, you wrote, you remembered and recalled your lives together and recognized his commitment to you. 

Your dad may try to brush off your attention at Father’s Day and tell you that he doesn’t need the focus and the attention but lavish him with it anyway. Neither of you will be around forever so make this one a good one, one to remember. Another shaving set or pair of socks will never be as treasured as a carefully composed letter recalling your best memories with your dad. 

Fathering is a fragile journey for many men, many whose frames of reference were often lacking.  Many of our dads fought unseen demons of ravished childhoods. Let the adult within you find grace for him —- if this be you — and celebrate your dad despite the struggles you too may have known. 

Why? Well, you decide.

June 7, 2023

Memories

by Rod Smith

I noticed some years ago that on landing in Johannesburg or Cape Town from an overseas flight after a long absence from South Africa, unanticipated memories — not always helpful or wanted, often unusual — would begin to surface. For instance, telephone numbers I’d not accessed or needed for years would be readily available.

I had not unbuckled my 46G seat and faced customs and immigration yet on this trip and for some reason I remembered the newspaper seller who stood on the corner of Field and Smith Streets at 1am on a Sunday morning after I’d left the Oyster Box Hotel. Danny would save me “all three” papers for a healthy tip and remind me that he’d kept “all three” last week and I’d not arrived.

I can never go too far down my Duran memory lane before Gordon Michael at the Mitchell Gardens Blue Zoo restaurant, a beloved afternoon tea spot, fills me with delight. On visiting, Gordon would open his menu and show me my columns he’d cut from the paper and stuffed into his menu to show his customers how long we’d been friends. Gordon has no idea how often I’ve told audiences of his stories of Durban and of his 46 years of faithful service to a city and people whom he has so deeply loved.

Gordon Michael
June 6, 2023

Ten days

by Rod Smith

There were 32 of us from 14 countries.    

Mozambique, Malawi, Rwanda, South Africa, South Sudan, Namibia, Burkina Faso, Zambia, and several other African countries were well represented. Three were from the USA. One was from the UK and one was from Canada. 

We were a collection of pastors and counselors, writers, journalists, and artists. Two were television journalists who covered little known wars. I was aware of at least 1 engineer. 

I heard people speaking English, Portuguese, Xhosa, and several languages I could not identify. 

While I have no way of knowing anyone’s net worth it became clear from multiple conversations that some lived on very very little while others have all they’ll ever need. 

Several people among us had buried their children, faced wars, famine and experienced violence first hand. 

Some had faced forced removals and had to resettle in areas unknown. At least 2 had endured brutal torture. 

For 10 days we lived together, shared meals, and talked. We learned. We laughed. We listened. Some cried. 

Over the days it became clear that happiness and peace and goodwill all come from within and defy purchase. We learned, some for the first time and some again, that it’s not where someone lives that delivers contentment, but always how.

June 5, 2023

Visit to South Africa

by Rod Smith

I’m in South Africa for a brief visit and I’m enjoying your gorgeous country. 

Resilience and friendliness and hope within the hearts of the people I’ve met apparently far exceeds the surrounding community and national stressors.

I’m frequently reminded in casual conversations that America — I live in the USA — is widely idealized by South Africans. “North America” includes the USA, Mexico, and Canada.

Load-shedding* is obviously a challenge to all South Africans.

I’m amazed at how people appear to adjust to it, embrace it, arrange their lives and programmes around it and simply go on. 

Given such a necessity in the USA there’d be outrage and people would take to the streets and refuse to accommodate the inconvenience. 

They’d feel picked on and singled and express it without reserve.

The USA is generally highly efficient. Things work.  Attention is usually somewhat immediate when things don’t — but, we are far from a perfect nation. 

Selfishness abounds. 

Entitlement persists. 

Political turmoil is rampant and is often hate driven. 

Crime is a significant problem and many inner city areas are veritable war zones.

Yes, you’ll hear of South African immigrants in the USA who brag about leaving their houses unlocked and have no home security system and so forth, but, they have joined the privileged.  

Lots of areas of our country are deeply troubled and we could do with a lot more of your friendly and humble attitude all round.

* Power (electrical) shedding — electricity shuts down for up to 4 hours a day in stages across the nation. There’s an app that informs the population when power will be off and reconnected in your area. This means traffic lights are off and some malls and banks have to shut downSome establishments have installed generators and so they are unaffected by load shedding.

June 4, 2023

Long term care for others

by Rod Smith

Caring for another, a neighbor, a friend, during an illness or while grieving a loss is an art.

Caring too much — overdoing caring — damages both the recipient of the “care” and he or she who offers it.

Caring offhandedly or indifferently is no care at all.

Then, it’s a tricky business trying to care for one who needs no care or thinks he or she needs no care.

Striking a balance of caring for another without compromising oneself is a delicate art form.

But, it’s possible.

It can be learned and practiced and perfected. Then, when errors are made, the errors can teach valuable lessons so they are unlikely to be repeated.

Among the first errors is the belief that caring for another is easy, requires little or no thought, training, or preparation. Another is agreeing or deciding too quickly.

Long term care for another, costs. It’s an enormous investment of time and love and commitment requiring that other facets of the carer’s life will require reassessment. Long term care for one will mean others in the carer’s broader circle of relationships will also require readjustments.

Self-care comes first or the “care” offered will probably begin well but spiral down to acts of begrudged favors and feel both for the carer and recipient like a really bad marriage.

June 1, 2023

Table with a view

by Rod Smith
May 30, 2023

Demanding and destructive masters

by Rod Smith

Anger, hatred, the desire for revenge, are strong emotions but are often the just and appropriate feelings of many who have been wronged.

Just, and appropriate, as they may well be, they are destructive to the host.

A person who enduringly hosts such emotions without a means to address them will be stewed in bitterness and even ill health. No matter how sadly and well earned, these emotions will, bit by bitter bit, destroy the host.

If you are craving revenge for yourself or others, if hatred wells within you, if you have outbursts of rage where the intensity of your rage blinds you and distances you from reason, please, seek counseling.

Seek a wise guide to lead you out of your multiple traps. A wise counselor will be able to assist you to tabulate your grievances, asses your degree (if any) of responsibility for the feelings you face, and devise with you a plan to negotiate your way to a free, or at least a free-er, future,

No one benefits when continuing to live under the demands of revenge, hatred and anger, all of which will prove to be rather exacting and demanding and unrelenting task masters.

May 23, 2023

How to be extraordinary in three easy steps

by Rod Smith

Say “please” and “thank you” and “well done” and “nice to see you” and look people in the eyes when you say these golden words. Make this a practice and you’ll be a one-in-a-million kind of person and others will consider you extraordinary. Not only that, your lens with which you see the world will shift to see beauty and kindness where you previously may have missed or ignored it.

Evaluate and solidify your core values and then perhaps decide you will return to no one evil for evil or unkindness for unkindness.  Rather you will respond to selfishness and deceit and indifference with engagement and generosity and offer goodness. This will make you extraordinary and enhance your days and bring you unadulterated and lasting peace. 

Decide who and what you are —- this will take extended alone time and a pencil and a few sheets of lined paper — and then slowly begin to declare who and what you are by living out your values. This act — always unfinished — will make you extraordinaryily self-assured and you will become a rock of confidence both to yourself and those seeking stability and guidance.

May 21, 2023

Culture shaping…..

by Rod Smith

I enjoy moments when life places me with people of diverse cultures. I love it when individuals are sufficiently comfortable to discuss the power that culture has in shaping our lives and our perceptions.

Mary is amazed that Anvi met her husband for the first time at their wedding. Mary is further surprised that Anvi says she is happily married. Anvi tells Mary she could never have been brave enough to pursue a “love marriage.” Anvi says her parents, whom she does trust, know her better than she knows herself and therefore knew what kind of man she would want to marry.  

John is amazed to hear that I’m willing to respect women leaders. John is even more surprised to hear I raised two babies without women to change their nappies (diapers). He tells me I insulted the men of his culture by doing “women’s work.”

Sunmi is confused at hearing June is unwilling to give up her career to take care of her aging mother-in-law. She expresses that such a choice in her culture would be considered unusual. 

A child, to the annoyance of some of the adults, interrupte his mother while his mother is talking. The mother considers it perfectly “normal” for a child to exhibit such behavior and is unaware that a child interrupting an adult in many cultures is considered gross disrespect.

May 16, 2023

Mountains into molehills….

by Rod Smith

Do your part to make the mountains you face become molehills 

  • One day at a time, the Twelve Step mantra is really helpful. Not everything you face has to be faced today. 
  • Learning to “hold onto yourself” is a skill really worth developing and will reap huge benefits. 
  • Gaining some distance to improve perspective is always helpful.
  • Listen more than you speak. When you listen for what people are really saying rather than what you hope they are saying. Our hopes can distort what others are trying to tell us. 
  • How people treat any one person is how they can treat everyone. Watch out for those who treat others poorly. You may be, you probably are, next in line. 
  • We see the world and others not as the world is and as others are but as we are. The lens you use is always in your pocket. 
  • The best thing you can do for the people you most love is to take care of yourself. If you do not, no one else will. 
  • Watch how people behave rather than listen to what they say. If the two don’t seem to match each other it is a signal that you ought to be aware.
  • Plan tough meetings in great detail. Flying by the seat of your pants will result in others taking you to the cleaners.