DEAR SEAN:
I’m embarrassed to be writing you, but I'm so confused with life. All my friends know what they want to do and I don’t know what I want to do with my life. I’m in my second year at Troy and am lost. Help me.
BOY-WHO-DOESN’T-KNOW-WHAT-HE-WANTS-TO-BE
DEAR BOY:
I know what you can be. Be you.
This world puts big pressure on you to BE something. They’ll tell you to BE successful, BE studious, BE punctual, BE a straight-A student, BE involved. Be this, be that.
Well, it doesn’t matter what I think, but there are enough overachievers in the world, busy BEING things.
We need more folks who take time to smile. Waiters, waitresses, pipe-fitters, hair-stylists, neurosurgeons, bartenders, line cooks, cops, Episcopals, musicians, architectural engineers, grass cutters, stick welders, and custodians. People who enjoy life.
I met a man named Paul. Paul is cleaning hotel rooms while I write this. I ran into him in the hotel hallway, ten minutes ago. Paul was pushing his cleaning cart, singing to himself.
Paul is skinny, with a voice as country as
cornbread. He cleans hotel rooms every day, even weekends.
He starts early and works late. He runs on energy drinks and granola bars. He makes beds, wrestles dirty towels, scrubs toilets.
And he’s singing.
Paul came from Georgia, eighteen years ago. He has taken jobs washing dishes, doing stucco work, laying concrete, mopping floors. He has a wife and six kids. All healthy.
Paul doesn’t want to BE anything. He’s already something. Paul is happy.
You can be, too. You can also be kind to kids, to your girlfriend, and to yourself. You can be kind to elderly women who unload trunks of groceries. You can visit people in nursing homes.
You can be the one who delivers a gift-basket to a family that just had a baby.
And while you’re at it, be sweet to the child…