If you venture at all onto social media or turn on
the news, you’d be hard pressed to believe that we are in the holiday season.
Turmoil and hate are everywhere: many alleged Christians are openly calling for
unmentionable acts against all Muslims for the acts of a small terror group
that co-opted Islam; blacks are railing against whites (and vice versa); the
poor are railing against the rich (and vice versa); and we have a man leading
in the presidential polls by appealing to, and breeding, the lowest common
denominator.
The love and eternal hope that should dominate the
season – and every day outside of it, for that matter – just isn’t there. People
are choosing instead to take darker paths. All of these actions, and so much
more, are all quite disconcerting for this is not behavior you would expect out
of grown adults.
And maybe that’s the problem. Maybe the supposed
maturity of adulthood isn’t all that it’s cracked up to be.
I've often found that the simple rules that we suggest to, even demand of, children to govern their lives and their behaviors are timeless and ageless expectations that should be applied to adults, too. Our companies, families, communities and world would be better off were we to govern and lead all of them with the pure innocence and unconditional love that children have in their worldview.
For instance, take the
succinct Scout Oath: “On my honor, I will do my best to
do my duty to God and my country and to obey the Scout Law; To help other people at all times; To keep myself
physically strong, mentally awake and morally straight.”
The Scout Law that accompanies it
is: “A Scout is trustworthy, loyal,
helpful, friendly,
courteous, kind,
obedient, cheerful,
thrifty, brave,
clean, and reverent.”
Those rules, which
millions of boys have memorized and are charged to live by, are pretty
impressive standards. Their call for moral clarity knows no boundaries – not for
nations, race, creeds nor social standings.
They are rules that I
strive to live by and rules that I often tell business and community leaders
that they should follow. It’s good to have some sort of moral compass in what
one does personally and professionally. Even a Godless society can be a good
one if people learn to carry themselves accordingly -- if someone doesn’t
believe in a god, expectations of pristine behavior can be had, whether they
occur organically or are learned.
More often than not,
good behavior yields good results for good people. That’s the way the fates,
the gods, the very nature of the universe seem to work. Those who approach
their lives – and the lives of others -- with dignity, class, etiquette, and
love seem to succeed in life and work.
And that is underlying
tenet in the life lessons that we as adults try so often to instill in kids –
be it through parental guidance, the Boy Scouts, the Girl Scouts, our churches
or our schools.
But, it’s damaging -- and damning – to our world that those same
adults do not practice what they preach. If the rules of children are known to
count for something, then why do we abandon the simplicity of childhood upon
becoming of legal age? Why do we say one thing to the young and do something
entirely different?
Life is too short to
live miserably and with disregard to those going through it with you. We’re all
in this together. Always remember power of the Golden Rule, something so
useful, so important, so potent that in some way, shape or form it can found in
every religion on Earth: “Do unto others as you as you would have them do unto
you.”
The simplest rules
always make for the best rules. If they
are good enough for our kids, then they are certainly good enough for us.
From the 21 December 2015 Greater Niagara Newspapers
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