On Fathers, batteries and a bike horn.

On Fathers, batteries and a bike horn.

???????? It’s Father’s Day.?? All the storefront windows remind us of this opportunity to give some kind of material gift to our fathers in appreciation for all they do.????However, giving a gift and expressing gratitude for it are two separate things.??

Men, in most cultures, have never been given permission to show their emotions. The story that follows is my way to say thanks for everything MY father gave me.

It is very personal, but then as a leadership coach, clients sometimes share their personal stories with me, so it's my turn.?

If any reader can begin to speak to himself (or herself) with a little more compassion, then it will be well worth it.

I grew up in the US in the 1970s, the third son of four (no sisters). ??I was considered “the artist” in the family -- ?“the sensitive one”, more interested in music and languages.??I was quite the contrast to my younger brother, Doug, who early on excelled in sports. ??

I never had any real interest or aptitude for sports, and I wasn’t going to “fake it” to please anyone. As a result, I resigned myself to the fact that my Dad connected more with my younger brother than with me.

We were a simple working-class family and lived modestly in a ranch style house in suburban Saint Louis. ??Dad made sacrifices to make sure we never went without anything. ??This meant traveling once or twice a month out of state to make sales calls. He’d be gone for 2 or 3 days at a time.

Whenever we heard his car pull into the driveway, both me and Doug would run out to help him unpack. Of course, we missed him, but we also knew that he would sometimes bring back some kind of “present” — comic books, a dartboard, a baseball glove or something that was generally of more interest to my younger brother than it was to me.

Except for once… I remember one Friday afternoon very clearly.

I came out alone to help Dad unpack the car. As I reached into the bottom of a brown paper shopping bag, I found something wrapped in hard plastic.

What’s this?”, I asked.

“It’s a horn for your bike”, ?Dad said. ?“You told me you wanted one”.

Just one? ?And just for me?”… Of course, I kept this thought to myself.

As a 10-year-old boy, I was starting to learn that it was best not to express TOO much emotion about anything.

It was a pretty primitive horn : a rectangular metal box which held two “C” size batteries, a wire and a little plastic red button which, when pressed, gave off a clear warning to any absent-minded pedestrians on suburban sidewalks.

I was delighted in the way that only a kid can be.

I kept that bike for years, although it got relegated to the basement when I got my first driver’s license at 16. I don’t ever recall leaving it out in the rain but for some reason the handlebars on that bike picked up an awful lot of rust.

Fifteen years later, while doing some serious house cleaning, I decided that it was high time for me to part ways with it. After dragging it upstairs, I took it out to the driveway for removal. I hit the kickstand to park it for one last time.

As I turned to go, however, I got hit by a wave of nostalgia.

The little kid in me wanted to press the rusty little red button on that horn one last time and to my astonishment, it worked! Even after years of lying dormant, the batteries somehow kept their charge. In fact, the horn sounded just as clear as the day Dad helped me put it on my bike.

Fast forward fifty years. My father passed away about 12 years ago.

I never imagined how much I would miss him. Sons never used to say those kinds of things to their fathers. And I must admit, when I did speak to him, I did not always say the kindest of things. (I may have inherited some of my Dad’s penchant for sarcasm.)

Still, I prefer to recall things we actually did together, like the games of golf on unbearably hot summer mornings in Forest Park.

There are winter memories too. The time when my battery of my Ford Torino died late night in a really dodgy neighbourhood of the city. ?Dad drove out from the suburbs in subzero temperatures with jumper cables to restart the car. ?He never complained once about doing so.

The fact that I have lived abroad for more than half my life did not give me the opportunity to spend enough time with him.

As Mom and Dad got older, I would spend an entire month back in Saint Louis, usually in the worst of the summer heat. I would always celebrate my birthday with them back home. We never did anything special. It was enough to play cards at the kitchen table or watch a Cardinals baseball game on the sofa.

Over time, we learned to hug each other. Somehow, late in the 1980s, it became socially acceptable for men to do this in public places like airports without looking “queer”. Dad actually grew fonder of his “prodigal son”.

One thing I’ve learned as a coach is that we are all deeply influenced by our national culture, whether we consciously identify with it or not. Role models (what defines masculinity, for example go unquestioned and continue to influence us even as adults. ?

In our pop media culture, icons are set on an altar and there is no point in pressing the “mute” button on the remote control.

All the latest research in neuroscience shows that for the first seven years of our lives, we all “download” what Jung called “archetypes”. Anyone who tells you that deprogramming societal or parental expectations is quick or easy is being disingenuous at best. Any progress towards self-acceptance cannot take place without pulling up the dandelion roots in the gardens of our lives.

Now, as an American, I’m an optimist by nature, but I also realize that finding peace and purpose calls for courage. In a professional context, conscious efforts need to be made?to create environments?where men feel safe?to express emotion?in their lives.

It won't happen overnight and finding one's voice in these turbulent times calls for true courage: the courage to be honest with ourselves and vulnerable with those we love.

My Dad’s love for me endures and gives me that courage.

In any case, whenever my heart starts to ache, somewhere in my memory I look for the plastic red button on that horn…

and I press it…

more about me and my coaching style

www.weilan.biz


#fathersday #fathersdaygifts #masculinity #menswork #leadershipcoaching #male

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Frank Pomata

Employment Counselor | Mental Wellness Advocate-Speaker-Trainer | Non-Profit & Volunteer Mgmt Consultant | Author

1 年

Absolutely love this piece, Denis. Thank you for sharing it. It touched me deeply because my father and I had trouble connecting when he was alive. He's been gone in the corporeal sense for a long time, but I visit him at the cemetery on special holidays, his birthday, and most recently on Father's Day. I will sometimes converse with him there. An older friend once told me his relationship with his father evolved after his death. I could not fathom what he meant at the time. Now, years after my father's death in 1997, I have come to discern what my friend was describing. I am no longer locked in combat with my father for autonomy or seeking his approval. I am also able to see my father more clearly as someone who loved me and did the best he could as a father with the "tools" he had available to him, and he passed along some important values and attributes that I see reflected in myself and my lives' journey. This is a photo of Dad & me (circa 1982).

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Claudia Cimenti

I help professionals, leaders, entrepreneurs - and their teams - uncover the root of challenges, custom-craft solutions & thrive | Coach (EIA), Team Coach (ITCA), Mediator, Author | Luxembourg & online | EN DE FR LU

1 年

Thanks you Denis for inviting me to follow your newsletter. What personal and insightful writing to start off the reading pleasure today! Indeed, sometimes it takes the better part of a lifetime to adapt to culture, or to put it into its proper perspective. A first step is to become aware of the cultural "water we swim in" (as a coach, I'm sure you're aware of the "the fish is not aware of the water it swims in" concept...)

Rosemary Gorman Morley

Intercultural Training Consultant / Cross-Cultural Trainer & Coach

1 年

"Any progress towards self-acceptance cannot take place without pulling up the dandelion roots in the gardens of our lives." - You are being entered into my personal quote book, Denis. Love this ??

Peter KNUDSON

Formateur en anglais chez Ministère des Finances et du Budget

1 年

My first bit of reading on this Father's Day and it goes straight to the heart. Keen. Poignant. Somehow I knew how to "pull up the dandelion roots in the garden" of my life. Your words give courage, show that we need not be isolated within our various cultural backgrounds. Thanks.

David Kehler

Intercultural Communication Consulting & Life-Skills Coaching for Cross-Culture Transitions

1 年

A touching story and good adivice. Let me share a bit about Taiwanese culture. All over Taiwan are public sculptures of fathers playing with their children and children embracing their fathers. I don't know which countries rank low on Hofstede's masculinity dimension (and consequently allow for greater emotional expressivity by men) but Taiwan is among them, at 45. For comparison, China and Germany have a score of 66, the USA is 62. The correlation between a society's art and values is something I always pay attention to. I suspect the relationship is reciprocal: values shape artistic artifacts, and the symbolism of art helps to reproduce values.

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