DANETTE GOULET -- Reporter’s Notebook
The best piece of advice I have ever been given was also the simplest.
“Smile,” my mother told me. “When you walk down the hall at school,
just smile at the kids you pass. They’ll smile back. And if they don’t,
they are the losers, not you.”
Her theory was simple, you see. Everyone was feeling the exact same
way I was. Everyone was waiting for someone else to make the first move
because, of course, it’s easier to let someone else take the chance.
“But,” she said, “is a smile really taking a chance? It’s a mere
pleasantry, not a cause for ridicule.”
She told me this when I was in middle school -- unquestionably the
roughest time in a child’s life.
I was so miserable -- so awkward.
Children are at their very meanest during those years, as parents of
Corona del Mar Middle School students will attest to.
But I figured, by God, it couldn’t make things worse. So I gave it a
try.
She was right. That was all people were waiting for.
People smiled back. Then it became “hellos,” then conversations.
Suddenly, things weren’t quite so miserable or awkward.
I was reminded of this advice and the profound effect it had on my
life when I visited a classroom at Newport Harbor High School this week.
I went to hear from students how vile outbursts of violence by
teenagers might be prevented.
A junior who had returned to Newport Beach after spending a year
abroad suggested that the simple kindness of a smile might go a long way.
“People are so cold here,” she said.
It is the same thing we heard after the Columbine shooting.
A 16-year-old football player named Evan told Costa Mesa High School
students last spring that his life was spared because he had been nice to
Eric and Dylan, the boys who went on the rampage that day, killing 12
classmates and a teacher.
It cost him nothing. It wasn’t even an effort. But it saved his life.
Simple human kindness -- that is the solution. Is it so much to ask?
Is it so difficult to instill?
Instead of condemning the youth of America, and saying, “God, we never
would have done that,” which I too have been guilty of, we need to talk
to them. We need to give them whatever it is that’s missing. Maybe it’s
still as simple as a smile.
* DANETTE GOULET covers the education beat for the Daily Pilot.
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