Getting to know all about you
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CHASING DOWN THE MUSE
How much, really, do we know of one another?
In my neighborhood, we wave, smile and ask the obligatory, “How’re
you doing?” Wayne and Faye walk their new dog. Ann, racquet in hand,
takes off with Helga for the tennis courts. Byron jumps in his sedan
and heads to the city. Randy dons his uniform and lends his hands to
Laguna’s Public Works Department. Paul transforms paper and canvas
into art. I know of our comings and goings, and the type of job each
of us undertakes, but I know little of what constitutes the daily
bump and grind.
This thought began to percolate after a recent luncheon with Sen.
Bob Graham of Florida. The Senator was asked to speak about how he
spends his days, and his answer was quite illuminating.
Graham was a member of the Florida State Senate in 1974, when a
female educator, who said he knew nothing of the difficulties within
the school system, challenged him to spend time in the classroom. He
agreed. She called back a few days later to let him know everything
was arranged, that the following week he would be teaching 12th-grade
civics. He had expected to spend a few hours, not a semester, but as
an honorable man, he kept his promise.
Sen. Graham learned more about the educational system by being on
the inside than he could ever have learned from the outside, and took
on the task of repeatedly working a new job. Through his tenure as
state senator, his eight years as the Governor of Florida, and his
current role as a U.S. Senator, he has completed 386 “work days.” His
jobs have included service as a policeman, railroad engineer,
construction worker, fisherman, garbage man, factory worker, busboy
and baggage handler. As a public servant, Graham has taken the time
to know his constituency.
My grandmother always lectured, not to criticize a man unless I
had walked in his shoes. I usually quipped back, that I’d never fit
in his shoes, but as I grew to an adult, her point made more sense.
When my neighbor, Faye, leaves for work, what sort of day can she
expect? Are her co-workers considerate and courteous? Is her boss
respectful? Is she provided sufficient resources to successfully
complete each task? Does she have an intolerable commute? We never
speak of these things as we wave from our decks or our car windows,
but they are part of the fabric of her life.
Although we cannot walk in another’s shoes, sometimes getting up
close and personal can suffice. Workdays changed the way Sen. Graham
perceived those that he governed, and his stories reminded me to
question and revisit judgments I might hold.
Each time I assume I know what someone is going through, I’d
better check my homework. In truth, all I have is a set of
assumptions and generalizations that color my thinking. I can declare
someone is unmotivated if they don’t have a job, but is this
necessarily the truth? I fill in the blanks with my own pieces of
experience, but quite frankly, these are molded by a middle-class
upbringing in this wonderful beach community.
When I want to label someone lazy, I had better ask, “Am I?” When
I want to scream at someone to “try harder,” I’d better examine what
is hard enough. I’d better try on that other pair of shoes so that I
might better understand my world and my place within it. And I’d
better find out if my husband Steve really likes tofu, or if he just
says that to please me.
* CATHARINE COOPER sits on the City’s Open Space Committee. She
can be reached at ccooper@ cooperdesign.net or (949) 497-5081.
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