Living by simple laws
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Theodor Albert is a Costa Mesa-based lawyer who’s enjoyed his 20-year
stint in Newport-Mesa. He has a love of the law and of American
history.
In addition to his law pursuits and study of American history,
which includes participating in Civil War battle recreations, Albert
enjoys going to the opera at the Orange County Performing Arts
Center.
The 51-year-old recently sat down with the Daily Pilot’s Luis Pena
and spoke about his childhood and Newport memories.
Where did you grow up?
Most of my childhood was in Whittier, although I was born in Fort
Sill, Okla. That was a happenstance of my father being in the service
at the time. But we lived all of our life in California. It was a
different time -- it seems things were a lot simpler. People were a
lot more sure of things than they are now. I used to walk to and from
school and never had any fear of being accosted or anything like
that. And my three siblings walked with me.
What kind of childhood did you have?
I think it was a happy childhood. We lived modestly. My parents
were able to afford a simple home and it was probably 2,000 square
feet, something like that. It was one of those houses that was built
by the hundreds after the second World War for GIs to own using all
of the government-assisted programs that were available to GIs in
those days. Went to Catholic school. It was a time when religion and
spirituality seemed to be a much bigger part in people’s lives.
How did you end up in Newport-Mesa?
I have been in and around Costa Mesa, Newport Beach for the last
23 years. I found myself in Costa Mesa a lot. Visiting clients,
shopping, visiting the beach, visiting Hoag Hospital, both my sons
were born there. I was married in Newport Beach the first time. I
used to hang out at a place called Bobby McGee’s, I don’t know if
it’s still there. The building is still there. It’s right by where
Coast Highway takes the bend just before it goes across the bridge
where the Ruben E. Lee use to be. You know where that steamboat thing
is, which is a museum now? That used to be a restaurant called the
Ruben E. Lee, and right near there was a place called Bobby McGee’s.
I used to hang out there all the time in the early ‘80s. It was a
happening place. I worked in Fashion Island for the law firm I was
with before this one for a period of 12 years. I remember Fashion
Island when it was kind of dowdy looking, before all the renovations
happened. I remember there was a J.C. Penney’s there ... down at the
end of Poppy. My very favorite routine as a young man looking for a
spouse was to go to the Five Crowns for dinner and then walk her down
that street, down Poppy, to where the ocean is there, where it
overlooks the cliffs to Corona del Mar. And on a moonlit night, the
romance of it never failed me.
If you could re-do one moment or incident in your life, what would
it be?
Well, those things in my past, which I thought were mistakes, I
realize in the long run were all there for a reason and a purpose.
The plan behind it wasn’t clear to me at the time, but it became
clear later. So even things that I thought were mistakes and wrong
turns, they also were a profit to me by learning lessons from them.
So I’m not sure if I would have done anything different.
What profession other than yours would you like to have tried?
Well, I’ve always had a great passion for history. I would have
liked to have been a history professor, although I entered college
thinking I was going to study to be a doctor. It took about one
semester for me to realize that my aptitudes were not toward the
sciences but more toward the arts and letters. That’s what I majored
in college and I never took a history course I didn’t like. I never
read a history that I didn’t like. And what television I watch is
mostly about history and most people have told me when listening to
me that I should have been a teacher.
What’s the most important lesson you’ve learned?
It’s that reputation can take decades to build, but can be lost in
an instant. So whenever you consider how you will behave both in your
professional and personal life, consider what is the right thing to
do, not what is the most expedient thing to do. Because I’ve come to
believe that the right thing is also the best thing in the long run.
What do you treasure most?
The love of my wife and my two sons. Because in the end, it’s all
that matters. The house and the cars and the clothes, and even
professional reputation, are small in comparison to your family. If
you don’t have your family, you have nothing. I’ve known an awful lot
of people, particularly lawyers, who are great in their profession
but have no family life, and for them I feel sorry.
What would you like people to always remember about you?
He did the best he could with what he had. I guess what people
remember after you’re gone is not how much money you had. Nobody
cares about that. But what people will remember is how you treated
other people and whether you did something to make things a little
better, or did you just take for yourself. That’s going to be what
people remember.
What was one of the best of the unexpected things that happened in
your life?
How very rewarding it is to be a daddy, because it is also the
most important thing, although it’s not always obvious. What you
teach your children about. What is important in their lives and life
in general has the most direct chance of making a difference for
mankind.
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