Reflections on 50 years of life
STEVE SMITH
No civic issues here today. This is a pause to offer a message to
teachers, parents, business people and others who may take for
granted their influence in the lives of others.
Tomorrow, I am 50 years old.
I have wanted to write a column for a newspaper since I was nine
years old -- it is one of the goals I have had for my life. Writing
for the Daily Pilot is an honor and a responsibility I take
seriously. If you read this column regularly, it is in large part
because some exceptional editors at the Daily Pilot make it better
once it is filed.
So to Tom Johnson, Tony Dodero, S.J. Cahn, Carol Chambers, and all
of the past editors and staff who have guided me, including former
editor Bill Lobdell, thank you very much for this opportunity, your
confidence and your trust.
My other career in marketing is also a source of great joy. I am
blessed to be working with a very talented group of dedicated people
every day, and I thank Curtis Pickelle, Susan Manson, Rik McDonald,
Karol Nesdale, Tina Harris, Janina Barela, Nancy Schutte, John
Decker, Paul Trudel, Jeri Hoag, Joel Ellis and Jeff Mancino for their
hard work and spirit.
Whatever I am is the result of decisions I have made -- some good,
some bad. I take full responsibility for the bad decisions, and I
credit the good ones to the influence of a great number of people,
some of whom would be shocked to learn that I still remember them
after decades of separation. Teachers, please pay close attention
here.
Mervin McLeod was my sixth-grade teacher at Laurel Elementary
School in Los Angeles. I was a 12-year-old from a chaotic home, and
he was the first adult male with whom I had regular contact who
conducted himself the way a man should.
The other teacher was Yvonne (Lefkowitz) Schwartz who taught at
Farifax High School in Los Angeles. Schwartz was the first and only
teacher to recognize my writing ability, such as it is. Her advice to
me on the last day of school is as clear as the day it was spoken.
She said, “You should be a writer.”
So, teachers, always remember, please, that you have the ability
to influence and inspire far beyond your classroom and in ways you
may never know.
Despite the chaos and turbulence that were frequent visitors to
our home as I was growing up, my parents, Homer and Roslyn Smith,
helped me understand that most of what people find important and most
of what they get upset about is not worth spending an ounce of energy
on.
The calm that I found in a home came at age 16 when I met Dr. and
Mrs. Jerome Harold Kay and their daughter, Karen. I have written
about them several times over the years, a testament to their
influence and the support they gave me. To the Kays, particularly my
dear friend Karen, words cannot convey the gratitude I feel.
I worked for Len Pritikin for five years in my first real job
after college. Len was the smartest businessman I have ever met and
may ever meet. When it came time for me to start my own business in
1993, I ran it the way I thought Len would run it.
That business ran successfully for five years until I changed
careers at age 43. That change was inspired and facilitated by Laura
Schlessinger, whose radio talk show and books have guided countless
parents to spend more time with their kids. This parent is among
them.
Mine has been a very full 50 years. But it would have little or no
meaning without my wife and two children. I realize now that meeting
and marrying Cay and starting our family was the real beginning of my
life. To Cay, Kaitlyn and Roy, I owe my happiness, my inspiration and
more gratitude than I could ever express. Being with them is the
fulfillment of another goal in my life.
There are others. Mike Thomas, Pete Thomas, Scott Thomas, Greg
Witmer, Cheryl and Nils-Eric Svensson, Hilary and Steve Barth, Nancy
and Lewis Hines, Dana Hines, Kellie Pendergest, Charlotte and Bud
West, Linda and John West, Catherine West, Kathy and Dave Miller, Nan
and Michael Smith, Brad Harris, Nate Adlen, Fred Szkolnik, Larry
Gold, Mark Berman, Terry Ickowicz, Lynda McGill, Rick McGill, Jackie
and Bob McGill, Linda and Jeff Schulein have all meant so much to me
over the years. I only hope that I have given as good as I’ve gotten.
And somewhere out there is Roy Redlich, my first best friend.
I’m not sorry to see 49 go. I had two serious injuries that
prevented me from fully participating in sports for seven of the past
12 months.
Fifty brings with it some new goals. I’ve got a couple of kids to
finish raising and another book to write. And most of all, I am
determined to discover the graveyard of all of the missing socks from
the world’s clothes dryers.
Fifty more years oughta do it.
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and a freelance writer.
Readers may leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at
(714) 966-4664 or send story ideas to [email protected].
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