Turning
Old Cliches into New Maxims:
Get Serious
By
Richard Eyre
Part
Six
Note:
This column appears every two weeks …with an old cliché replaced
by a new maxim each time. Click here
to read the full introductory column.
This
one still rings in my ears! In the deep, loud voice
of my high school basketball coach. To him basketball
was life -- and life was very serious. “Come on!” “Think!” “Don't make that same mistake again!” “Set that pick like you mean
it.” “You’re not here to fool around!” “Get serious.”
The
irony of talking like this about something that was
supposed to be fun never occurred to him. Once in exasperation
he even said, “What do you guys think this is, a game?”
Well
it was a game, of course -- and a game that is better played
when people are loose rather than tense, relaxed and
enjoying themselves rather than pressured and over-trying.
Life,
while it is much more than a game, works in much the
same way.
Most
of us take ourselves far too seriously. We turn life
into a fierce competition by comparing ourselves not
only with real people but with the unreal images and
expectations of the media. Leisure gets as serious
and competitive as anything else. We have to win,
or at least improve, otherwise what would be the point?
We plan serious vacations (right down to the minute)
so that we can maximize our time off. We tell our children
to “get serious” at the very time they are enjoying
themselves most. And we trick ourselves into thinking
that seriousness is synonymous with success.
*
“What
do you guys do for fun?”
It
was a strange way to start a sophisticated business
seminar. And it looked strange too --
the casual, bearded speaker, dressed in cords and a
flannel shirt, talking to an audience clad in serious
dark suits with patterned power ties.
But
that was how he began. He and I were the two featured
speakers at a corporate “personal renewal” conference.
I was seated on the stand, behind the speaker, watching
the audience.
“You
guys look pretty serious to me,” my counterpart said.
“What do you do to relax?”
The
audience looked a little confused, some a bit irritated.
They were here for serious renewal! What was
this? Finally someone raised his hand. “I play tennis.”
“Elaborate,”
said the speaker.
“Well,
I’m up to a four-point-five ranking and I got to the
club semifinals this spring ...”
It was quickly obvious that this guy’s tennis was serious
-- even stressful.
For
ten more minutes the speaker tried to get someone to
come up with something simple and spontaneous and fun.
Finally he started telling his own ways of loosening
up and enjoying the day-to-day. He told some of the
crazy little things he did to lighten his business travel:
of paying the toll at toll booths for the car behind
him and watching the surprised reaction in his rearview
mirror. Putting little “dot” stickers up in the curve
of an airplane window or a public rest-room mirror so
that if he was ever there again, he could remember he’d
been there before. Starting conversations with total
strangers. Paying restaurant bills anonymously for
people who looked like they couldn’t afford it.
By
now the faces in the audience showed a mixture of skepticism
and real envy --
as they realized that his message was simply that what
we need to renew ourselves is not to do more
but to relax more.
*
I
love to coach six- and seven-year-olds. Our city has
a program called Biddy Basketball with a lower basket
and smaller basketballs -- and without scoreboards. I learned
in my first year of coaching that the kids don’t respond
very well or improve very much from criticism. Telling
them not to double-dribble or pointing out their errors
just causes very serious and worried looks on their
little faces -- and their technique actually gets
worse.
What
does work is to praise them and to have fun. Every
time any of them do anything even remotely promising,
I tell them how well they did. The others listen,
watch, emulate. And before each practice or game we
have a standard question and answer. “Why are we playing
basketball?” “To have fun.”
Life
of course has its serious side. But why “seriousize”
the parts that don't have to be? Part of our seriousness
is habit. Just as “lightening up” can become a counter
habit.
A
sense of humor is well named. A sense is something
that can be developed. As you try consciously to be
more aware, to notice the amusing, ironic, or
humorous aspects of everyday life, you sensitize yourself
to the lighter side and learn to laugh more -- particularly at yourself.
And
lightness is an intriguing and multi-meaningful
word. As we choose a lighter approach and attitude,
we shed the somber heaviness and pessimism of seriousness
and brighten with wider awareness and clearer insight.
“Lightness” is the opposite of darkness as well as of
heaviness.
G. K.
Chesterton said it best, and though his quotation is now old,
it can become a new maxim for today:
THE REASON ANGELS CAN FLY
IS THAT THEY HAVE LEARNED TO TAKE
THEMSELVES LIGHTLY.
In
our families we need to remember that “crisis
plus time usually equals humor.” Like
the time that seven of our children spilled their milk
at the same dinner, or the late-night return from a
camping trip when we didn’t have a house key and had
to camp one more night -- in the backyard.
In
our work life we need to remember that most of the hassles
and small failures aren’t remembered -- by others or by ourselves.
Properly
viewed, people are essentially interesting and amusing.
And life is essentially beautiful and entertaining.
And we ourselves are often pretty funny.