Showing posts with label rules. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rules. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 12, 2025

Make Mine Neat (No ICE)

 As a freshman, along with my c/o 1970-classmates at Hamilton College, I took a vocational interest/aptitude test (Strong Interest Inventory), designed to offer at least some direction to the clueless (where I was eminently qualified) about our future life/career directions and choices. 

The results for potentially successful, or even suitable, career paths were clearly unclear. My highest scores* were at best fuzzy "Maybe?"s. On the flip side, however, there were three career paths that definitively fell into the "For the love of all that is holy, NO!!! Run away, run away fast!!!" 

Not only were those scores low, they mirrored the stock market line graph on a bad day, red lines in solidly negative territory. Compared with my friends, only I had even one negative score, much less three. The highest of the lowest was Industrial Arts teacher, where I would have been not only manifestly incompetent, but a danger to myself and others. (Kind of like arming me with a gun in my classroom.) Moving literally down the scale was Pastor, so my later thoughts about opening Bob's Church & Taco Stand were obviously a goof.**

My worst score, though, was reserved for police officer, accurately predicting my casual, at best, relationship with both rules and their enforcement. Although I was undoubtedly not a good fit in law enforcement, I nevertheless respected the men (and, much, much later, women) who served their communities in that role, doing a necessary job that I could never have performed at any level of competence, not even in radar trap towns like Bella Villa, Marlboro, or their north county cousins. I do have several friends and formers who took on those un(der) appreciated tasks, though, and I thank and respect them.


But this current crop of ICE agents, hired to fill a number quota*** established only because it sounded big and ended with 4 zeroes? Honestly, I couldn’t even look at myself in the mirror (which the aging process and fading faculties already make problematic) if that had been where I ended up. Maybe there are some ICE agents with sufficient levels of competence and compassion to earn my respect, who do not need to mask their identities, but what I’m seeing, generally, are men not qualified for even small squad police work, undertrained bullies with xenophobic axes to grind and brick-sized chips on their unimpressive shoulders (meeting a baseline recruitment standard that seems to be: breathing male {preferably white}, no DEI worries here), unfit both physically and attitudinally, encouraged by what so poorly passes for leadership in the current administration to indiscriminately**** throw their (often literal) weight around.


*       Author, Journalist, Lawyer, not necessarily in that order 

**     The one time I tried to join a church, the pastor kindly, but firmly, said, "Oh, Bob, that's a lovely thought, but, really, you need to stay away from organized religion."

***   Quotas are good things now?

**** Net fishing for tuna scoops up dolphins, too.

Friday, July 21, 2017

The Incomplete Rules o' Life Update

As disappointing as it may be, I still haven’t been invited to present any commencement addresses, even though I’ve been sporadically revisiting my (Incomplete) Rules o’ Life over the past few years in anticipation, trying to keep it up to date, should the occasion arise. Perhaps it’s just as well, though. I’d hate to generate protests or walkouts by the graduates. I’ve also added a couple corollaries. In any case, here is the annotated update (“Rules” with a C in the number are corollaries), followed by the complete “Berndt’s Incomplete Rules o’ Life.” Some rules are obviously more significant than others, and someday I may reorder them in terms of importance. Or, given how long it’s been since I did an update, maybe not. Enjoy it, or not. Better yet, make your own! (see [renumbered] Rule 65)
2-C. Rightness does not excuse rudeness (stolen from Megan-Phelps Roper and her TED talk about leaving the Westborough Baptist Church)
15-C. Don’t be afraid to lose; or fail. If you’ve never failed, you’re either not trying hard enough or enough new things.
See Rule 15 Above. If your primary goal is to avoid failure or loss, you’ll never maximize your results.
47-C. No sane adult would ever repeat adolescence.
(See Rule 47)
54. Unconditional love makes both the giver and receiver stronger.
Loving without reservation is liberating and empowering – and sometimes painful. Do it anyway.
55. Just because it feels personal doesn’t mean that it is. 
Intent is everything, and not everyone shares your agenda, journey, challenges, dreams, values, aspirations, etc., etc. This rule holds true in family relations, interpersonal relations, government relations, international relations. Or you can spend your life angry. This is just one of the reasons I find Donald Trump so dangerous, since everything seems to be personal to him (and worse, he promises to act and react accordingly).
56. You can’t choose your martyrs, but you can choose your heroes.
There will be people who will adopt and even sacrifice for your cause, whether or not you want or need them to. You have no control over that. However, you don’t need to defend or lionize them unless they’re truly worthy.
57. If you're going to post, repost, or create a meme, double check the spelling and grammar.
Of course, this assumes the people you hope to influence will actually recognize errors of that sort, which, now that I think about it, is a not very frequent attribute of those who get enthusiastic about reposted memes. So, in the words of Emily Litella (the late, great Gilda Radner), “Never mind.”
58. With nothing to look forward to, there’s an unfortunate tendency to spend too much time and energy looking backward.
Living in the past is not particularly productive, and often delusional. It may be the most significant pitfall of aging. Revisionist history is not just for textbooks and agenda-driven historians anymore.
59. No one said the high road is the easy one. But it is almost always the right one.
I can’t think of any real exceptions to this. I suppose that, in theory, if taking the high road jeopardizes an innocent’s welfare, you might face a tough decision and need to investigate alternative routes.
60. Loyalty is a two-way street and may require some sacrifice on your part.
If you expect loyalty from your friends, family, employees, employer, colleagues, etc., it’s up to you take the first steps down that avenue, even knowing that you might not be met halfway. If loyalty really matters, it must become a prime value, which can be inconvenient and even require some sacrifice, although never to the point of violating other core values.
Sidebar: I don’t know who is to blame (but, like most things, I’m guessing there’s plenty to go around), but I think our national economy is much the worse off for companies seeing their employees as just another interchangeable part, a human “resource” instead of a human being. Likewise, employees who don’t understand their importance to the bottom line, and the bottom line’s importance to their continued employment, are soiling their own nest.
61. Smart and $1 will get you a Big Gulp. So will dumb and $1.
It’s all about what you do with your gifts. Over the years I taught a lot of gifted kids who never unwrapped their presents. The path of least resistance is also the least likely path to success.
62. Everybody’s job/life is tougher/cushier than yours.
Recognize that it’s your road that you have to travel. Don’t judge someone else’s because their path isn’t yours. Every job has its challenges, and you probably don’t know how tough they are.
63. You can only coast so far. Eventually you run out of downhill and need to work to get up the next one.
Take it from a coaster. If you’re always coasting you won’t be in the kind of shape you need to succeed when life gets harder. That it will get harder is a certainty. That is not, however, inconsistent with getting better.
64. Don’t debate trolls.
Seriously? This requires explanation? A corollary of “Never try to teach a pig to sing; it wastes your time and annoys the pig.” Except trolls just annoy you, because they don’t have feelings (except misplaced superiority) of their own. It is a waste of time, however.


 And, as always, the (revised) original list. Most phrasing, if not the idea itself, is mine, but those knowingly borrowed are in italics.

1  You don’t get a discount on the Happy Meal just because you’re not….
2  Being “right” is over-rated….
            2-C. Rightness does not excuse rudeness (stolen from Megan-Phelps Roper and her TED talk about leaving the Westborough Baptist Church)
3  Love increases in direct proportion to usage.
4  Better to ask forgiveness than permission.
5  Find satisfaction in achieving the best result possible instead of frustration over failing to achieve the best possible result.
6  There’s no “undo key” for life.
7  Don’t worry about what other people think about you, because, in fact, they’re not (thinking about you).
8  Most people are capable of redemption, but only if you allow it.
9  If one sincere apology isn’t enough, forgiveness isn’t really on the agenda (Okay, maybe two).
10  Life is a marathon, not a sprint.
11  Not liking an answer doesn’t make it wrong.
12  Being correct and being wrong are NOT mutually exclusive.
13  If you’re both the host and guest of honor at a Pity Party, don’t expect a large turnout.
14  Although your body offers numerous hints, it’s when your mind stops growing that marks the beginning of the end.
15  You never know the limits of your reach until you fall on your face.
15-C. Don’t be afraid to lose; or fail. If you’ve never failed, you’re either not trying hard enough or enough new things.
16  Try to go where you’re invited, stay away from where you’re not.
17  If you can’t like yourself, what’s the point for anyone else?
18  Be a good audience.
19  Admitting that you are/were wrong is both cathartic and liberating.
20  If you can never be satisfied, don’t be surprised when people stop trying.
21  Wherever you go, there you are.*
22  It’s just so much easier to tell the truth in the first place.
23  Stereotyping victimizes both the typee and typer.
24  Just because you agree with me doesn’t mean I’m right. **
25  If you insist on seeing the glass half-empty (or less), don’t be surprised if someone just drinks the rest.
26  The loudest voice has no more claim to truth than the softest.
27  It’s way easier to fix the flaws in others than deal with your own.
28  You can always find something to complain about, but I’m not sure how that’s helpful to anyone.
29  People will generally live up to or down to your expectations.
30  If you want to make a fresh start, it will require more than a change in location.
31  If you’ve never offended anyone, it’s likely you’ve never said or done anything worth thinking about.
32  If someone really wants your advice or opinion, (s)he’ll ask.
33  Hey, if you’re going to nurse a grudge, at least make it over something life-altering.
34  Pay yourself first.
35  If you expect people to read between the lines, make sure the font is dark and bold – and don’t forget to double space.
36  Whether it’s arson or an accident, you can’t unburn a bridge. You can rebuild it, eventually, but getting a permit from the right person can be problematical.
37  The pain-level of an insult is directly proportional to its truth-level.
38  Unsolicited opinions are like pennies – it’s easy enough to find one lying around – and it’s worth about as much. (See Rule #32)
39  Blaming others for your failure to ask for what you need is a little backwards. (If you don’t A-S-K you don’t G-E-T.)
40  Just because you have the right doesn’t make it right.
41  Make sure your path to the target is clear when tossing a well-aimed dart – you never know who might walk in front of it.
42  Most rules written in crisp, dark black print on starkly white paper may be clear but are also fragile and easily broken. 
43  If what you’re doing to win her (him) isn’t real, the relationship won’t be either.
    44  Before trying to convince someone else that you’re right, ask, and admit the possibility, “What if I’m wrong?”
    45  The potential to do harm is greater if thinking is missing from the picture.
    46  Just because a critic says something is “good” doesn’t mean I have to like it.
    47  Most important youth lessons are painfully learned.
            47-C. No sane adult would ever repeat adolescence.
    48  Live so that people will want to celebrate your life at your funeral.
    49  Next time is often a long time from now….
    50  If you don’t have anything to do, that’s probably pretty much what you’ll actually get done.
    51  Just because someone put you in charge of the restaurant doesn’t mean you should try to tell the cooks how to do their jobs.
    52  Sports without sportsmanship is just war with fewer casualties.
    53 Just because you’re as good at something as you care to be doesn’t mean you’re actually good at it.
54. Unconditional love makes both the giver and receiver stronger.
55  Just because it feels personal doesn’t mean that it is. 
56  You can’t choose your martyrs, but you can choose your heroes.
57  If you're going to post, repost, or create a meme, double check the spelling and grammar.
58  With nothing to look forward to, there’s an unfortunate tendency to spend too much time and energy looking backward.
59  No one said the high road is the easy one. But it is almost always the right one.
60  Loyalty is a two-way street and may require some sacrifice on your part.
61  Smart and $1 will get you a Big Gulp. So will dumb and $1.
62  Everybody’s job/life is tougher/cushier than yours.
63  You can only coast so far. Eventually you run out of downhill and need to work to get up the next one.
64  Don’t debate trolls.
65  You’re welcome to borrow or revise any of these, but you’re better off with your own list; it is, after all, YOUR life.
66  Always leave room for one more….
*Apparently stolen from Confucius. Who knew? I thought I was using something from Buckaroo Banzai Across the Eighth Dimension.
**The converse is also true.

Thursday, June 25, 2015

A Conundrum: Tolerating Intolerance

 And on that subject....

The pending arrival of the SCOTUS decision on gay marriage is crashing head-on into the controversy over the Confederate flag. I struggle with the aftermath of both these issues, no matter who wins, because the problem with “winning” is that the “other side” has to lose.
However, this piece is about neither of those issues, at least not directly, although I unequivocally support marriage equality. I also totally reject arguments that the stars and bars (I refuse to promote its status with capital letters) – and, by extension, the whole Civil War – is really about celebrating Southern heritage. I call B.S. and refer you to the linked article. (http://theweek.com/articles/562004/surprisingly-uncomplicated-racist-history-confederate-flag from The Week)
Some conservatives, and especially conservative Christians, are claiming that the so-called tolerant liberals who support marriage equality are intolerant of their faith-based opposition to the same, that not only their beliefs but they themselves are being discounted and, in their view, even discriminated against.
In the same way, I consider myself to be a tolerant person, but I confess that I am tempted to respond to what I perceive to be the intolerance of others with intolerance of my own. A shop owner who refuses services, or offers only surly service, to a person because of sexual orientation is not someone who will earn my patronage or respect. Neither do I have any use for racists, no matter how they try to camouflage their bigotry with disingenuous or irrelevant arguments.
However, I try to remind myself that basically good, decent people can be unenlightened, misinformed, ignorant, or just plain (have you noticed that plain and Palin are anagrams?) wrong. I also recognize that those who disagree with my positions might feel the same way about me. I also try to remind myself about Rule #24: agreeing or disagreeing with me doesn’t make you right — or wrong.*
The key to tolerance is respect for those with whom you disagree, (even if you believe that THEY are failing to respect you in turn) not necessarily their opinions or their arguments, but them as people, entitled to their own misguided notions (as I am to mine, as you might see it). In the same way that I assume that any disagreements in philosophy or point of view are not personal, I assume that any contrary political positions are not aimed at me, but my positions.
What that does, I hope, is allow a return to civility, a willingness to accept that the ideas of others are worthy of consideration, because the holders of those opinions are worthy of respect as human beings, to accept that there is no single answer, no single solution. For that to truly happen, however, will require that all of us, no matter our position on the political spectrum or stance on an issue, must forgo anger at those with whom we disagree. Sadly, we have too often deteriorated from “I believe I’m right” to “I’m morally superior and you’re not only stupid but evil.” We, and our opinions, all come from different places, places that color our perceptions of both events and each other. We must be willing to at least listen to those who think differently and not confine ourselves to our personal echo chamber.
Nothing in this (increasingly) complex world is so simple that there is no room for debate, disagreement, or alternative thinking. You can claim the moral high ground, but if you look across the valley you’ll see at least one other camp on another mountain. I suggest that if both can’t be right it is equally likely that neither is, at least not completely. I have written about this before, but before scorching the earth of someone with whom you disagree, pose the question, “What if I’m wrong?”
Bottom line: we are all entitled to our thoughts and opinions, no matter how misguided, but we also all have a responsibility to play nicely with the others who inhabit our sandbox. It doesn’t cost extra, after all.

Yes, I know my self-imposed hiatus did not last long. Maybe I should have threatened to quit writing sooner!