Words Matter

I like to take a look at the daily prompts WordPress provides, and earlier this week this prompt caught my attention: “What is the last thing you learned?” The last thing? Don’t you mean latest thing? The last thing would imply I’d learned everything I was going to learn, and now I’m dead. A poor choice of words.

Words are powerful. As kids we learned the phrase “sticks and stones can break my bones, but words will never hurt me.” Who were we kidding? Not our parents, who knew just how much words could hurt us. It probably pained my parents to see me trying to hide just how much the taunting and teasing wounded me.

To this day, I remember the boy I had a crush on in junior high telling one of my friends I was nice, but a little weird. It stings just to write about it. There’s a part of me that wants to see him again–fifty years later– and prove to him I’m not so weird. However, I think the pain would come flooding back and I’d wonder if I did prove such a thing, or if I just verified what he already believed to be true.

Fortunately, the flip side is true as well. I still remember a friend telling me she knew she could trust me to keep a secret, and I “got it” when it came to the need for privacy. That resonated with me for a couple of reasons. One, I prided myself on my ability to keep quiet when someone confided in me, and I was glad to be known for that trait. Two, there was someone else who understood that private matters are just that–private. That wasn’t something that was particularly respected in my family growing up, and it was difficult dealing with what I saw as betrayal when someone broke a confidence.

Words are symbols. They represent things in our life that we each interpret differently. I doubt that eighth-grade love interest of mine had any idea how much he could hurt me by calling me “weird.” It maybe didn’t have nearly the same negative connotation to him that it had to me. “Weird” can have many meanings, although overall it generally is a negative thing to call someone.

Of course, “geek” was not a nice thing to call someone back when I was in school. Things change. With the proliferation of computers and gadgets these days, calling someone a geek might be a term of affection.

The times may change the meaning of some words, but their overall power never changes. I know I’ve hurt some people with the words I’ve used, and my deepest apologies go out to them. Hopefully I’m more careful these days.

Image Credits: Words © MarekPhotoDesign–stock.adobe.com; Girl being shamed © Biscotto Design–stock.adobe.com; Girl being accepted © Biscotto Design–stock.adobe.com

Trust, but Protect Yourself

Years ago, twenty years ago, in fact, I had a boss who consistently lied to and manipulated his employees. I was told about this facet of his personality early on, but didn’t initially fully comprehend just how bad a problem it was.

Little by little, I started to figure it out. It all peaked when he called me and another employee into his office because of the dissension between us. We sat next to each other, arms folded in defiance, listening to our boss try to negotiate some peace.

Suddenly, it became clear to me what was going on. He had lied to me right and left about things she allegedly was saying about me. Glancing over, I could see the same revelation had struck her. We both listened to him ramble on until he dismissed us, and left the office in silence.

The damage had been done, however. We never to spoke to each other again, although other employees told me she no longer was mad at me.

It taught me a great lesson about trust. I always believed you trust someone until they give you reason not to, and to a certain extent, I follow that belief today. Now, however, I listen to what others have to say about an individual.

Maya Angelou said, “If someone shows you who they are, believe them.” I extend that to, “If someone shows who they are to a group of people who have proven they are trustworthy, believe that group of people.” It may sound cynical, but it’s not really. It’s simply paying attention to the clues.

I’ve always been a trusting person, and that trust has led to a fear of authority figures. I trust them, therefore they must be right. If they tell me I’m wrong, I believe them. At least I used to.

But the flip side of that is true for me, also.. I had a manager once who was gruff and abrupt. Her tone sounded like she was rolling her eyes, even if she wasn’t actually doing so. I mentioned this to a co-worker, and said I didn’t know if I could work for someone as difficult as this person appeared to be. That colleague assured me our manager was really a kind person, she just had a rough exterior. I believed her, and ended up working for this manager for four years.

Trust is a difficult thing. I was brought up in a household were you couldn’t trust what others were saying. My mom, in particular, violated my trust on a regular basis, to a point that when I was a teenager, I spoke to her as little as possible. Today, I still don’t confide in her.

I think my feelings about trust today can be summed up in what I learned in journalism school–trust, but verify. I modify that a bit to say trust, but protect yourself. I still generally trust others until I have reason not to, but I listen to what others have to say, too.

It’s a protective measure, and perhaps I have a shell around me because of it. I’m a bit of a turtle. But it’s the way I have to live. I’ve been hurt too many times to live any other way.

Image Credits: Turtle © ssstocker-stock.adobe.com; Trust (blocks) © thodonai–stock.adobe.com; Light bulb © Nikolai Titov–stock.adobe.com; Rolling eyes © Oleksandr Pokusai

Walter Wants Something…

…but what, I don’t know. I can’t resist that face, though, so I put my camera down, picked him up and gave him a big ol’ hug. Hopefully that was satisfactory.

Image Credits: Paws in Heart © Bigstock Photos; Cesar Cat © Belinda O; Cat Poster © a7880ss-stock.adobe.com

It’s National Banana Bread Day!

Or, as it would be celebrated in my house, national banana nut bread day. I must confess, more than once this month I’ve given in and bought a banana nut muffin from the cafeteria downstairs in my building. They’re expensive as far as muffins go, but as an occasional treat, so worth it.

I haven’t made banana bread in a very long time. For one thing, my bread pan went missing after my last move. Also, I have a hard time waiting for the bananas to ripen. That’s just as well. I don’t need a whole loaf of the stuff sitting around my kitchen, waiting to be eaten.

It may be a little late to plan to make banana bread today, but if you love it half as much as I do, put it on your to-do list for the near future.

Image Credits: Banana Bread © chas53–stock.adobe.com; Ripe Bananas © Marijana–stock.adobe.com

Broken Laws

If you’ve ever lived in an apartment, you’ve gotten mail for previous residents. Some people leave without forwarding addresses, and some mail comes after the forwarding has expired. When I first moved into my apartment, I got a ton of it.

The problem is, you can’t just throw it away. It’s a federal offense to do so. A felony. And in case you think they never prosecute, according to some attorneys, they actually have on occasion, when, say, it’s a summons that’s ended up in the trash. Now, I don’t know if anyone has spent the maximum time in a federal prison (five years), but that’s not a place you want to spend any time in.

I did some research on other laws you might be breaking without knowing it, but I won’t bore you with them since most of them you won’t be breaking if you have any common sense. But I was shocked today when, after mentioning the “wrong mail” law to some of my colleagues, they launched into a conversation about laws they’ve broken while being fully aware of what they were doing. Not just talking, but bragging. I left the area. I didn’t want to hear it.

Okay, the statute of limitations probably applies to most, if not all, of what they’ve done, but really.

Which brings me to this point: don’t talk in public about things you don’t want posted on social media. When I got home tonight, I was scrolling through my Facebook feed, and saw that one of these braggarts had, in some detail, listed one man’s, shall we say, youthful indiscretions. Okay, she didn’t name names, and I didn’t know who she was talking about. I’d done my best to forget what I heard, and frankly, I don’t know most of the people involved, but goodness.

We live in an era where anything you say or do could be reported, or worse, recorded, and there’s not much we can do about it. Some of that works in our favor. A friend of mine accidentally left her wallet at the checkout in the grocery store, and when she went back to get it just minutes later, it was gone. She called the police immediately, and discovered that not only did the store security cameras identify the person who took it, but a middle school-age kid taking random videos (he was bored) caught the thief in the act. His mom had called the police to turn over the video.

The world is moving so fast that I can’t keep up with it. The mail law I described above I’ve known about for years, but I don’t know if there even are any governing social media specifically. I know the industry has taken steps to self-regulate, and my guess that is in part because they don’t want government stepping in and telling them what they can and cannot do.

That was the motivation behind the Hays Code of the 1930s, which regulated what you could and could not say or do in moviemaking. It, in part, led to the Golden Age of Hollywood, when, in my opinion and that of many others–including some top filmmakers of today–some of the greatest films of the 20th Century were made.

Self-regulation is a good thing, if not always reliable. Take Twitter, for example. It self-regulated, then was sold to a man who doesn’t seem to think the rules apply to him. Frankly, a lot of social media is too big to regulate. I don’t follow Tik Tok, but I know it’s huge. Probably beyond regulating fairly, to be honest.

Be careful in today’s world, and do what you can to be fair. That’s the best we can do in some situations.

Image Credits: Mailbox © cherylvb–stock.adobe.com; Video Camera © luliia–stock.adobe.com; Scales of Justice © Sikov–stock.adobe.com; Movie Making © Jag_cz–stock.adobe.com