The clock in Jeff’s car glows 6:40 P.M. as
he rolls into the driveway after another long and tiring day at work. He
opens the door to his home with a weary sigh and drops the mail next to
the answering machine, which is blinking in that incessant, anxious way
that demands listening. All he wants is a relaxing evening with no bosses,
clients, or coworkers to please.
He peeks into his wife’s home office and greets
her warmly. As they chat about their day, she asks if he’d mind fixing
dinner so she can finish up a few things. “No problem,” he assures her.
Before heading to the kitchen, he pauses to savor a moment’s peace, silently
planning out the next few hours: check the mail, listen to messages, take
a nice hot shower, change into sweats, fix a quick dinner . . .
“Hi, Daddy! Play with me?” Snapped out
of his reverie, Jeff puts on a smile and bends to wrap a hug around the
giggling little angel with the hopeful eyes. He twirls her around in big
circles and plants kisses on her nose. “Hey, my little Lily-flower!” he
croons. He buries his nose in her soft hair, loving the little-child feel
and scent of her. Laughing with glee, Lily cherishes these sparkling moments
in her daddy’s arms; craving more, she implores, “Play with me?”
“Hey, punkin’, I have some things to do; then
we’ll play later.”
“Just a little while, Daddy?” she pleads with
a smile. But looking at his face, she suddenly knows he’d never drop everything
just for some silly play, but she can’t help asking one last time. When
the expected answer comes, she wanders off resignedly to watch the TV show
that’s always on at this time, always on for her when Daddy’s not.
Lily watches her program, all the while counting
the minutes on the clock. Jeff loses himself in the mail, the newspaper,
and the answering machine, looking forward to the completion of all his
daily responsibilities so that he can play with his daughter. After some
time on the computer reading E-mail, he trudges upstairs, loosening his
tie. He can almost feel the steamy warmth of the shower, the comfort of
those old sweats, the . . . wait, what is this?
He turns to find a beaming little girl, who’d
sneaked up the stairs behind him, given away by the soft thumping of her
tiny feet. She musters all the vocal sweetness that she imagines a good
girl to have and asks, “Can we play now, Daddy?” She doesn’t want to bother
him, doesn’t want to pester. She just wants him close to her, laughing
his silly laugh just for her.
What Jeff hears is persistence—a trait he will
someday appreciate in her as an adult, but one that annoys him today. So,
with a ruffle of her hair, he dismisses her with strained patience. “In
a little bit, Lily. Why don’t you go ask Mommy if she can play with you
now?”
Not so easily put off, she is in position at
the bottom of the stairs when he descends some time later. Her little face
is fairly bursting with the effort of holding back her request. She doesn’t
want to annoy him, doesn’t want to be inconvenient, doesn’t want to be
bad—and so, says nothing, hoping he’ll remember his promise to play “later.”
But he doesn’t.
“Ready for some dinner?” he asks, walking quickly
past her in an effort to stave off a few repeats of her “Want to play?”
chorus. He enters the kitchen and begins pulling items from the refrigerator.
Just then, the telephone rings, and little ears listen—as they always do—as
Jeff answers. “Hello? Hey, Steven. How are ya? Great. Did you catch the
game Sunday? I can’t believe he missed that play . . . ” And so he is lost
to her again, this time to adult conversation, phone tucked between ear
and shoulder.
Maybe if I’m just quiet and smile real big,
Lily thinks. So she looks up at him with every fiber of her being poured
into her smile, every good thing in her soul spilling from her eyes. Still
on the phone, her daddy smiles back vacantly and plops a plate down for
his daughter, then disappears into his wife’s office with a plate for her,
too. Lily’s best smile fades as she quietly eats her dinner to the hum
of Daddy’s voice on the phone.
Afterward, of course, the parents are busy.
There’s dinner to be cleaned up, garbage to be taken out, bills to pay
. . . And all the while, Jeff’s little one—who naturally will not be little
forever—patiently and proudly waits beside her latest Lego masterpiece.
She just knows he’ll notice it soon. She knows it’s the marvel of engineering
brilliance sure to draw him into her world. But the doorbell rings, and
Jeff strides right past her to answer. Perhaps after the visitor leaves,
she wonders . . .
It’s Rahul, their neighbor. He needs help getting
his lawn tractor started. “Hate to bother you, Jeff, but you think you
might have a second to look at it?”
“Of course,” Jeff replies, his thoughts registering
the day last week when Rahul was there at 6:00 A.M. to jump start Jeff’s
car. “That’s what good neighbors are for.”
After letting his wife know where he’s bound,
he leans down to plant kisses on his daughter’s soft cheeks. “Be right
back, punkin’,” he says. And he leaves too quickly to notice the silent
tears that begin to run down those same cheeks so hastily kissed, soft
cheeks that are soon buried in pillows. When Jeff returns, she is asleep,
dreaming of moving out and becoming a neighbor who could ring the doorbell,
call Daddy on the phone, and send E-mails to him.
The Hidden Message
“You are not as important to me as the mail,
the messages, the dinner, the phone call or the neighbor. I love you, but
I’m too busy for you—and there’s always later, there’s always tomorrow.”
Think About It
Children perceive time, and what we do with
it, differently from the way adults do. By about age thirty, we adults
barely notice the passing of mere seconds. In the currency of time, they’re
pennies, hardly able to buy anything of value. For little ones, however,
every moment is weighty with possibility and so passes heavily and slowly.
Consider, for instance, the evening we just witnessed—it passed particularly
slowly for the little girl but blew past the man who is her father.
Seconds become minutes, of course, and minutes
become hours. Almost imperceptibly, hours become decades. One day, Jeff
may indeed turn around to play with his little girl, only to find a young
woman too busy tending her own life to notice—after all, she has learned
by his example. What a common tragedy! Ask any parent of grown
children, and he or she invariably will attest to how fast it all goes.
As the popular maxim forewarns: One comment you’ll never hear on a person’s
deathbed is “I wish I’d have put in more overtime.” Instead, we all know
the final plea is for more time with those whose love fills and sustains
us. The hard truth is that we have only a relatively small sliver of time
in which to give our children the gifts of our experience, patience, wisdom,
and heart.
Naturally, obligations intrude on our every
day. We perceive these obligations from an adult point of view, sorting
through them, prioritizing as we go. We give a potential interruption to
our mental calendars a quick once-over and make a snap decision: adjust
the plan, or stick to it? But however we triage the callings in our lives,
time marches on. The work gets done. The meals get prepared. The house
gets cleaned. Things work out. Of necessity, we allot time for the chores
that keep us fed, clothed, clean; these things push themselves into our
plans by their very nature. Other items seize our attention with their
urgency—a flashing message machine, a ringing phone, a buzzing doorbell.
Certain activities, however, don’t call to us so loudly. Yet, these can
have an impact more profound than all the others combined: activities such
as walking in a park, visiting relatives, tossing a baseball with a child…or
building a Lego city. These are the things that build up a soul.
What would happen if, today, all parents made
their children their top priority? Nowadays, we so often complain about
teenagers and their lack of respect for adults, and we worry about the
anger and lack of direction that seems to plague them to the point of violence;
yet. I meet many parents who tell me that their teenagers are wonderful
young people, and that they enjoy them now, just as they always have. Therein
lies an important lesson: We need to begin, right now, at this very moment,
to see each second as a gift, as an opportunity to savor where we all are
now— whether we do this by playing, chatting, or simply being together
with our children. In so doing, we may weave a lifeline that just may continue
to hold throughout the years. When that Lego city gets built, so does the
foundation to a future. And a minute of time for a child will someday be
worth its equivalent in hours to the adult she becomes. The time we spend
with our children now—nurturing, teaching and loving them—is the substance
that helps mold them into the people that they will become.
Changes You Can Make
Review the priorities in your life, make a list
of your top five, and begin investing the bulk of your time and energy
in those choices. If you are a parent, your list—of course—should include
your children. Keep your list of five handy, and refer to it whenever a
decision arises. Ask yourself, “Does what I am doing, or about to do, fit
into my list of priorities?”
Unlike much advice, this way of living is not
“easier said than done.” On the contrary, it’s “easier done than said”!
You’ll find that it doesn’t take hours to fill a child’s need for attention.
Sometimes fifteen minutes will fill your child’s
cup—and then allow you to tend to your daily rituals without that nagging
sense of guilt, or that feeling that something important is missing. In
this story of Jeff and Lily, if he had dropped everything upon his arrival
home and given Lily thirty minutes of undivided attention, he may have
satisfied her need for his love. She might then have been happy to scamper
off and allow him to get to his business, or perhaps trailed along with
him letting their connection linger throughout the evening.
Of course, some daily tasks must be done regardless
of their placement of your list. The laundry would definitely not be in
my top five, but it still needs to be done! However, having your list will
ensure that these “maintenance’’ tasks are done with the proper
acknowledgement of their importance. This means that I may decide that
a game of Monopoly with my children now is worth postponing the laundry
until after they’ve gone to bed.
As for those must-do tasks, some can be undertaken
with a child included as helper or simply as
company—a three-year-old can sit beside you
with her plastic kitchen set “preparing” her own dinner, as you prepare
dinner for the family; a five-year-old can sort socks or fold hand towels
as you fold the other laundry; a seven-year-old can accompany you on your
round of errands. In each case, you will most likely enjoy the time talking
together.
When you decide that your family and your children
are your priority, and that you want, and need, to spend more time with
them, your daily decisions will become easier. You may even begin to ascertain
that some goals you had rated as “top priority” are supremely unimportant.
And as a natural and direct effect, these will fall away, leaving you with
two undeniable gains: a heightened and refined sense of values, and the
freedom to pursue them.