STEVE SMITH -- What’s up
- Share via
A day after the terrorist attack in New York, I went to a nearby
Starbucks to satisfy my craving for a caramel frappucino. It’s a big,
gooey drink that is topped with whipped cream and caramel sauce.
As I got out of the car in my driveway, I knocked the full drink
against the door and spilled it all over my pants and shoes. For only a
moment, I ran silently through the special vocabulary I use for such
times. But just as quickly, I stopped.
At that moment, I remembered the victims of the terrorist attack in
New York and the brave firefighters, police officers and assorted rescue
workers who are still sifting through the rubble and will be for many
months.
“What in the world,” I thought, “do I have to be upset about?”
I grabbed a garden hose, quickly sprayed the driveway clean and went
inside the house. My nice pair of shoes was ruined but I didn’t care.
Last Sunday, Daily Pilot sports editor Roger Carlson covered local
high school football on the front page of the sports section not with
box scores and highlights but with these important opening remarks:
“There’s a gnawing sense that in times like these there are not very
many important things that one does over the course of a day, that most
everything on the regular schedule is pretty trivial.”
Carlson is correct. Of course, there are times when it’s easy to
forget just how good we have it, but over the long haul, this perspective
would serve us all well.
My wife Cay and I shared this sentiment with friends Joe Norris and
Rosie Tomasek one week ago. Standing on the sidelines of a soccer game at
TeWinkle School, we agreed that the attitude adjustment has been a good
development.
Rosie and her husband, Ed, have just completed a yearlong experiment
in which Rosie went to a 9-5 job and Ed played Mr. Mom. I am pleased to
report that these two daring people have found domestic success beyond of
what they could have imagined last summer. Ed is now back to work at a
job that gives him much more family time and Rosie is an at-home mom. “We
can have coffee together in the morning,” said Rosie. Here’s a shining
example of two people who didn’t need a terrorist attack to realign their
priorities.
My brother, Michael, who lives just across the East River from where
the World Trade Center towers stood, told me that even in New York there
has been an attitude adjustment.
“People seem to be a lot more patient,” Michael said. “You don’t even
hear a lot of horns honking.” This in a city where a bad attitude was a
badge of honor.
Not far from Michael, politicians in Washington were all on one side
of the aisle as they authorized the president to take action against the
terrorists responsible for the attack. The new attitude was on Capitol
Hill, too.
“There are certain things in our lives that have become unimportant
that were so important before,” said James Thurber, director of American
University’s Center for Congressional and Presidential Studies. “It’s
almost embarrassing to be overly partisan at a time like this.”
If we take away any lessons from the disaster in New York, besides the
obvious need for more security, it should be Carlson’s reminder that most
of what we do each day is “pretty trivial.” That’s not to say that it’s
time for all of us to join a convent or sell all our possessions and live
in caves. What it means is that when things don’t go our way, we should
temper our reactions accordingly.
OK, so the job center frustrates Chris Steel. OK, so the development
of Fairview Park hasn’t moved along as quickly as perhaps Libby Cowan
would like. OK, so the fate of the El Toro airport is still a question
mark.
These matters will eventually get resolved but not to everyone’s
satisfaction. The most important thing is the process and that we
remember to treat each other decently and honestly during our debates and
never forget the fact that we live in a society where we are free to
express our thoughts without fear of government reprisal.
The terrorist attack in New York has brought tremendous grief even to
our community, 3,000 miles away. But it has also brought a great gift: an
opportunity to correct the course of each life and to adjust our
priorities so that we understand, as Carlson does, as the Tomaseks do, as
the Washington politicians do and even as New Yorkers themselves do, that
when we are told our lives will never be the same, we have the power to
make that a good thing.
That attitude can even overcome a ruined pair of shoes.
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and freelance writer. Readers
may leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at (949) 642-6086.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.