by Curt Kovener
The 112th senior class at Crothersville High School graduated Sunday and they are to be congratulated for completing the educational milestone. Though decades after passing what I thought was that same milestone, I have concluded was only a bump in the road of life.
The new high school graduates need to understand that they have simply completed the easiest ride of their lives. Now I, like the newest graduates do today, certainly didn’t feel that way nearly four decades ago before my graduation day.
However, with the benefit of some living and education from the school of hard knocks (I am a graduate of HKU.) I find the advice proffered back in that other millennium by those who I thought were over the hill and out of touch now has marvelous wisdom.
The Statler Brothers are right: “Things get complicated when you get past eighteen.”
But even though, throughout the coming complicated times, always remember the Golden Rule: “Treat others the way you want to be treated.” Admittedly, that very simple Scriptural based philosophy is difficult when the alligators seem to be snapping all around you, but in the longer scheme of things, you, your family and your community will be better for it.
Remember, giving someone a piece of your mind will probably only show how thoughtless you really are.
While we live in a world of instant gratification and immediate convenience, always remember that the things of true value and quality take time. Diamonds are merely chunks of coal put under pressure for a long time. Whether it’s your job, your community, your church or your marriage, stay with it for the long haul.
And remember through those tough times—those times when you may consider bailing out—metal gets stronger when it is tempered by fire. The same is true of the human spirit. While the difficult times are never pleasant, seeing them through helps develop character.
When things seem to be at their blackest, remember “Tough times never last, tough people do.”
Grampa used to tell me the story of a farmer who took his potato crop to market. Rather than drive his horse & wagon over the well used, smooth path, this farmer went over the roughest roads on the way into town. “In rough times the big potatoes rise to the top,” he would say. And it is true in more than just the physical farming sense.
But do not become so tough that your heart is callused to the needs and concerns of others. There will always be folks less fortunate than you. Do not turn your head and your heart to them. Consider for a bit what it might be like to walk in their shoes and remember the Golden Rule.
We were put here for a reason and that reason is not to be a bunch of takers and collect as much of life’s “stuff” that we can. Giving of our time and ourselves is much more important. Remember to do what you can to make your family and your community better than how you found it.
“Live simply so others can simply live,” is a good philosophy to govern your life.
Stand up for that which you believe is right. Speak out against injustice. Do not accept at face value that “we do it this way because we’ve always done it this way.” See if you can find a better way.
Keep up with new, emerging technology but do not allow it to force you to sacrifice the simple joys of walks in the woods witnessing nature. Those times are therapeutic breaths of fresh air for the soul to better prepare you to deal with the continually hectic, continually advancing workplace technologies.
I remember a story told by one of the speakers at one of the graduations I have attended over the years. It seems a recent college graduate runs to the top of the campus hill, thrusts his arts diploma toward the sky and shouts proudly, “Look world, I earned my AB degree.” To which the world replies, “Then pay attention, son, and I’ll teach you the rest of the alphabet.”
So seniors, this column may not mean much to you today. But place it in your scrap book or high school annual for future reference. It may gain some wisdom over the next decade or two.
And remember the Golden Rule.