Ads


Elizabeth Scalia

view all featured authors »

Something Greater Than Yourself

When my husband and I picked up our son—let’s call him Buster—from the train station this past weekend, he threw his gear into the car and proclaimed a state of near-starvation. We invited him to put off eating and join us at an Eagle Scout Court of Honor for a young man named Danny.

Six years earlier, Buster had returned from a week at scout camp telling us about “this cute little kid, Danny, who just joined a few months ago—he’s shy but you can tell how badly he wants to be part of it.” Three years after that, Danny had been an impressive all-day worker at Buster’s Eagle Project, where Buster called him “exceptional,” and predicted that Danny, too, would reach Eagle. So, it was unsurprising that Buster willingly delayed dinner for this “brother scout.”

Danny, with 52 merit badges on his sash and a scouting resume that truly was exceptional, even for an Eagle, began his prepared remarks by saying, “I didn’t know he would be here today, but that just makes this speech all the better, because I am going to begin by telling you that one of the biggest reasons I stand before you tonight as an Eagle is because of Buster.”


On the last night of camp, Buster and Mick did a great Blues Brothers routine with black suits and fedoras and when it was over, Buster gave me his sunglasses. It sounds silly, but that meant so much to me; it meant that someone I really admired thought I totally belonged where he was. I’ve brought those cheap sunglasses back to camp with me, every year since; they’ve reminded me of who and what I wanted to become—the guy who makes everyone else feel welcome and at ease, and is kind to the kids who hang back.

He went on to tell of a night last summer when he was feeling out of sorts and went back early to his tent.


And as I sat there, I could hear the kids at the campfire, singing all the songs I’d taught them; they were the same songs Buster had taught me, and it was amazing to think about the influence that we have on people’s lives, how simply things are passed along, and how unusual it is to actually get to see your influence on others.”

Over supper, Buster admitted feeling humbled by the speech, and also a bit awestruck. “When I handed Danny those sunglasses, I had no idea it would mean so much to him. We don’t realize how sometimes the smallest things we do can have such a huge impact on someone else.”

The following day, came news of the sudden passing of an assistant scoutmaster and friend. A genial man, he had participated in scouting for his stepson but his authority was never invested with ego, and that gave him a light touch with the kids, who uniformly liked and respected him. I recalled a pancake breakfast where he held steady at the griddle, content to stir and serve. “Let others be the central commanders,” he joked while keeping up a steady stream of encouraging banter to the worn-out waiters.

He left scouting sometime after his son made Eagle, but when our elder son asked him to come out of retirement to emcee his Court of Honor, this scoutmaster couldn’t say no. He put himself at the service of anyone who asked for help, even when illness began to make each day a challenge. We had last seen him a year ago, at a fund-raiser honoring another scoutmaster. Though much thinner, he still carried himself lightly, still exuded warmth and good humor, still rose to honor someone else, and to serve when asked, by saying “a few words.”

At his wake, the rooms were overflowing with scoutmasters and their wives, and with the scouts who kept coming, and coming; young men who had long-since left behind their sashes and medals and the external trappings of the Boy Scouts, but who carried within them the values they had learned and internalized though the influence of this man, who would be surprised to hear that his small jokes and warm demeanor had modeled another side of manhood for so many. Our elder son was not the only scout to travel from out-of-state—in torrential rains—to pay his respects for an hour or so, and to tell a grieving wife and son, “Yes, he mattered. His life mattered to me.”

As his family endures their graveside goodbye this morning, perhaps those words will be the consoling epitaph that upholds them when the world begins to spin: He mattered. His life mattered to me. To many.

That, after all, is what our human hearts long for: to know that we were seen by someone, and that we mattered. Too often we equate that sort of affirmation with fame, and perhaps that is why our culture is so loaded down with vulgar reality shows and mediocre contests; people want to know they have been noticed and, if not loved, at least looked at. Becoming famous for being famous carries with it an illusion of having an impact, of “making a difference.”

But if the self-serving, banal fame of the Snookies and the Kardashians, whose names are distressingly to the forefront of our awareness for no discernable reason, matters, it may be in measures more cautionary than lasting. Their influence cannot—should not—have a deeper influence on the world than the example of one ordinary, not-famous man flipping his 400th pancake while reassuring a young scout who has spilled maple syrup all over himself, or one ordinary, not-famous 15 year-old handing a pair of cheap sunglasses to a shy kid who wants to belong.

Elizabeth Scalia is the Managing Editor of the Catholic Portal at Patheos and blogs as The Anchoress. Her previous articles for "On the Square" can be found here.

Comments:

3.8.2011 | 8:59am
DeLynn says:
Beautifully written, Elizabeth. Our world would be a better place and we would be more content if we could all understand the truth of your words today. I love this: "He mattered. His life mattered to me. To many." Thanks for writing this--and I loved reading about your boys again. :) Our eldest is an Eagle...and hope the youngest will be, too.
3.8.2011 | 9:27am
I'm sending the link to members, advisors & families of our son's Boy Scout Troop - beautifully written Anchoress! Thanks so much for the soul-stirring reflection.
3.8.2011 | 11:01am
Tim Murphy says:
Beautiful, Ms. Scalia. One of your best. In our family Eagle rank has passed from uncle to nephew for four generations, starting in the Twenties, and I've spoken at two nephews' Eagle Courts of Honor in the last four years. I worked on the staff at Camp Wilderness for five years in the dreadful Sixties, and while there is a touching simplicity to the Scout Law, it is a great code to live by, embraced by millions of boys.

Tim Murphy
3.8.2011 | 11:06am
Nerina says:
Heart-achingly beautiful piece of writing. I've just sent this link to all of my two sons' Scout leaders and to the troop members. Thank you, Elizabeth, for your continued support of Scouts and for reminding us what really matters.
3.8.2011 | 11:45am
Daniel says:
This website is called First Things........and this post lives up to the name.

If you combined the philosophy of the late, great Victor Frankl with the literature of Dostoevsky's, "Alyosha's Speech by the Stone".......you get something like this article.

High praise indeed for Elizabeth Scalia.
3.8.2011 | 11:47am
Vader says:
I refuse to recognize Snookie's and the Kardashian's claims on my attention. Miley Virus for that matter.

I can't quite feel that way about Lindsay Lohan. She was talented and cute in the remake of The Parent Trap. Watching her disintegrate has been genuinely painful.

It's difficult to imagine her father flipping 400 pancakes. Too bad thre wasn't someone else to step into the role when she needed it.
3.8.2011 | 12:44pm
Ferrygull says:
My youngest is passing from Cub Scouts to Boy Scouts officially this Saturday at his pack's Blue and Gold Dinner. He had his first meeting last night with the Troop he will be joining. It is a beautiful thing, in what is often a very dark world, to see this group of boys trying, failing, succeeding in their endeavors, and helping each other (and their community) along the way. It is worth every inconvenience, every penny, every soaking wet sleeping bag. Thank you for the article.
3.8.2011 | 8:02pm
Sally Thomas says:
Elizabeth, what a beautiful tribute to the imprint one child can leave on another's life. My boys are both Scouts; at this moment, they're both off at my younger son's Cubs meeting, where my bookish, goofy teenager is serving as a Den Chief. The 8-year-old is learning the virtues of self-control and self-giving, while the 13-year-old is having reinforced to him that it is good to be older and to have responsibility and to have younger people watching what you do.

I have nothing but admiration and love for the Scout leaders in our little parish, who sacrifice so much of themselves and their time for the formation of our children. They're right up there with our priest in offering, constantly, an example of self-giving, and of quietly heroic manhood. And when I see the boys take care of each other -- as in the "alpha" boys of the Scout troop nurturing the sensitive boy who's homesick at camp -- I see that those examples hit home in exactly the way they're supposed to.
3.10.2011 | 8:49pm
Ismene says:
What a lovely, uplifting piece. Thank you.
3.17.2011 | 4:18pm
Pete Siegel says:
You never know the effect a small act of kindness will have. Alvin Townley's books Legacy of Honor: The Values and Influences of America's Eagle Scouits and Spirit of Adventure: Eagle Scouts and the Making of America's Future contain more stories like this one.
3.17.2011 | 11:24pm
Mike Clinch says:
My son got bullied by a much bigger kid in our church, but didn't fight back often. The bullying ended on a Scout Sunday, when the bully arrived in a Webelos uniform, and my son arrived in a Boy Scout uniform, a First Class rank patch on his chest and eight merit badges on his sash. The bully finally caught on that he was teasing an older boy, and also realized WHY my son didn't fight back, because of the values of the Scout Oath and Law. After hearing tales of our troop, the bully said that our troop sounded a lot better than the one which was recruiting him. My son invited the bully to visit our troop. He did, and brough along his entire Webelos den to join our troop. I was never prouder of my son than on that Scout Sunday

Three years later, this young man put in more hours on my son's Eagle project than any other Scout. Three years after that, I got to sit in on this young man's Eagle Board of Review. I asked my trick question - if you had more than a single mentor's pin, who would you give them to, and why. The young man listed several troop leaders, teachers and coaches, and then asked if a youth could receive one. I said "Yes", and he replied "Then your son definitely deserves one."

They have worked together on summer camp staff for four years now, and are best of friends.
3.18.2011 | 4:11pm
EMK says:
Mr. Clinch, that is a great story!
4.7.2011 | 5:45pm
Vinsel Diet says:
I have nothing but admiration and love for the Scout leaders in our little parish, who sacrifice so much of themselves and their time for the formation of our children. They're right up there with our priest in offering, constantly, an example of self-giving, and of quietly heroic manhood. And when I see the boys take care of each other -- as in the "alpha" boys of the Scout troop nurturing the sensitive boy who's homesick at camp -- I see that those examples hit home in exactly the way they're supposed to. Elizabeth, what a beautiful tribute to the imprint one child can leave on another's life. My boys are both Scouts; at this moment, they're both off at my younger son's Cubs meeting, where my bookish, goofy teenager is serving as a Den Chief. The 8-year-old is learning the virtues of self-control and self-giving, while the 13-year-old is having reinforced to him that it is good to be older and to have responsibility and to have younger people watching what you do.
type the text above in the box below

Links

Blogs

Find Us

Contact