wisdom

Changing From Boy to Man

One afternoon, at the church library, a friend and I got into a conversation about what makes a man. Not so much the biology—what makes male different from female—as about what makes man different from boy.

Was it as simple as age? Or as superficial as appearance? Or did it come down to how many attributes he fulfilled as defined by Art of Manliness? Who's to say what the standard is, anyway—are you looking to judge this according to the holy book, or by the stick of our society and culture? (And God knows the latter has given us everything—from toxic hyper-masculinity to passive emasculation—but the answer.)

At one point we rattled off a bunch of people we knew. Look at this guy, he said. He has a steady job, a wife and two kids. He takes good care of his body and fixes things around the house. Agreed—he's a man. This other guy...he's living at home with his parents, struggling to make ends meet. He hasn't figured out a direction for his life. He calls him a boy.

Words From My Father

Do not forsake the wisdom of your elders. 

Older people, your parents especially, have many years of experience and insight to bring to the table. And if they love you, you will hear the truth. Because they aren't afraid to tell you like it really is. 

In these moments, be ready to receive it. Do not harden yourself to their words, because only foolish people spurn wisdom. And you don't want to be a fool.

I say this because I had a decision to make this morning. Would I carry this hurt, or would I learn to let it go? Last night my mom brought something up from the past, something I didn't think was a big deal. Something I had already apologized for. And it hurt. Why hasn't she gotten over this? I thought she had forgiven me. And I didn't even think it was my fault to begin with. Poor communication, perhaps. But my intentions weren't wrong.