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Story Asia
hosted by www.howtotellagreatstory.com
(This piece is reproduce with permission from the author.)
My name is Neill Neill-What You See Is What You Get
This is a very personal article. It is one
person's story of how thinking beyond himself and taking
visible local action in the present became a
life-guiding principle. It's about responsibility and
occasional courage.
On the Saturday morning of April 20 when I was
16 years old, my mother set off to drive to work. It was
an easy drive of 11 miles from the little town of
Elmira, Ontario. There was a bit of fresh spring snow on
the road.
In less than 10 minutes from the time my mother
left, my uncle Jim arrived at the door to say "Doreen is
gone." She had been killed in a car accident.
I was the oldest of four boys who were not
strangers to such tragedy and the grieving that follows.
Seven or eight years earlier our father had been killed
in a plane crash. I remember later that morning one of
my brothers looking to me and saying, "We're orphans."
As events were pieced together through various eyewitnesses, the
following is what appears to have happened.
While still in town my mother's 1949 Studebaker
Starlight Coupe skidded on the wet snow on the straight
and level street which led out of town. She was driving
very slowly, perhaps 15 or 20 mph, so she fairly quickly
came to a stop sideways in the middle of the road. There
had been no traffic. But before she could drive ahead
and continue on her journey, another car sped down the
middle of the road into town and T-boned her car. She
died instantly; she was 41.
There was to be a court case: the other driver
versus my mother's tiny estate. I went with my uncle
around to the local farms and businesses to interview
all the witnesses to the accident. Each told his part of
the story. Together they wove a coherent picture of what
had happened. Mother's car skidded and came to a stop
for a few seconds. The other car sped into town at about
70 mph in a 30 mph zone. There were reports that the
other driver had been drinking.
But every single one of the eyewitnesses ended
his story with, "But I don't want to get involved." That
statement still rings through my mind. Since not a
single witness would stand up, the driver of the other
car succeeded in convincing the court that my mother had
pulled out to pass someone and had hit his car. He won
his lawsuit, leaving us very little.
When my 16-year-old mind was able to comprehend
the enormity of the injustice, I made up my mind that if
I ever witnessed an accident I would stand up and tell
what I saw. My decision soon expanded to my refusing to
walk away from an injustice. My own convenience and
occasionally my safety would have to be secondary.
I have lost track of the number of times I have
offered a blanket and myself as a witness to strangers
who have been in an accident or suffered an injustice. I
have stood up in court a few times, once for nine hours
at a coroner's inquest.
I have learned a lot from the trauma of my
mother's death and the further injustice that followed,
as well as from my decision and subsequent testimony.
Living a meaningful life involves a willingness to stand
up and be very visible and very present. Sometimes doing
what's right takes courage. For me, authentic living
became an exercise in self-exposure. I have no regrets.
The good life is not about hiding or avoiding or
trying to be invisible. Living an authentic life cannot
be an act. It is a state of being from which may flow a
lot of action, some of it uncomfortable. Life is about
being real, and a real person is not one person at home
and another at work, another in the lineup at the Post
Office and yet another in court. A real person is "out
there," so "what you see is what you get."
Copyright © Neill Neill. All rights reserved.
Dr. Neill Neill, Registered Psychologist, maintains an
active
psychology and life-coaching practice on
Vancouver Island, BC, Canada. He is a member of the
treatment team at
Sunshine Coast Health Centre, an alcohol and
drug rehab center for men. His goal is to help you to
help yourself to a better life. Visit
http://www.neillneill.com for other articles
and commentary on practical psychology, including
positive psychology.
235 Crescent Road West, Qualicum Beach, BC V9K 1J9, CANADA