Teaching Up The Tree
Last spring, a friend asked for my advice.
He felt his elders were making mistakes and wanted to get through to them.
I drew a blank on his question and have been considering it for some time!
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I saw two components...
a desire to help others
an opinion that someone else is wrong
For the first component, I asked myself, "What is the most powerful form of teaching that I can bring to my family?"
If I'm looking to maximize my impact then nothing beats sharing stories about how I repeated one of my family's most common mistakes.
So... I pay attention to what needs fixing in the elders, notice when it needs fixing in myself and share a funny story about my error with my kids.
My kids love hearing about my mistakes.
Adults hearing about their own mistakes?
Less so.
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The second component of my friend's desire to teach...
I asked myself, "Am I sure?"
Am I sure that my way is correct?
Are there circumstances that would make my way incorrect?
My buddy and I were discussing long-term financial security. At the time, we were 100% certain that "our way" was the right way. I agreed that his elders were mismanaging their affairs.
As fate would have it, a few months later I heard a story about a pensioner.
An elderly woman had most of her life savings sitting in a local credit union (earning 0.1% per annum). Instead of telling her that she had to change, her family initiated a discussion to understand why that decision made sense to their mother.
It turns out the lady had thought through her rationale in detail. Her strategy recognized a personal lack of knowledge, a lack of trust in financial advisors, fear of loss and zero personal upside from positive investment returns.
Sometimes it is my lack of understanding that needs to change.