Lessons Learned
I
Didn’t Do It
The
knee-jerk response to most every “shouldn’t have done it” incident is I didn’t
do it. I didn’t do it. I didn’t do it! Regardless of the age of the
spokesperson, two to ninety-two, this response more often than not remains consistently
uttered, for it represents the finest in Teflon outfitting defending one
against all sorts of true or false but always uncomfortable allegations. I can
be watching a student do the very thing he or she has been instructed not to do
and when called on it will almost unequivocally, bordering on the brazenly,
assert, I didn’t do it. Many times a day. This phenomenon is certainly not
exclusive to schools and students, however, for these students have had to be
carefully taught, which they absolutely have been. The I didn’t do it mentality
and societal norm seems as automatic to human nature as bowing for applause. I didn’t do it is usually followed by a bit of
anemic bantering along the lines of yes you did, no I didn’t, yes, no, etc.
where it then fizzles to conversational complacency, a very safe place where it
quietly rests until it is needed again. It never gathers moss nor grows dusty
waiting, though. In complacency it is deemed not a worthy fight, and in
complacency it is perpetuated with increasing shamelessness. But it’s a lie. A big, fat, bold-faced lie. I
am not sure why we are okay with this. Over and over and over again in every
walk of life and living from classrooms to legislative halls, from snarling
interactions with referees, police officers, and parents to defensive exchanges
with neighbors and road rage enthusiasts, we fight to abscond from the responsibility
of simply owning what we do. The reality is, despite what our insecurities may
shout at us, owning our actions, fessing up to our behavior, or begging the
pardon of our screw-ups does not in fact really hurt that much. Mild
embarrassment perhaps. Or maybe a pinch
of shame. But honestly, bearing responsibility
for our good or bad behavior strengthens integrity and is honorable. We all
make mistakes with great regularity for it is in our very nature to push back a
bit against the rules, even the most compliant among us. Own it. Claim it.
Confess it. Apologize for it. Then be free of it. If you refuse to own it, it
will in fact own you, and you will be diminished by it. The automatic I didn’t
do it response is not good enough for
today’s students, or yesterday’s for that matter, because it doesn’t call
students forth to be strong or to be responsible, both of which they will need
to become the leaders they are capable of becoming.
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