essaysbysean.blogspot.com
So what’s wrong with a little
patronizing between friends?
Folks not my friends would say patronizing is wrong indeed. Recently I
came across the “p-word” while reading Confessions
of a Public Speaker by one of my favorite essayist-public speakers, Scott
Berkun.
Berkun noted that when Dale
Carnegie, back during the Great Depression, published his patronizing classic How to Win Friends and Influence People,
the critics complained. They said the book wasn’t new: It was full of very old
clichés and advice. As for Carnegie, he was confident his book deserved to be a
best-seller: He was exploring the concepts of his book with the businessmen he was teaching at his night class in public
speaking —even though yes, the old “patronizing” advice
dated back to classical times. Once, the story goes, after freely choosing to
address a hostile crowd of publishers, editors and advertising men, Carnegie
“dodged the bullet” with his audience by being honest, saying to the critics
“…Of course I deal with the obvious…—because the obvious is what people need to
be told.” And he humbly admitted he was quoting the words of great men. He
received a loud round of applause. (P. 138 of Scott Berkun’s Confessions of a Public Speaker)
It was honest Berkun who used the
term “patronizing.” Berkun said his work in public speaking often involves
telling people things they already know, or once knew and have forgotten.
Berkun wrote that he dared not disclose this to his audience because it would,
in his words, “be patronizing.” (P. 138) In fairness, he added, “Yet I know old
ideas said well enough have surprising power in a world where everyone obsesses
about what’s new.”
Judging by Carnegie’s critics,
Berkun would be correct to avoid disclosing the truth, but I just don’t know.
Maybe it’s a matter of degree. I guess Berkun can judge fellows from the big
city: he is from New York himself. In contrast, I am from the Alberta prairie,
a dry fertile land, where everybody I know buys their sweet corn from the fields
around the town of Taber: You may call me corny for saying this, but I do live in the corn belt and what I say
is: Verily, I don’t mind being patronized. And I don’t think my neighbors do
either. I’m still chuckling over the time a young man from the faculty of
agriculture came by and offered to give some knowledge to an old farmer. The
farmer smiled and said kindly, “I already know twice as much about farming as
I’m now putting into practice.”
Maybe we acquire a healthy sense of
humor about “being patronized” as we age. I’ve noticed how groups of smiling
satisfied seniors, when getting onto the Light Rail Transit (A bus-like train
within city limits) don’t hesitate to point out to each other where to
sit—something groups of uptight teens never do.
Like Berkun and Carnegie, I know a
lot about public speaking: I’m a member of Toastmasters International. This is a
worldwide organization of weekly clubs, based in (where else?) California, for
learning “public speaking and leadership.” My club meets at the back of UnityChurch every week—Here in the Bible belt we have many churches. Believing in
Toastmasters, I encourage folks to go be a guest at any club by telling them,
to their amusement, that a Toastmasters meeting is almost as much fun as an
evening at home watching Star Trek, “but of course you can’t watch Star Trek every night.”
At my club, remembering Berkun’s avoidance
of the p-word, how much responsibility should I take for my friends at
Toastmasters being uncomfortable with “being patronized” by me? My answer is:
None. They are adults, and they can handle their own discomfort. I stand before
them not pure and homogenized, but as a man with a level of cream. At one
level, I know they know that I know how they know … A sense of humor helps. And
it helps, as Dale Carnegie would approve, to mind the don’ts: I don’t do
self-righteous, don’t blame, don’t get angry with them, and I don’t purely
think they have never known what I am telling them.
So much for the don’ts. As for the
do’s, Carnegie would say the way to have a friend is to be a friend. So as I am
“speaking the facts,” and reminding people of the obvious, I am also,
at one level, admitting that I’m forgetful too—and all too human. “Admitting
stuff” is what friends do. At another level I semi-consciously project that I
like my audience, my fellow mid-westerners. When I do a speech for my
club-members, I “have something to say” which I think is important for them...
and for me too, because “you learn best by teaching” and, I admit, that’s the
way I remember best too. And of
course, regardless of whether I’m being paid, at a visible level I enjoy being
there. As I see it, public speaking is classed with the performing arts, where
customers never want to feel you are merely “working.” At the risk of
patronizing, my advice is: Speak with joy, because grimly going through the
motions is only good for the drafted minions of Darth Vader—or for your day
job.
I believe all of us are forgetful.
Every year the “check out counter” magazines run features on things like home
fire safety, setting goals, nutrition, budgeting and how colors can be
coordinated for better homes and clothing. Maybe I was once a
“fashion challenged nerd,” but I would hope by now I finally know the common advice in magazines,
or at least I know “twice as much as I’m putting into practice” but still, it’s
nice to regularly see these magazine features in print because I realize there are new
babies being born everyday who don’t know. Besides, judging by our actions, we
forget… Sometimes I wonder: Will I ever, once and for all, learn to exercise a
little more and procrastinate much less? Until I do, there will always be room
for more features about such things—And ones on clutter, too.
Being young at heart, although in
late middle age, I still like to innocently hope that maybe one day I’ll become
wise. Maybe.
Wisdom for me, like courage, seems
especially scarce at 3:00 a.m., the hour of the wolf, “when all I can do is lie
awake thinking about how my life could have gone but didn’t—and then pour a
glass of whiskey, to keep the wolf on the other side of the door…”
Unlike wolves and nature, people
are complex. Even a lifetime is not enough to plumb the depths of their conflicted
motivations and flaws. By comparison, it’s super-easy to learn straightforward
disciplines like mathematics or psychology. Let’s face it: There will always be
a place for literature and classic stage plays. We will re-read the old
classics, and re-experience the same plays, because of the lessons: so hard to
retain and so easy to forget. Maybe some modern critics, maybe to avoid feeling
patronized, will say the latest play has new improved props and lighting, or a
new interpretation by a new director. Ah, vanity. Under the sun, vanity is as
old as the river Jordan.
As for me, nobody needs to “avoid
patronizing me” by claiming anything is new. Preach me the old sermons… I need
to sing the carols again.
Sean Crawford
As leaves turn yellow, curl and
drop
Calgary 2013
Footnotes:
~I guess carol means lesson, as in
a preacher reading at a church service saying, “Here ends the second carol.” Hence
the title of a short story by Charles Dickens.
~I liked Confessions of Public Speaker, Scott Berkun, O’Reilly, 2009
~I wrote of Dale Carnegie in my essay Learning to Be Nice, archived May 2013.
~I wrote of Dale Carnegie in my essay Learning to Be Nice, archived May 2013.
~The story of the “hour of the
wolf,” using vodka—and then three more little glasses in case the wolf has
brought her cubs—is a memory of her Russian uncle, related by Susan Ivanova on
the space station Babylon-5, the
first ever “five year novel” on TV, by JM Straczynski.
~You meet the nicest people at
Toastmasters; of course I advise new guests to try out three different clubs
before choosing one to join. My own club includes a single mother, Leanne, who owns
every adventure of the starship Voyager—the
one with Captain Katherine Janeway—and she rations herself to one episode per
night. Leanne’s “my kind of people.”
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