essaysbysean.blogspot.com
I appreciate “liaison,” as in, “making
sure needed information is shared…”
From February 1954 Reader's Digest Word Power, definition: Linking up; a bond or union; unity of action between distant parties, as "a close liaison between allies."
From February 1954 Reader's Digest Word Power, definition: Linking up; a bond or union; unity of action between distant parties, as "a close liaison between allies."
Introduction
The summer after college I kept looking
in on the college career center. One day the secretary offered some spelling advice:
A lot of people were writing on their resume they engaged in liaison—only they
were not spelling liaison properly! On another day she asked me if I would work
for a weekend of stocktaking at a clothing store. It turned out several
students in succession had been given the address… but then each one in
succession hadn’t shown up to apply for the job, and the employer was getting
frustrated, phoning the college to ask, “Where is he?” I was reliable and
non-lazy, so I went on down and made some cash.
It seems to me some folks are lazy
about looking for work, others lazy about spelling and still others, even if it’s
a new business buzzword, are too lazy to “liaison.” I have a keen interest in liaison,
in communication, because for as long as I can remember my family has been
“liaison challenged.” How frustrating—but hey, that’s relatives for you.
At Home
A few years ago my brother Patrick
was in town, staying at a hotel, at the western edge of the city. And early one
morning my brother Jim drove west to Dad’s place, picked up Dad, and proceeded
to west to Pat’s hotel, a block from the ocean, just as the song birds were
starting to awaken. The problem? They hadn’t properly informed Patrick of their
plans, nor communicated with Pat to learn his hotel room number or room
telephone number: They could neither call nor, not knowing the room, knock on
the window, while of course there was no one inside at the front desk that
early… So they left the hotel, without Pat, driving back east and up the Fraser
River for a day’s drive to my sister’s place, at 140 Mile House—not even a
village, just a couple streets. They still hadn’t learned to liaison: If only they
called ahead to my sister at her isolated home then she might have baked a
cake, or at least made sure there was enough coffee and cream in the house. I
don’t know: Did they just fail to think ahead, or were they lazy, or what?
(...Update: Sis tells me she had to go deliver food she had promised four days previously for a big family thingy on the husband's side, and then bow out to go and be with her surprise relatives)
When it was my turn to stay in a nearby
hotel, Dad asked me to drive him to a re-union lunch, for former penitentiary
employees. We had to go to the port city of New Westminster, to a part of the
city where Dad no longer knew the roads: Things had sure changed since the big old
maximum-security prison had been removed. The other streets, surveyed before
the Great War, had followed a nice Roman grid system. Not here. I liked how the
roofs of some of the tall new condos and apartments seemed to follow the staggered
rooflines of “the penn,” or, as we kids called it, “the joint.” Dad and I
fruitlessly drove around seeking for the address before I remembered my
father’s notorious lack of liaison: Abruptly I thought of how I could get my
old man to open up: “Dad, were you told what color this building is?” He had
failed to tell me something important—The restaurant we were looking for was in
fact in a part of the old penitentiary main block: massive and unmistakable! …
And Abroad
I would have hoped my father would
have learned from his young years during the war. All too often he had to watch
helplessly from a hill as the allied air force bombed allied troops on another
hill. My mother’s opinion was that someone always failed to radio that the hill
had been taken, that the news was not passed on. I don’t know.
It was from an earlier world war, I
understand, that the French word liaison
entered the business world. The best way to ensure that “obvious things” were
explained and passed on was to have some one from the French army physically
standing in headquarters. He was called a liaison
officer. This might seen a waste of manpower, but let’s remember the
officers of that war were notorious for not being very bright, while the
consequences of “I thought you knew” were very serious.
In peacetime a failure to cooperate
is less grave. I’m still chuckling at a company of riflemen coming off a night exercise,
filing into a meadow at daybreak where the cook had enough sizzling eggs and
bacon to feed an army… and then walking right on by to go to a field firing
range. No one had told the cooks about the change in plans. The troops could
only drool. As for me, as I trudged by I engaged in the ancient privilege of
ground troops—cursing our stupid officers.
At least in today’s peacetime army they
have a clue that liaison is important. When a buddy and I were welcomed to the
“elite” Canadian Airborne Regiment by an elite captain, he proudly made a point of
telling us that in this elite outfit information is passed on… I soon learned he
only wished it was so—I ended up grinding my teeth a lot. In fact, I learned to
leave the barracks bright and early on our days off—lest I be dragged off for a
“training thingy” they had forgotten to tell us about.
In Business
I maintain a keen interest in
liaison. How does one prevent a lack of liaison, be it humorous or grave? How might
my poor relatives, who are only human, possibly have ever managed to plan
ahead, cooperate, have common sense? It was management expert Peter Drucker who
said every executive should make it a habit, with every new management decision
or project, to ask, “Who needs to be informed?”
A good habit of liaison, I think,
can go a long ways towards making up for a lack of common sense or empathy.
Sean Crawford
Habitually looking both ways before
I cross the street,
In the foothills of the Rocky
Mountains
April
2014
Postscript: A few days after our lunch I thought of a young WWII combat
lieutenant, Paul Fussell, author of the heartfelt essay Thank God for the Atom Bomb. When Fussell attended university after
the war he met former rear area officers, but never any fellow front line infantry
officers. Not one. As for Dad and I—The lunch food was mediocre, and the rest
of the people who showed up had been solely office staff: Dad was the only one
who had escorted prisoners and walked the guard tower and catwalk. My auntie
Flora had been an office worker there, but she has long passed away. We won’t
be back.
No comments:
Post a Comment