WHAT BARBARA IS REALLY TEACHING US - BE BRAVE
By jackieacho , May 17, 2014
Barbara Walters is using
her megaphone to tell us something important. Can we hear
her? Is she breaking through our armor of modern culture
and personal regret to pierce our hearts? Does she fully
realize how important it is and why now is the right time to say it,
again, with feeling?!
“I
was so busy with a career. It’s the age-old problem,” Walters, 84, said in an
interview that will air on the upcoming ABC News special, “Barbara Walters: Her
Story.” “And, you know, on your deathbed, are you going to say, ‘I wish I spent
more time in the office?’ No. You’ll say, ‘I wish I spent more time with my
family,’ and I do feel that way. I wish I had spent more time with my
Jackie.” – Laura Effron via
Good Morning America
Barbara
Walters has had an incredible career spanning ~56 years. Her story as a
mother reads like so many powerful women who leaned in. Several
miscarriages. Finally got her baby (adopted in this case). No
maternity leave. Lots of outsourcing. Plenty of money to pay for
the best. Fame, influence, kudos, accolades, awards galore. What
are we to do with her regret? Do we chalk it up to choice again, and
congratulate ourselves that we made the right one (or worry or hope or fear or
get angry…if we’re not sure).
56 years of
career.
5 years of
early childhood.
That’s 9% of
Barbara’s career, but 100% of
the critical period when so much was set in motion for Jackie’s emotional
wellbeing, her parents’ identity as parents (not
just moms ), and their lifelong relationship. Parents
open the bank of empathy for their children in early childhood ,
a bank which sets them up to deposit or withdraw from others
personally and professionally for the rest of their lives.
We have research out the wazoo on what children need in this
critical period of 0-5 years , and so much of it comes down to
something that we’ve known all along: love, given by the people so
blessed to parent a child in this world. The inconvenient truth is that love takes
time. How much time? Well, my toddler daughter told
me (while on my knees in my closet a decade ago), “I’m okay if you’re gone a
day a week; I’m not okay if you’re gone more.” Whaaaa?!!!!! That
would surely have ended Barbara’s career.
But
did it end mine? No. So many of us - men and women alike - have the
technology we need now to work around giving children what they need in early
childhood, as well as making breakfast, packing lunch, meeting young kids
getting off a bus, having family dinner, or being around in case teenagers
decide to talk. Entrepreneurship was my out. Intrapraneurship can be too, if organizations realize the value of taking
it .
I’m
much luckier than Barbara Walters. I’m also luckier than Barbara Acho,
who faced a choice with a baby Jackie in 1968. She stayed home.
Were my brother and I all she needed to feel fulfilled? No. My
mother went back to school when I was 13 and has had a flourishing career as a
therapist ever since. My mom is not a perfect mother or
professional; there is no such thing. But she was brave . Brave enough to chart
a path that was unexpected, to do her best to give her children
what they needed and channel her
God-given talents into trying to make the world a better place. Don’t get
me wrong. She was scared - of failing her kids, her
potential, or both. But that is exactly why she had to be brave.
Sophie’s choice is
a false dichotomy which values neither children nor women (not to
mention leaving fathers out of the picture completely!). We can be
braver than that.
That is what Barbara taught me.
Happy Birthday Mom. Love you, Jackie