By "Man Up" I mean toughen up, give it up, fess up, stand up, wise up, team up, dress up, show up, shut up, keep up, listen up… those two little words can cover so many things. But during life's rough patches, we are often called upon to "man up." That's when we must raise the bar one itsy bitsy notch. Nothing painful, or impossible.
Let me give you an example.
One time I was scheduled to speak in Oshkosh, Wisconsin. As we were on the way to the event we received a phone call from our host saying she needed to inform us that the lake flies had arrived several weeks early due to warmer weather so we needed to be aware and ready. She said we needed a raincoat over our clothes for protection. I'm sorry, but I am not in the habit of carrying a raincoat when it is sunny and 75 degrees outside. Now, I had taken Ms. Sue and Tracy, one of our family assistants, with me. The three of us looked at each other very perplexed and said, "What in the world is she talking about?" It did not take long for us to figure out exactly what she was talking about.
As we pulled up to this beautifully restored building right on Lake Winnebago, we sat in the car dumbfounded. The bugs were so thick they made a wall. It was like something out of an Alfred Hitchcock movie! The cars were covered and the columns on the building were black due to these insects all over them. We three sat in the protection of our automobile staring at each other, wondering who was going to make the first move.
I didn't care how charitable this organization was, I was not getting out of that car. Nope not me! I hoped they would have a lovely event. I would read about it in the newspaper the next day. Then I looked around and saw people going into the building very enthusiastically, as if the darn little bugs weren't swarming everywhere.
That's when I thought "Man Up."
We were three intelligent women. We had graduated from college. We could do this. We settled on the following plan: open the door, run like we're in the 50-yard dash, wave our arms like a traffic cop and snowplow right through those pesky booger bears to the front entrance. I looked at Ms. Sue and Tracy and said, "Here we go!"
Man up…. Tough times don't last, but tough people do. That was all I could think of as we sprinted towards the front door. I really wish we had gotten the three of us on video juking and jiving our way to the door. It was either them or us, and I was not going to let those little booger bears win. I had told Ms. Sue that for thirty feet she needed to keep her mouth shut or else it would be filled with these things. That, my friends, is an extremely difficult thing for Ms. Sue to do. But she rolled out of that car like Jolly old St. Nick getting to his first house on Christmas Eve to deliver gifts. She had a spring in her step that I hadn't seen in a very long time. We dashed and dodged and darted. It made for a complete out of body experience.
Where was the pest control man when you needed him?
When we crossed the threshold, the three of us were dying with laughter. Of course, I haughtily looked at the "door greeter" who was acting like she was in Miami and it was sunny and seventy, and I said "Y'all need to call the fog truck to come spray and get rid of all these things."
Apparently these flies come out once a year and the coming out process last about two weeks. Once they hatch, or whatever it is that they do, they only live twenty-four hours, but there's a ton of them. I'm sure the fly family said, "Get up, rise up, bug up, fly up, and mess up everyone's day as well as their clothes." (When you squish them it is a green dot that looks like baby poo.) You can't make this stuff up!
This isn't the epitome of manning up, but it was my version during one of life's messier moments. Day in and day out we have varying degrees by which we have to Man Up, whether it is dodging the lake flies, being responsible for yourself, putting a veto on bad language and bad behavior, being on time, cleaning up someone else's mess, not losing your temper, volunteering more, deciding to go back to school to get your degree, running an errand for a friend, or babysitting for a neighbor who needs some "me time." Often it's a simple, unexpected giving of one's self.
Manning up is a choice. You always have the option to "man up," since it is within all of us to do. And in life, you'll find that there are some people who do and some people who don't.
Oh, and in case there is some female sitting there reading this and thinking, "Well, why did she say, 'Man Up'? This doesn't include the ladies…" Really?! That's where the two little words, "shut up" come into play. There are times you just have to tell someone to shut up, as rude as it sounds, and this is one of those times because in this case, ladies, "Man up" is just an expression; it's not a slight to our gender or a politically incorrect phrase that you have to get your feelings hurt over or start pouting about.
I hope you don't have to encounter lake flies as a reason to Man Up. But whatever the case, know that every time you Man Up, you become a leader.
聚合中文网 阅读好时光 www.juhezwn.com
小提示:漏章、缺章、错字过多试试导航栏右上角的源