Tuesday, April 25, 2017

Pay Attention, Please

         Last year, while at our local library, I ran into a mother whose children attend the same school as Lu. Though we saw each other daily we had not previously struck up a conversation. We did on this day. We talked about a variety of subjects, what grades our children were in (hers were a year ahead of Lucy), who they had as teachers (the one detail I can’t remember from the conversation), where we lived (she happens to live not 5 minutes from me), how long it took us to get our children to school in the morning (25-30 minutes) and which route we took to and from the school (she followed the main roads, I favored the back roads). We talked for 15-20 minutes before our children began to demand our attention and pull us in different directions. Throughout the rest of the year, I saw this woman every afternoon at pick-up. We often exchanged pleasantries and talked about how the year was progressing. The end of school saw Jody, the girls, and I traveling north for the summer and the end of our conversations.
            However, we struck up our daily acquaintance again at the beginning of this school year, nothing more than exchanging pleasantries but still small conversations. About a month ago, she began a conversation with me about Lily and her growth over the last year. We then began talking about IB middle schools in the area (there are only two), which led to her once again asking me where I live. I was taken aback, as she continued to ask many of the same questions she asked me a year ago at the library. At first, I simply felt like I was having a déjà vu. However, as I shuffled the girls into the car and began to drive home, I became more and more annoyed by the situation. Did this woman have such a short-term memory that she didn’t remember our conversation? Does she simply talk to so many people that remembering my details were impossible? Or was this an indication of something else, something inherent in our society, a lack of caring for other people and their situations? An egocentrism?
            This incident bothered me. However, I was able to brush it off because this woman is an acquaintance at best. Not two weeks later, I was texting a friend that I hadn’t talked to in awhile but keep in touch with through Facebook. The conversation began as most conversations among friends, with us asking each other how things were going and what was new. It then progressed into more specifics. I began to discuss the challenges of taking care of a child with diabetes and my desire to move. To my dismay, my friend asked me which of my children has diabetes, and where we are now living. I was shocked.  How could this friend, whom I adore, and was so close to at one point in time, know so little about my family and life, especially when I post so frequently to Facebook? I tried to excuse my friend’s lack of knowledge by telling myself that she/he had a family and a life too, one thousands of miles from me, but, honestly, I was pissed.

            I pride myself on learning names and retaining information regarding the individuals I meet, especially information regarding my friends. I am not perfect. I don’t always remember every detail, but my memory can often be easily refreshed. Whether this is a learned or inherent skill I am unsure, and I question whether others have simply not learned to pay attention to individual details, if it simply isn’t inherent in their personality, or if they simply don’t care enough to pay attention. I want to believe that others care but simply lack the skills. However, my interactions with individuals often have me questioning this theory. The only thing I do know for sure is that when I have interactions like the two described above I feel angry, sad, and discouraged. So the next time you are talking to someone, whether you will see them again or not, pay attention, you never know when those details may come in handy and make someone feel as if they are cared for.

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