HIStory written backwards
Jan 1, 2018
You cannot connect the dots looking forward
We spend our entire lives living in FF – planning for a future as yet unwritten.
You can only connect them looking backwards
That is until the day it is all done, and all we get to leave behind is our past.
I start this New Year writing my father’s eulogy. And as I do, it struck me that a Eulogy is HIS-story – written backwards and a lesson in Futurecasting.
To watch slowly, in REW, how individual life decisions in his early years impacted subsequent choices and rippled out to influence so many lives.
Almost a century later, I wonder what wonders the 1940s teenage version of my Dad possibly imagined for his life.
At the start of his life, horse & carriage prevailed in East Africa. They were still laying down railroad track and motor cars were a rarity. I discovered a few weeks back that he took his first flight in 1954 – despite being a global traveler from the age of 9. Yet barely a decade later, in 1969, I recall the day he insisted we all sit in front of our one-channel black and white TV to watch a delayed broadcast of Neil Armstrong taking ‘one giant step for mankind’.
Over his lifetime, he would live to see revolutions in medicine, politics, and technology – ideas much bigger and bolder than anything any 18-year old could dream or envision with the information and experience in front of him.
He lived through many wars, including the Second World War, Vietnam, and the Gulf War – and watched the Berlin Wall go up .. and be pulled down.
He was born into an era of long-hand cursive writing when information took weeks to cross the oceans on scented paper and air letter forms. But he would end his days WhatsApp-ing Christmas trivia in real-time with his grandchildren on 3 continents – on an iPhone5 that he bought himself on Amazon.
As I analyze his life, I once again see that it is not being able to predict, but being able to anticipate that is our best indicator of long-term survival. As well as the ability to use a solid foundation of skills such as Flexibility & Adaptability, Resilience, Self-confidence, Empathy, Constant Learning, and strong social skills.
And to take our learning from our previous experience as the stepping stone into our next adventure.
Or as Steve Job’s said at his 2005 commencement speech at Stanford:
So you have to trust that the dots will somehow connect in your future.
From simple life decisions – like what to wear and what to eat. To pivotal decisions – like where to study and who to marry. Because it is only in hindsight that you will see how one decision impacted a second and a third.
And how the story of your influence upon this earth was a result of taking just one step at a time, moving from dot to dot to dot.
. . . Until you look back and see the interesting journey you have taken.
Beautiful writing and so true, Dad lived through such a revolutionary time, constantly learning, educating, adapting, growing his own community with love & faith.
Love you. Lyssa
Love you too! We were fortunate to have had him show us the way for so long.
Thanks for sharing from your heart these candid insights, not only about your amazing Dad but about how we can only truly connect the dots as we look back (never as we look forward).
This may be a new concept to many and is certainly one we need to take some time to absorb.
May we all be more aware as we move “from dot to dot” this new year.
Well said, Diana. Indeed may we all consider our opportunities this year a chance to create a new path, one little step at a time.