Posted by
Alan Eason on Saturday, February 27, 2010 10:24:32 AM
We will get out of these hard times – and, once out, we will
recognize it was the Doers that made it happen. The longer I live, work
and travel in and around Washington DC the more I am convinced that it
is a city of Talkers. Yes, there are hard-working, sturdy doers here by
the thousands, and our republic depends on them. God bless ‘em! But it
is the talkers in DC who have the limelight. Blinded by their own
brilliance, they rumble about the town like tumbleweed. I bump into them
often – thus my rant.
I remember, as a much younger man, spending some time with an elder
in our church who was a farmer. He didn’t say much. But I have seldom
been so impressed at how much one person could get done in life. And it
was solid. I would float my lofty ideas by him, and his wise words were
often: “We’ll see.” We did.
Here in DC it is not just The Administration, Congress and the Media
that clobber us with lofty talkers. They are everywhere, at all levels
and in most organizations. Oratory is in vogue. It is so pervasive that
I have named it The Washington Disease. You see it in
business, with gusts of “my-idea-is-the-most-significant-idea” blowing
down corridors and swirling around meetings. You see it in schools with
the teacher asking the class for their feedback and then cutting off the
discussion because the teacher thought of something more important to
say. You see it in the frenetic pace from the beltway to the National
Mall to the suburbs – as a friend of mine puts it: “Everyone’s in a
hurry even if they don’t know where they are going.”
Where does it come from? People feel the need to get something DONE –
but they are trained here to TALK. It is easy to talk. Talk is cheap.
Meetings are easy to schedule in Outlook. We get to talk a lot in
meetings. Makes us feel better. Gets us through the day. Makes us look
even better if we rush. It is easy to rush – hey, I am an adrenaline
junkie too – it feels good.
How about really getting things done? That costs us more. As my dad,
who grew up on a farm, would say: “Time to put your money where your
mouth is.” (Note to Congress and the Administration – the proverb cites
YOUR money – not someone else’s). It boils own to DOING something. That
usually involves more work than talking. A great deal more. Doing
things makes you miss meetings.
A big part of the problem here in the DC area is that people are too
tired out from the talking and the rushing to move down from the 10,000
foot level and get their hands in the dirt like a farmer and make
something grow. Besides, there is not much social value here in being a
farmer. Doers don’t get much credit. My theory – it is too provincial.
Seems too much like it comes from the heartland or a red state. I
digress.
Now THAT gets me back to some of my recurring themes: Politics –
Business – Spirituality – Life – What’s good for America – and stuff
like that.
Here is the summary:
- Politics: I think
America is really tiring of DC talkers. Recent elections seem to bear
that out.
- Business: It is
still about the small-businessperson, the small business family, and the
American worker who likes the feeling of being captain of his or her
own ship.
- Spirituality: The
Bible says it is not the hearer of the Word but the Doer of the Word
that is blessed… (I think that also goes for the talker-about-the-Word)
- Life and What’s good for
America: It finally boils down to the regular American people who
go about doing and helping their neighbors and making their small
communities work. It is about volunteers and parents and kids and
teachers and preachers and singers and diggers. It is about farmers with
hands in the dirt. I would MUCH rather listen to the few words they
have time to say than the over-caffeinated cacophony I hear in and
around our nation’s capital.