An Inauguration Day stranger, Memorial Day promises and the inconvenience of change

Four months ago, I was sitting in a bar with Ryan and Dan Healy, and Penelope. It was Inauguration Day. We watched our country make history swearing in the 44th President of the United States.

The room was a can of sardines, but more optimistic. Tangled in a motley web of businessmen, congressmen and college students, we parked it next to a middle-aged bald guy. Pulling out a shot glass from his jacket pocket and slamming it on the table, he asked the barkeep to pour some whiskey.

“Hey,” he said. “Would you guys like to take a shot with me?”

Dan and I looked at one another, then back at the guy. “Sure,” we decided.

“It means a lot that you both are doing this with me,” he said. “I’ll tell you why after Obama takes his oath.”

We sat there, quietly sipped on beers, listened to Biden take his oath, then Obama. Looking over at our friend, I saw tears.

“Cheers,” he said. We took our shots. I forgot what whiskey tasted like midday on a Tuesday. Closing my eyes for a moment, I regained my composure. When opened them, the man was pointing to a pin he was wearing on his chest, a young man in uniform holding a puppy.

“This is my son,” he said. “He died in Iraq four years ago.”

He told us how passionate his son was to go into the Middle East—keen on making the world a better place—only to find himself appalled by how everything was being done. He couldn’t wait to come home and dedicate his life to changing America’s foreign policies.

He never got to do that, but his fortitude lived on through his father. Obama’s Inauguration—in his eyes—was the catalyst for change that his son had dreamed about.

“On Memorial Day,” he said, “do me a favor.”

“Tell my son’s story to someone … anyone.” He just wanted his son’s story to be told. And today, I’m doing the best I can to live up to my promise.

During the month of May, two amazing bloggers, Sam Davidson and Matt Chevy, teamed up to get young bloggers talking about change. I couldn’t think of what to write about. Then I remember the promise I kept to that stranger on Inauguration Day and the lesson that I learned.

It has nothing to do with politics, or foreign policy, or Republicans versus Democrats. It’s about the power each of us has to make a difference today, right now, if we’re devoted enough and perseverant enough to make things happen. It’s a fragile gift, because we never know when that chance might be taken from us.

I’ve been thinking a lot today about the people I know whose dreams of cultivating change were cut too short. Like my friend Kaity, who might have lived on to help save the rainforests if she didn’t die of an over dose two years ago. Or my friend Chris, who would have made one kick-ass electrical engineer if he didn’t die tragically in a fire before he even graduated college. And of course, Sgt. Mark Allen Maida … a total stranger to me if it wasn’t for his father.

As another Memorial Day drifts past, and we all go back to work, school or whatever else we do with our time, let’s try not to forget how easy it is to fall back into idle behaviors. Let’s try to remain focused on the things in our lives that we want to and need to change.

Change isn’t enclosed in bubble wrap. It’s not going to wait until we’re ready to commit. And when the chance has gone, we rarely get a chance like it again.

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7 Responses for "An Inauguration Day stranger, Memorial Day promises and the inconvenience of change"

  1. An Inauguration Day Stranger, Memorial Day Promises And The … « Obamabidenforchange.com May 25th, 2009 at 11:51 pm #1

    [...] More:  An Inauguration Day Stranger, Memorial Day Promises And The … [...]

  2. Matt Cheuvront May 26th, 2009 at 4:02 am #2

    Ryan – this is great man. Exactly what I needed this morning. It’s so easy for us to fall into idle behaviors, to coast through life, go through the motions. We become content with our routine and lose the want-to needed to rise above and break away from the mediocre lifestyle. Change IS inconvenient, when I sat down and thought about making changes in my own life, the first thing I thought about, the first thing MOST of us think about, is how it will rattle the cage, how it will shake things up from what we’re used to.

    What so many fail to realize is that change doesn’t have to be epic – it doesn’t have to be monumental, and it doesn’t happen all at once. But at some point, change requires YOU to change – sitting back and waiting for it to happen will never get you anywhere – and as you said, we never know when our ability to bring about change will be taken from us unexpectedly. That’s why the old creed of ‘LIVE FOR TODAY’ rings so true.

    Thank you for sharing your story – and for lending your thoughts to this series on change. There have been so many personal and inspirational stories shared – it’s been overwhelming (in a good way). Cheers Ryan!

  3. JR Moreau May 26th, 2009 at 11:05 am #3

    Powerful post Ryan! Great story. Sometimes the importance of change and the moment when it finally turns over on itself needs to be savored and acknowledged as a special time in your life rather than rushing past it towards the next event.

  4. Ryan Paugh May 26th, 2009 at 12:36 pm #4

    @Matt: I’m glad you liked it. You did a great job this month, as did Sam. Glad I could be a part of the Inconvenience of Change.

    @JR: Absolutely! I think change is something to be enjoyed. All too often we treat it as an obstacle, when really it’s a gift to be able to change at all.

  5. CEP May 26th, 2009 at 5:31 pm #5

    This is a really great post, Ry! And what a wonderful promise to keep to Sgt. Mark Allen Maida’s dad. Reading this post brought tears to my eyes.

    I also what to mention that I welcome change because it has really helped me grow as a person. And has made life very interesting at times!

  6. Kristina May 26th, 2009 at 9:33 pm #6

    Thanks for the evocative post, Ryan. It reminded me, once again, that this isn’t a dress rehearsal. Sieze the day!

  7. Ryan Paugh May 27th, 2009 at 8:57 am #7

    Thanks @CEP and @Kristina … I’m glad this story touched you too.

    UPDATE: I reached out to Mark’s family today, so they might get a chance to see that their son’s story was told.


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Who Am I?

My name is Ryan Paugh and this is where I write about things. I'm the Co-Founder and Director of Community at Brazen Careerist. My life is nothing short of crazy. If nothing else, I hope that I will make you laugh.

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