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Some Thoughts on Judgement, Mercy, and Loud Ties by Aaron Hecht


(Author's note: My last blog about high school set off a lot of discussions, including some with friends I haven't talked to in a very long time. This, in turn, brought up a lot of memories about stuff I haven't thought about in a very long time, reminding me of where I got some of my most firmly held convictions about life in general. The following story about a day I spent in criminal court back in college is one of those stories, and I've tried to make it as interesting (and short) as possible. Even so, it takes a little while for me to come to the point of this blog, but I hope readers will find the payoff at the end worth the time it took to get there. If you don't want to take the time to read the whole story, you can skip down to the part marked "Conclusions and takeaways". If you DO choose to read the whole story, I apologize for the lack of names. I have forgotten the names of some people and the names I do remember are of people who might not want their names repeated in public.)

Many years ago, when I was in college, I was over at a friend's apartment one evening watching a movie. About midway through the movie, my friend picked up the remote, hit the pause button and announced that he had to go the bathroom and it would probably take a while. He invited me to join him, and that joke was as funny as it had ever been, but I politely declined and instead went over to the window to get some fresh air.

As I was standing there looking down at the parking lot below us (my friend's apartment was on the third floor) I noticed someone coming along the sidewalk. As this person got closer, I realized it was a girl who was in my extended circle of friends, but not someone I knew very well. She was cute, though, so I kept my eyes on her as she began to pass underneath the window, because the alternative was to go back to sitting on the couch, staring at the paused movie on the TV screen, and that wasn't very exciting.

As she came closer, I noticed that she wasn't walking very steadily and she almost fell a couple of times, making me wonder if maybe she was drunk (it was Friday evening, after all) and then, when she was almost under the window, and I was just about to call her name and maybe even invite her to come up and join us to watch the rest of the movie, she did something terrible. She picked up a brick that happened to be sitting there on the grass and threw it into the windshield of a car that was parked there. It didn't shatter the windshield but it damaged it, and the car's alarm began to go off. I had just enough time to think to myself that she had better run away as fast as she could, but then she picked up the brick and threw it at the windshield again, damaging it in another spot and also dinging up the hood of the car a little bit when the brick bounced off and landed there.

I was riveted, of course, and I continued to watch in amazement as a campus security guard ran up and saw the damaged car and the brick, which was still where it had landed on the hood of the car after bouncing off the windshield a second time. As he'd been on his way, he'd also glanced up and seen me standing there in the window, so I couldn't duck back inside and pretend I hadn't seen anything. I continued to watch as the security guard tried to ask her what was going on. I couldn't hear what she said above the car alarm, but it was obvious that he had started out very angry and whatever she was saying in response to her questions just made him angrier.

Long story short, the security guard called the cops, she was arrested, and I had to make a statement, even though I'd always been one of those people who said I wouldn't rat out my friends (in this case, I didn't see any point in doing otherwise).

As I was to find out, she had been stoned when I saw her, and she had thrown the brick at the car because she had hallucinated that there was some kind of gremlin on this car, which was trying to attack her. When the guard showed up, she tried to tell him she had just been passing by and had no idea why the car was damaged, but that obviously wasn't true.

The amount of damage to the car was just a PINCH less than it needed to be for her to be charged with a third-degree felony, but she was charged with three first-degree misdemeanors, including a drug-related charge, and a few lesser crimes. She was offered the chance to plead guilty to just one of these first-degree misdemeanors in exchange for all the other charges being dropped, and she would have had to spend ten days in jail and go to drug rehab. Because the crimes had happened on campus, she was also suspended, and they were considering the possibility of expelling her, but that was the least of her concerns. If she didn't take the deal and tried to fight the charges in court, but lost, she was looking at spending almost a year in jail.

It couldn't have been more obvious what she should do, but as her mom would tell me much later, she decided to fight the charges in court because her lawyer told her that the case against her rested almost entirely on my willingness to testify against her, because I was the only one who had seen her actually throwing the brick at the car. The security guard was also called to testify, but he hadn't seen her actually commit the crime. She was foolish enough to believe that I wouldn't testify against her in court because I had a crush on her, as she assumed most of her male friends did. Her lawyer and her parents tried to tell her that this was a very bad idea, and that she should take the plea agreement that was being offered. But she was one of those people who just has to learn things the hard way.

The prosecutor in the case called me in to go over my testimony a couple of times as the date for the trial drew near, and he said there was no way a jury would fail to convict her.

I felt really bad for her, but I was also cautiously hopeful that the shock of going to the Big House, even if it wasn't for very long, would help her make better choices in the future.

On the morning of the trial, as I was heading to the courthouse, I made sure to wear dark blue Dockers pants, a white dress shirt, black suit jacket and a light blue tie.

However, it would be a massive exaggeration to say that I was wearing a "suit and tie" that day. 

The elements of my outfit had all been acquired separately and were not even remotely part of any kind of set. In particular, the tie was just the first one I'd seen when I went over to the men's section at KMart. It cost $4, as I recall, which was all I felt like spending for something I'd probably only use once. I'd assembled this outfit because I had watched enough TV shows about courtrooms to know that this was the way to dress when you went to court, whether you were a defendant on trial, or a witness, or a lawyer, or whatever. I owned a few other ties, but they were all kind of loud and flashy, and no one in any of those shows I'd seen ever wore a loud tie to court, so I figured I'd better not do that either. This hunch was later confirmed, but you'll have to read to the end to see how.

I had been told by the prosecutor to be there at the court house at 9 AM sharp, because that's when the day's legal business got started. There would be other trials that day (hearings for misdemeanor charges and even trials usually only lasted a half hour or less, so several could happen in one day) and he didn't know for sure when the trial I would be testifying in would happen, so it was best for me to be there early so I'd be available whenever I was needed.

I got there at a quarter before 9, just to be on the safe side, and entered the building. The prosecutor's assistant was standing at the front desk filling out some paperwork. She smiled when she saw me and told me where to go, telling me she liked my tie (I had a hard time taking this seriously since there was absolutely nothing to like about it, but later I'd learn otherwise).

I walked over to the doors, went through them, and entered the courtroom. There were already several people sitting there in the visitors' section, and most of them looked really unhappy. These, I assumed, were the people who were there because they were facing charges of some kind. 

They were all embarrassed and uncomfortable. They didn't want to be there, and they were worried about what might happen to them. Some were scared, crying softly, while others looked angry, like they thought it was unfair for them to be there. Others just looked numb and exhausted, like they hadn't gotten much sleep the night before, or maybe for the previous several nights. 

A few had people sitting next to them who were obviously there to offer moral support, mostly their mothers. There were also a couple of defense lawyers sitting there, and it was pretty obvious who they were because this was just another day at the office for them, and it showed.

When I walked in, several of these people looked up at me and I heard one middle-aged lady ask the young man next to her, probably her son, if I was his lawyer. He shook his head no, but I was flattered to think that I looked sharp enough that someone thought I was a lawyer. I didn't think my appearance was THAT amazing, but I was about to gain a better understanding of why this woman had made her mistake.

I sat down and a short time later, the security guard also came in dressed about the same way I was. He sat down next to me and we chatted in low voices until the prosecutor and his assistant came in through one of the side doors. They sat down at their table and spoke quietly between themselves, going over some papers they had brought with them. It was obvious that for them, this was also "just another day at the office." After a few moments, he turned around and caught my eye, so the security guard and I stood up and leaned over the rail while he told us that the trial we were there for was second to last on the docket for that morning, so we might have to sit there for a while. But then again, sometimes things go very quickly, as he explained.

The security guard was annoyed but the prosecutor assured us that we'd almost certainly be done before the lunch break. He also advised us to learn what we could from watching the other hearings and trials. Maybe it would make us want to go to law school, he said half-jokingly, adding that we both "looked the part."

The security guard sat back down wordlessly while I smiled politely because that's how I was raised, and also because at that point in my life, I wasn't sure what I wanted to do for a career, and this wasn't the first time someone had suggested that maybe I could go to law school. The security guard, for his part, was just months away from graduating with a degree in criminal justice and he had already been accepted to the training program for the State Troopers, but that was just a stepping stone. His long-term ambition, so he told me, was to be a detective for a big city police department. I respected this ambition, and I was sure he'd make a good law enforcement officer.

At that exact moment, the young woman whose trial we were there to testify in walked in with her mom. She looked at me talking to the prosecutor and gave me a look which said "how could you?! I thought you were my friend!" Then she flounced over to a chair as far away from me as she could get and sat down in a huff, burying her face in her hands and crying. Her mother looked at us with obvious embarrassment and went over to sit next to her daughter, looking like she just wanted to get it over with.

A few moments later, just like in the TV shows, a bailiff said "All rise!" and everyone in the room stood up as the judge in his black robe came in and sat down, after which everyone else did. The bailiff then went through the routine, saying that the court was now in session, with the honorable Judge so and so presiding. The trials and hearings then started and, just like the prosecutor said, they went quickly. I must admit I was fascinated, but also very saddened, by what I saw and heard that morning.

Most of the people who were accused of crimes were there for hearings in which they would plead "guilty" or "no contest" to whatever they were charged with. The prosecutors had offered their lawyer a deal which would see them plead guilty in order to spare the court the time and expense of proving them guilty in exchange for the prosecutor asking the judge to go easy on them in sentencing. But one guy was there for such a hearing, and he arrogantly told the judge he was not only pleading not guilty, but he declined his right to legal counsel and planned to defend himself at his upcoming trial. This guy was dressed in blue jeans and a polo shirt that wasn't even tucked in. I remember thinking it was probably one of the dumbest presentations, in any kind of circumstances, I'd ever seen up to that point in my life. But other defendants also did things which visibly irritated the judge, and I was amazed at their foolishness. 

But in particular, a pattern seemed to be coming into focus whereby the sentences the judge meted out that day were a result of what kind of mood the judge was in at the moment he handed them down, and all of a sudden it dawned on me that his mood seemed to be affected to a large degree by the clothes the defendants were wearing.

The most obvious example of this was a man I actually felt sorry for as he took the stand in order to enter a guilty plea on a drug-related charge. He was probably in his mid-fifties but looked like he could have been older. He had definitely seen some hard times. During the brief statement his lawyer tried to walk him through, which apparently had been rehearsed, he wandered off the script more then once, expressing confusion and talking about the drugs the police had found on him, like he had no idea it was illegal to possess them because when he was a younger man, he'd used drugs like that with his friends and they'd never gotten in trouble for it. He said some other things which made it obvious that heavy drug use had been part of his life for a long time. His poor lawyer had to actually interrupt him a couple of times because it was getting really awkward, and he was making things worse for himself.

But in the end, despite the fact that this was not his first offense, the judge gave him a suspended jail sentence and ordered him to go to rehab. I was amazed at this leniency, but by this time, I'd begun to understand a few things, especially the fact that this judge felt sorry for this man, just as I did.

It wasn't just his confused speech that evoked pity; it was the way he was dressed.

Simply put, he looked like one of the most pathetic human beings I had ever laid eyes on. His brown, polyester pants were pulled up almost to his belly button. His torso was covered by a stained, faded yellow dress shirt that was at least one size too large. But it was his catastrophically tacky, polyester tie that made me feel most sorry for him. It looked like something that had been a bonus prize someone got for buying two cartons of cigarettes at the Pigley Wigley store back in 1952, and it had been sitting on the clearance rack at a second-hand store ever since. It was just so heartbreakingly stupid, and to make things even worse, it was tied incorrectly so that the smaller end was hanging down below the level of the larger end.

But on the other hand, at least he was trying. At least he HAD a tie, and his shirt WAS tucked in, and his thinning hair WAS combed neatly over the bald area in the middle of his skull.

I couldn't be sure of course, but I got a very strong sense that this honest effort he was making by wearing this tie, keeping his shirt tucked in and having his hair combed is what prompted the judge to go so easy on him.

Anyway, like the prosecutor had told me, most of the hearings and trials went quickly, with only one taking more than a few minutes. I was fascinated by everything I was seeing but in particular, I couldn't help but notice it more and more as one hearing followed another, that the clothes people were wearing seemed to have a direct effect on the kind of sentence the judge ended up giving them.

I began to wonder if I was the only person who had ever watched those TV shows.

Finally, it was time for the trial that I was there to testify in, but just before it started, the defense lawyer, who had already represented clients at three hearings that morning, asked to approach the bench and the prosecutor did also. I looked over at the defendant and her mom, but they both just looked down at the floor. After a few moments, the judge called a ten-minute recess, and the security guard and I looked at each other, both wondering what was going on.

When the court was called back into session, the judge asked the defense attorney if he was ready to start. The defense attorney replied that his client had decided to waive her right to a trial and take a plea deal that the prosecutor had offered, whereby she could plead guilty to two of the misdemeanors instead of just one, in exchange for the other charges being dropped and him only requesting 60 days of jail time at a minimum security facility, during which she'd be enrolled in the drug rehab program. Also, she would need to pay for the damage to the car and another fine, as well as court fees. I don't remember the exact amount, but it was not a small number. Her mom, who would probably have to pay most of that money, closed her eyes and sighed heavily when she heard it.

However, the judge said a few things to the defendant and her mom about this being an opportunity to kick the drugs and otherwise take back control of her life, and then he issued his sentence which was almost exactly what the prosecutor had asked for, and that was that.

Apparently, the lawyer and her mom had convinced her at the last possible minute that she needed to change course or she was going to end up losing any chance she might still have of salvaging her future.

The security guard, who had dozed off a few times that morning, was fully awake now and he was NOT happy, but he didn't get up and storm out right away.

After the next hearing, which only lasted for a few minutes, the judge ordered the court adjourned until after lunch and the prosecutor, who could see that the security guard wanted to talk to him, invited us to join him at a restaurant near the courthouse for lunch.

It was a decent place, and after we'd ordered, he asked the security guard to tell us why he was so upset.

The security guard said he'd WANTED to testify because he WANTED her to get sent to jail for a long time.  He was also angry because, in his view, he'd wasted his morning and missed two classes he needed to pass in order to get his degree. The prosecutor and I both sympathized with all that, but I said that although I had also missed a class to be there, I felt like it had been very educational so maybe it wasn't a complete waste of time. The prosecutor seemed very pleased with this statement, and the security guard readily admitted that I wasn't wrong about that, but he still wasn't happy about how things had gone down.

In an obvious attempt to change the subject, the prosecutor then turned to me and asked me where I'd found the tie I was wearing. I told him the truth, that I'd paid $4 for it at KMart and he laughed hard at that, which broke the tension because the security guard also laughed. I asked what was so funny, but the prosecutor just shook his head and said it was the PERFECT tie for the occasion because it was the kind of tie that a sincere, down-to-earth, honest person would wear, which was exactly what he'd wanted the jury to think of me when I was on the stand testifying. He pointed to the security guard's tie and said it wasn't terrible, but it's not the kind of tie juries liked to see witnesses on the stand wearing.

This made me ask him about the tie the pathetic man had been wearing and my theory that this tie had played a role in the judge's decision to go easy on him. He replied that I was absolutely correct about that, and also the broader point about how the clothes people wore to court played a role in the kind of sentence the judge was likely to hand down to them. At this point, the security guard declared that he had a hard time believing that a judge or a jury would take the clothes people were wearing into account. I replied to that by saying that, before I'd seen what I'd seen that morning, I would also have been skeptical about this, but I couldn't deny what I'd seen and heard.

It got quiet at the table for a moment as the prosecutor took another bite of his sandwich, washed it down with a sip of his Coke and then took a deep breath before beginning to speak once again.

I don't remember precisely what he said next, but it was something like this.

"Boys," he said, "it may seem hard to believe, but the way a person dresses has an enormous impact on the way other people perceive them. If you go to law school, or if you go into law enforcement, one of the first things you'll be taught is that the clothes people wear is also a VERY good indicator of a person's state of mind, and THAT is considered a legitimate reason to judge how credible they are, and not only on the witness stand. A person who dresses casually will have a casual attitude, and that will affect their behavior, but there's more to it than that. Most groups in society have uniforms they wear, not just the Army. If a person is wearing the clothes that a certain group always wears, it affects their image of themselves, and that plays a role in how they act, especially if they think people from that group are watching them.

That's why offices have dress codes that require workers to dress a certain way. It's not just aesthetics; employers know that if they want their workers to think seriously, they have to be dressed seriously, and they have to be surrounded by other people who are dressed seriously. The military knows that too. Everybody knows that.

The way you two are dressed today showed everyone in that courtroom that you meant business, ESPECIALLY that defense lawyer. He knew he was gonna lose as soon as he saw you this morning, and he immediately told your friend to stop being stubborn and take a plea deal."

Turning to the security guard, he added "I gave her a fairly good deal because I don't want to ruin her life. She didn't deserve that. She's a stupid kid who made a mistake, then she made another mistake by not taking my initial deal. There needed to be consequences for that, but again, I didn't want to ruin her life. I've got kids too, and I know EXACTLY what her poor mother was thinking today. When you're a cop, remember that the people you're chasing are only human. Unless they do something truly evil, the goal should be to help them learn a lesson so they don't screw up again, not crush them so badly they can never recover. The law's the law, and sometimes you can't be flexible. But sometimes you can, and you need to use your judgement."

I looked at the security guard to see how he'd react to that but he had a perfectly neutral look on his face, which seemed to indicate that he hadn't been very impressed by anything he'd just heard.

We finished eating, the prosecutor kindly paid for our food and then we went our separate ways. I never saw the prosecutor again but I saw the security guard around campus a few times before he graduated. He told me that my "friend" had indeed been expelled, and he was glad she'd been expelled.

As I said before, I also spoke briefly with her mom a few days after the trial, and she filled in a few blanks for me. I was left with the impression that her mom didn't blame me for anything, but she was very distressed that things had gone the way they did, although she also knew it could have been much worse.

Conclusions and takeaways

Well, I didn't go to law school as that prosecutor obviously wanted me to, but I DID take a single class on Constitutional Law as a General Education elective and I would later go back to court a few times just to watch the proceedings, keeping in mind everything he'd told me, especially about clothes. Once, just as an experiment, I went there wearing one of my loud ties and got some DEEPLY unamused looks from everyone including the clerk at the front desk, police officers I passed in the hallway on my way to the courtroom and even the judge, who I was almost worried was going to hold me "in contempt of court" despite my just being in the visitors section.

What I learned from all his can be boiled down to a handful of points.

First, there's a wide variety of attitudes in the criminal justice system. There are street cops, prosecutors, attorneys, judges and others who are so traumatized, horrified and disgusted by the evil they confront on a day-to-day basis that they just want to punish anyone who steps out of line even a little bit, in order to terrify the entire population into strict obedience. That, they figure, is the only way to keep everything from getting totally out of control.

The security guard, who I assume later became a State Trooper, is an example of this mentality. I don't agree with it, but I see the point. Human nature has some really dark aspects and people certainly do need to be kept under some kind of control. The innocent must be protected and society must have order. As Romans 13:3-4 tells us, "For rulers are not a terror to good works, but to evil. Do you want to be unafraid of authority? Do what is good, and you will have praise from the same. For he is God’s minister to you for good. But if you do evil, be afraid; for he does not bear the sword in vain; for he is God’s minister, an avenger to execute wrath on him who practices evil."

However, and this is the second point, many people in the criminal justice system are not very concerned with society in general, and are more interested in protecting individual people and their "rights". Sometimes that even includes protecting people from the consequences of their own mistakes, even if doing so risks them not learning a lesson and becoming more dysfunctional and perhaps even becoming a violent threat to society.

I don't think the prosecutor quite got to that point, but he was leaning in that direction. He definitely thought the rights and interests of individuals were at least as important as the rights and interests of society, unless, as he said "they did something truly evil." As I've gone through life and seen several examples of people who did truly evil things, I've occasionally had occasion to wonder if they were evil enough for that prosecutor to be willing to really go after them. I sure hope so.

As I said before, the judge I saw in the courtroom that day seemed to be very open to suggestions, including the suggestions given to him by the clothes people were wearing. His mood shifted considerably over the four hours of that morning's court session, and in the subsequent court sessions I attended, I saw a similar pattern with him and also other judges who presided over the courtroom proceedings I observed later.

Although I understand why these things happened the way they did, it was very frightening for me to think that if I ever found myself in legal trouble, the result of it could end up depending on whether or not the judge in my case was in a good mood or not on the day I was to be sentenced, and I would probably have no control whatsoever over the factors which would determine what kind of mood he or she was in.

Finally, what the prosecutor told me about the effect the clothes people wore had on their own attitude, and the attitude others took toward them, has never left me for one moment in all the years since. I often catch myself judging people, or at least evaluating them, based on the clothes they're wearing. I'm sure others are doing the same to me, and I'm careful to wear clothes that actually DO communicate to casual observers what I'm trying to communicate and not just leave it up to chance.

On this note, I have one last thought to share with anyone who is still reading, and it goes like this.

When we go to church, or kehillah, or fellowship, or whatever anyone wants to call it, we should not dress casually. We should remember that we're going to meet with God, who is the judge of all the Earth and the King of the Universe.

You would never go to meet with an earthly king, or judge, dressed the way you dress when you're going to the movies with your friends. It's not a "casual" event to go to meet with God, and you shouldn't dress casually because that will give you a casual attitude about it, and it might also influence others who are there to have a casual attitude, which will be a mistake.

So, if you don't think God minds that you show up to your meeting with Him wearing casual clothes, maybe you're right. But you should still make an effort to dress formally for a meeting with Him, for your own sake, and for the sake of the other people who might also be there. It's a formal, dignified occasion, and it deserves to be approached with a formal, dignified attitude that is not possible if you and I go to it wearing casual clothes.

I know this blog was longer than usual, and I want to both thank and congratulate anyone who read the whole thing. I hope it blessed your life.

Oh, and one more thing. If you own a loud tie, get rid of it. Trust me, that's the best thing to do.

Some Thoughts for the Graduating class of 2026 by Aaron Hecht


We're in the season of graduations from both high school and college. A few years ago I wrote a blog addressed to college graduates and as I was re-reading it this afternoon I found that it was still pretty relevant so if you or someone you know is graduating from college this spring, I invite you to take a look at it by clicking HERE.

But in this blog, I want to address specifically high school graduates. A guy I was in college with posted pics from his son's high school graduation this week and it prompted me to think about my own high school graduation, which happened kind of a long time ago now, but it was also just the day before yesterday.

If I could go back in time and tell my 18-year-old recently graduated self a few things, it might go a little bit something like this.

First of all, I'd tell 18-year-old me that it's really important to make plans and stick to them, and the more specific those plans are, the better things are likely to turn out. Decide what you want, and every time you have any kind of decision to make, big or small, take a moment to consider which options will bring you closer to your goals and which will push those goals further away, or maybe even lower the chances that you'll ever reach them.

Going through life without goals means you'll just kind of drift from one thing to the next without ever actually accomplishing anything and waking up one day to the realization that you've wasted a lot of time going nowhere. The later in life you come to this point, the harder it'll be to redeem whatever time you've got left.

Second, I'd tell 18-year-old-me a few things about what it's like looking back on high school later in life, and what it's NOT like.

I never went to any of the reunions my fellow graduates because...well...I just didn't. I distinctly remember thinking I would, but in the event, I never did. As they approached, especially the first one at 10 years out, I seriously considered the possibility of going. But the expense in time and money to make the trip just didn't seem worth it, because I would rather spend that time and money on other things. I had things I'd accomplished since I graduated, and there were things I hadn't quite accomplished. There were people I'd like to try and impress with my accomplishments, and there were other people I might not want to admit the things I hadn't accomplished yet. But that's not what kept me away. I just had better things to do with my time and money, especially since I was able to keep in touch with the people I really wanted to, very easily, since email had just been invented around the time we graduated together and Facebook came along a few years later.

This brings us to my first life lesson for you graduates, and it's something most of you might have a hard time believing, but it goes like this.

The things that are really important to you right now will not be as important to you later in life. That even includes things you NEED right now, like the friends you've spent your childhood and teenage years with. There's some truth to the saying that "the older you get, the more you need the people you knew when you were young" but that doesn't mean you'll be "friends forever" with everyone you shared your school years with.

As you grow older, you'll make new friends and develop new interests, and the connections you have now with people, places and circumstances will become less important. Even the relationships you keep will change. For instance, there's a couple of people who I was in school with who I still stay in touch with over Facebook, despite the fact that I never really liked them much back then. But as we got older and things changed, especially after I got married and had children, I started to have more in common with these individuals than I did when we were kids. Some others who I was really good friends with back in the day are now people who I have very little in common with.

Another closely related point is how many of the things I expected to happen in my own life, and the lives of my friends, that didn't happen, or they happened but it didn't lead to the expected results.

In particular, when the time came for my 30-year reunion, people began exchanging news and updates about each other and I heard about a guy I'd been casual friends with who had made a pretty big mistake back in high school, he'd gotten his girlfriend pregnant. She was pregnant most of our senior year and she had her baby just a couple of days after we graduated. They got married that summer and he took an entry-level job with a company owned by one of his dad's friends. It was a pretty inauspicious start to their lives, and I remember being kind of sad for them because they'd both wanted to go to college and now they couldn't. I also remember thinking that having started off in such an unpromising way, it was unlikely that their marriage would last.

But I turned out to be wrong, because they are still together, and they have had several more children. Despite not going to college, he eventually started his own business, and it was very successful.

The lesson here is that although it's better not to make mistakes, if you DO make them, it doesn't mean your life is over. Even big mistakes can be redeemed, and in the case of my casual friend, the fact that he had parents and siblings who helped him and his new wife and child made a big difference.

That's another lesson dear graduates, about the importance of family and community. Invest in yours, if you're blessed to have them. If you're not blessed to have them, find one that you can join yourself to. It makes all the difference. Some people who DIDN'T make any big mistakes nonetheless had a very difficult time in life simply because they didn't have any family or community to help them when they inevitably had problems or issues that they needed help with.

I ESPECIALLY want to urge you to be nice to your parents. Some of you are overjoyed to "finally" be free to go out into the world beyond the authority of your parents. Some of you might have had parents who were abusive, or if not abusive then just not very helpful. If that's your situation, I'm sorry, and I hope you can find some way to redeem those relationships.

But if you've got parents who did their best and who can still be helpful to you in the future, be nice to them. It's not easy watching the child you've raised and still love very much (and worry about) leaving the nest. Even if your parents know you're ready, they still worry, so be nice to them. With the exception of God Himself, you'll never have anyone who wants to help you succeed more than they do.

That brings me to another point, that life can take a LOT of very unexpected twists and turns.

For instance, the people who were voted "most likely to succeed" in the senior yearbook ended up not doing anything very special. One works as a mid-level manager at a small bank in a town a few hundred miles up the interstate from the town we graduated in while the other one moved to Chicago and taught at a small university there. Both of them got married and had children and no one would say they didn't "succeed" in life, but no more than most of the rest of us.

So if you weren't voted "most likely to succeed" in the senior yearbook, or even if you were, that's just an old custom (which maybe they don't even do anymore) and it doesn't mean anything in particular.

Once again, my graduating class includes people who had all kinds of stories.

Most of us went to college and most of those who started college finished and got their degrees, while a few dropped out of college. Some moved back home to live in the town where they grew up while others moved to other towns, other states, or like me, other countries, to pursue different careers. Very few of us ended up working in jobs that we thought we'd be working in when we were in high school. Only a few married the person they thought they wanted to marry when we were in high school.

One girl went to New York after we graduated to pursue her dreams of making it big in the fashion industry. She never came to any reunions either and she never sent any messages updating us on anything, so I don't know if she accomplished her dreams or not. I hope she did.

Another girl who was in the same Geometry class as me our junior year made some bad choices after graduation and ended up going to prison. She got out after serving several years but was back in prison within a few months and she's still there, having been denied parole several times. I sent her a letter once, trying to joke about old times, but she either didn't get the letter or she wasn't amused because she didn't respond. Maybe she was embarrassed, I don't know.

A few people joined the military and ended up fighting in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. One guy, who I remembered being very friendly and cheerful, got killed in action in Iraq. His little sister made a memorial website and I visit that website every year on Memorial Day. Every year it makes me cry, even though I didn't know him very well.

On that note, at the thirty-year mark, I was saddened to see that several of the people I graduated from high school with were already no longer alive. Most had died in car accidents or from diseases. One guy came to the thirty-year reunion although he hadn't been at the previous ones because, as he stood up and told everyone, he had a chronic condition which made it unlikely he'd be around for the 40-year reunion, and he wanted to see his old friends one last time. I wasn't there, but people who were told me that when he got up and made that announcement, two other people tearfully stood up and said they didn't expect to live long enough to come to the 40-year reunion either.

Some of the people who died lost their lives to the side effects of drug abuse, including some who had been into drugs already back in high school. Others were a big surprise, as they'd seemed to be pretty squared away and not the kind of people anyone would have thought would go down that path.

But, nonetheless.

The point I'm trying to make here, dear graduates, is that your life is just beginning, and it could be much better, or much worse, than anything you're even imagining or worried about right now. Making good choices and minimizing mistakes is very important, but neither is a guarantee of any outcomes, good, bad, or indifferent.

I took all the big tests when I graduated, including the SAT and the ACT and the ASVAB and a few others. My scores placed me in the top ten percent of graduating seniors in the United States that year, but literally millions of people who scored lower than me have had more successful careers and made more money than I ever did. 

I never abused any drugs, but some people who did have had more success in some areas of life than I have had, while many others have had less. I once worked for a man who casually talked about all the party drugs he'd done when he was a young man. In the years that I worked for him, I watched him make all kinds of bad decisions that were probably at least partially explained by impaired cognitive function from all those drugs he'd done. But he was my boss, and for the years I spent in that job, I just had to cope with it as best I could. That's how things had fallen into place.

So dear graduates, in conclusion, I want to congratulate you for reaching this milestone in your young lives, and wish you all the best in whatever comes next.

Just remember...

Making plans, setting goals, saying no to everything that doesn't help you accomplish your goals and minimizing damage to your life from mistakes are all very important. 

Take care of your health, physical, mental, emotional and spiritual. 

Don't forget to honor your father and mother, and don't forget your Heavenly Father. You'll need God, and your parents, far more in the years ahead than you can possibly imagine at this stage in your journey. 

Be careful with whatever money you're blessed to have, and don't go any deeper into debt than you absolutely have to.

Be realistic, and don't be so sure of yourself. It's a rare person who doesn't look back on their life as they get older and realize that they were wrong about many things. 

Be willing to admit it and apologize when you realize you were wrong, or made a mistake. The person who admits it when they're wrong, or made a mistake, or lied, or otherwise did something that was hurtful to others, will gain the respect of those they hurt. Those who don't admit it will be resented by those they hurt and it'll cause all kinds of problems for both parties.

On that note, you should always forgive people when they make mistakes, even if they don't apologize, not for their sake but for your own. But be careful not to trust that person again, because if they didn't apologize the first time they abused your trust, they'll probably do it again.

Above all my friends, manage your expectations. Remember these stories I've told you in this blog about all the expectations I had when I was in your shoes, graduating from high school lo these many years ago. Almost nothing I thought the future would hold, for myself or for my friends, ended up going the way any of us thought it would. Some people we expected to crash and burn ended up doing great. Some people we expected to soar with the eagles ended up crashing and burning. 

Most of us turned out just fine.

I hope you do too, and I hope you enjoy the journey as much as I've enjoyed mine so far.

Some Thoughts on Mother's Day by Aaron Hecht


A few years ago I wrote a blog on the occasion of Father's Day that got more clicks than anything else I've ever written. In that blog I acknowledged that many of my readers might have a difficult relationship with their biological father, or the memory of him, but I urged them to thank God for their father anyway and I explained why.

I meant to write another blog for the following Mother's Day, but for all kinds of reasons, I never did. So today, I'm going to correct that mistake, and I hope this blesses someone out there.

The word "mother" appears 306 times in the New King James Bible, and the most famous mother in the Bible is, of course, Mary the mother of Jesus.

I believe that Mary does deserve a tremendous amount of love and respect for all kinds of reasons. But long before Mary, there was Eve, and it says in Genesis 3:20; "And Adam called his wife’s name Eve, because she was the mother of all living."

Imagine that.

Eve was the "mother of all living." That means you can and should think of Eve as your mom, and so can and should I.

Like all moms, Eve made some terrible mistakes that every single one of her children continues to suffer from down to this very day.

But also like all moms, Eve deserves to be forgiven for her mistakes, because she was only human, she was doing her best, there was a lot she didn't know, and there was a lot she didn't even know she didn't know.

Also, like all moms (and also all dads) she deserves to be forgiven for her mistakes because the simple fact that if she had not given birth to her children, who went on to give birth to other children, for generation after generation up to and including you and me, none of us would exist. If we didn't exist, we wouldn't be here to suffer the negative effects of Eve's mistakes. We wouldn't even know about them.

All of these things I've just gone through about Eve are also true about my biological mother, and yours.

I know that for some people, Mother's Day is one of the most difficult days of the year because they had (or maybe still have) a difficult relationship with their mother.

Even if you have a great relationship with your mom, or the memory of your mom, there are probably some things you need to forgive her for. That was certainly true in my case.

My mom was deeply imperfect. 

The product of a broken home and many childhood traumas, there was a lot she didn't know about how to be a mother to small children. There was also much more she didn't know about how to be the mother of teenagers and young adults. To make things worse, we lived far away from our extended family, so there was no one she could go to for advice about how to do the things she didn't know how to do. There were friends she had who she asked for advice, and some of that advice was good, but a lot of it wasn't. Even when I was a little kid, and continuing almost until the day she died, I was often horrified, outraged and flabbergasted to find myself in some of the messed-up situations that resulted from all this.

My mother made many mistakes, and I suffered a lot from the consequences of those mistakes.

But she also did a lot of things that were very good for me, and she protected me against many of the things that could have been terribly harmful to me.

When I was a kid, and even more so later in life, I was aware of the fact that a lot of my friends had mothers who were much higher functioning than mine was. But I was also aware of the fact that a lot of my friends had mothers who were much lower functioning than mine was. More than a few of my childhood companions didn't have a mom at all, or they had a stepmother who was neglectful of them, or worse, really mean and abusive. I was, and still am, deeply grateful not to be in that situation.

To sum up, on balance, I know my mom was above average in most respects, and in those areas where she was below average, it had the effect of helping me become the person God wanted me to be.

In this context, one of the most comforting verses in the Bible comes to mind, Psalms 27:10; "When my father and my mother forsake me, then the Lord will take care of me."

Also relevant in this context is Ephesians 6:1-3; "Children, obey your parents in the Lord, for this is right. “Honor your father and mother,” which is the first commandment with promise: that it may be well with you and you may live long on the earth.”"

This is, of course, a reference to the Fifth Commandment, which appears along with the rest of the Ten Commandments in Exodus chapter 20.

And that, brothers and sisters, is the bottom line we all need to remember on Mother's Day, Father's Day, and every day in between.

All of us had mothers who were imperfect, just like Eve, who was the "Mother of all the living" was imperfect. But the mother we all had is the mother that God in His infinite wisdom, mercy, power and authority, ordained for us to have. He knew what kind of mother we needed in order for us to fulfill the perfect plans and purposes He had for all of our lives.

By honoring our parents, we're also honoring our heavenly Father, and there is no relationship more important than our relationship with Him.

So with all that in mind brothers and sisters, I hope you'll join me this Mother's Day (and EVERY day) in honoring your mom, giving thanks to God for her, because with all of her imperfections and mistakes, she IS (and always will be) your one and only mom. More importantly, she is (and always will be) a manifestation of God's love for you.

Of course, everything I've said about your own mother in this blog also applies to the mother of your spouse and the mother of your children as well, if you're blessed to have any.

Happy Mother's Day.


(Aaron with his mother and the mother of his sons)

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