| 
Common Courtesy?
By Vickey Pahnke
Taylor
“What are the magic words?”
My mom and dad made sure that I understood
the importance of using “please” and “thank you”
in my earliest of conversations. I should shake hands with those
I met, wait for my elders to sit before I did so, and always offer
to help when we visited friends in their home. I should think about
what I was going to say before I said it (although I never did so
well with that one) and think through how something may affect another
before I acted (I was better at this one).
My parents taught, from the time I could interact with others, that
there are many things we should do out of “common courtesy.”
In my growing up years, there were words that you would never hear
spoken and topics of conversation that we would not even think of
entertaining. If I neglected to say “Yes, ma’am,”
or “No, sir,” or show proper respect to my elders in
any way, all would not be well for me with my dad! It was common
courtesy to behave in a civilized, kind, and respectful manner.
As the years have passed, it has become uncomfortably evident that
the courtesies once automatically extended in society are disappearing
in many circles. In very deed, common courtesy is no longer so common.
Here are some questions for us to answer for ourselves:
- Do we extend the same courtesy
to our family members as to those with whom we work, or to those
with whom we serve in our church callings?
- Are we as courteous behind the
wheel of a car as we would be to one entering the church building,
or an office where we would interact?
- In the halls of our schools, is
our behavior the same as when we are in the halls of our church?
- Are the courtesies we extend on
a daily basis the kind that we would offer when we enter the temple?
- Are we just as courteous these
days as we used to be? More so? Less so?
- Just what does courtesy mean these
days?
- Is our fast-paced, Internet world
causing a lack of personal connection that allows many members
of society to practice the common courtesies expected as we learn
to work, learn, and live together?
Good manners (another way of saying common courtesy) show others
that we respect their feelings, their rights, and their opinions.
It is a way of growing in self-mastery. It is a simple way of being
more like our Savior, who is the supreme exemplar of benevolence.
Extending ourselves to offer kindness
and thoughtfulness is a way to strengthen relationships —
and fortify ourselves. Better than vitamins, perhaps, in building
the kind of muscle that may not show on the outside but definitely
helps us deliver with a stronger and brighter being!
One of the things I love about my husband is his consistent ability
to show small kindnesses. Among his many talents, none is grander
to me than his respect for me and others. His little acts of service
(not really little at all) brighten the world. His common courtesy
is an indication of his strength of character.
I delight in my son jumping ahead to open the door for me, or taking
heavy items out of my arms to carry for me, his older sister, or
other females. Likewise, it does my heart good to see one of the
girls say a quick and heartfelt, “Thank you,” to a male
who steps to the table, extending courtesies that say, “Let
me be of service.”
These little daily rituals help build
us to be the good Samaritans as we travel the road of life. We might
just be amazed at how such a simple thing can bring a bit of healing
to a fellow traveler.
It is a tough world sometimes. Sweet blessings of “the old
days” with the old ways seem to be diminishing as quickly
as beaches erode in a storm. To keep a beachhead more safe and strong,
precautions are put into place and simple reinforcements implemented
toward building a better foundation.
Likewise, in eroding society, we strengthen
ourselves as well as our own little portion of the world when we
stake our reputations — our character, our integrity —
on certain simple principles. Showing civility to our fellow beings,
so many of them caught up in personal storms and fighting heavy
head winds, is a beautiful thing.
Courtesy? I am hoping it makes a big
comeback, growing in popularity until it is as common as the “common
cold”!
Click
here to sign up for Meridian's FREE email updates.
© 2007 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
|