A Letter to My Son, on Starting Out In Life
Dear Seth,
You’re only three years old, and at this point in your life you can’t read, much less understand what I’m going to try to tell you in this letter. But I’ve been thinking a lot about the life that you have ahead of you, about my life so far as I reflect on what I’ve learned, and about my role as a dad in trying to prepare you for the trials that you will face in the coming years.
You won’t be able to understand this letter today, but someday, when you’re ready, I hope you will find some wisdom and value in what I share with you.
You are young, and life has yet to take its toll on you, to throw disappointments and heartaches and loneliness and struggles and pain into your path. You have not been worn down yet by long hours of thankless work, by the slings and arrows of everyday life.
For this, be thankful. You are at a wonderful stage of life. You have many wonderful stages of life still to come, but they are not without their costs and perils.
I hope to help you along your path by sharing some of the best of what I’ve learned. As with any advice, take it with a grain of salt. What works for me might not work for you.
Life Can Be Cruel
There will be people in your life who won’t be very nice. They’ll tease you because you’re different, or for no good reason. They might try to bully you or hurt you.
There’s not much you can do about these people except to learn to deal with them, and learn to choose friends who are kind to you, who actually care about you, who make you feel good about yourself. When you find friends like this, hold on to them, treasure them, spend time with them, be kind to them, love them.
There will be times when you are met with disappointment instead of success. Life won’t always turn out the way you want. This is just another thing you’ll have to learn to deal with. But instead of letting these things get you down, push on. Accept disappointment and learn to persevere, to pursue your dreams despite pitfalls. Learn to turn negatives into positives, and you’ll do much better in life.
You will also face heartbreak and abandonment by those you love. I hope you don’t have to face this too much, but it happens. Again, not much you can do but to heal, and to move on with your life. Let these pains become stepping stones to better things in life, and learn to use them to make you stronger.
But Be Open to Life Anyway
Yes, you’ll find cruelty and suffering in your journey through life … but don’t let that close you to new things. Don’t retreat from life, don’t hide or wall yourself off. Be open to new things, new experiences, new people.
You might get your heart broken 10 times, but find the most wonderful woman the 11th time. If you shut yourself off from love, you’ll miss out on that woman, and the happiest times of your life.
You might get teased and bullied and hurt by people you meet … and then after meeting dozens of jerks, find a true friend. If you close yourself off to new people, and don’t open your heart to them, you’ll avoid pain … but also lose out on meeting some incredible people, who will be there during the toughest times of your life and create some of the best times of your life.
You will fail many times but if you allow that to stop you from trying, you will miss out on the amazing feeling of success once you reach new heights with your accomplishments. Failure is a stepping stone to success.
Life Isn’t a Competition
You will meet many people who will try to outdo you, in school, in college, at work. They’ll try to have nicer cars, bigger houses, nicer clothes, cooler gadgets. To them, life is a competition — they have to do better than their peers to be happy.
Here’s a secret: life isn’t a competition. It’s a journey. If you spend that journey always trying to impress others, to outdo others, you’re wasting your journey. Instead, learn to enjoy the journey. Make it a journey of happiness, of constant learning, of continual improvement, of love.
Don’t worry about having a nicer car or house or anything material, or even a better-paying job. None of that matters a whit, and none of it will make you happier. You’ll acquire these things and then only want more. Instead, learn to be satisfied with having enough — and then use the time you would have wasted trying to earn money to buy those things … use that time doing things you love.
Find your passion, and pursue it doggedly. Don’t settle for a job that pays the bills. Life is too short to waste on a job you hate.
Love Should Be Your Rule
If there’s a single word you should live your life by, it should be this: Love. It might sound corny, I know … but trust me, there’s no better rule in life.
Some would live by the rule of success. Their lives will be stressful, unhappy and shallow.
Others would live by the rule of selfishness — putting their needs above those of others. They will live lonely lives, and will also be unhappy.
Still others will live by the rule of righteousness — trying to show the right path, and admonishing anyone who doesn’t live by that path. They are concerned with others, but in a negative way, and in the end will only have their own righteousness to live with, and that’s a horrible companion.
Live your life by the rule of love. Love your spouse, your children, your parents, your friends, with all of your heart. Give to them what they need, and show them not cruelty nor disapproval nor coldness nor disappointment, but only love. Open your soul to them.
Love not only your loved ones, but your neighbors … your coworkers … strangers … your brothers and sisters in humanity. Offer anyone you meet a smile, a kind word, a kind gesture, a helping hand.
Love not only neighbors and strangers … but your enemy. The person who is cruelest to you, who has been unkind to you … love him. He is a tortured soul, and most in need of your love.
And most of all, love yourself. While others may criticize you, learn not to be so hard on yourself, to think that you’re ugly or dumb or unworthy of love … but to think instead that you are a wonderful human being, worthy of happiness and love … and learn to love yourself for who you are.
Finally, know that I love you and always will. You are starting out on a weird, scary, daunting, but ultimately incredibly wonderful journey, and I will be there for you when I can. Godspeed.
Love,
Your Dad
- Posted on 15 May 2008 in Finance & Family, Happiness |
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Comments (153)
The Daily Minder Says:
May 15th, 2008, 21:57 pm
I am so happy you balanced life being cruel and love being the rule. I think your son is a lucky little man!
Congratulations on being a father that really cares about how their child grows and adapts in the world.
Awesome post!
TDM
Laurie Says:
May 15th, 2008, 22:01 pm
Leo,
Make your son a special box to keep your letters in and keep writing them to him. He’ll have them for the rest of his life and can read them again and again long after you’ve past on. They will be very special to him.
The Daily Minder Says:
May 15th, 2008, 22:07 pm
Nice suggestion Laurie! I imagine this type of thing would be very meaningful after a father has passed away.
TDM
Leo Says:
May 15th, 2008, 22:09 pm
Great suggestion Laurie! That’s better than my idea of just posting the letters on my blog and letting him use Google to find them later. :)
Jennie Rosenbaum Says:
May 15th, 2008, 22:14 pm
that is just beautiful. I wish my parents had thought to do something like that when I was a baby. I will carry those thoughts in me in a little warm place, thankyou.
Simon Hill Says:
May 15th, 2008, 22:18 pm
Great post Leo, lots of wisdom shared.
I really like the part where you said life is not a competition, it’s a journey. That’s so true. It’s taken me many years and several mistakes to realise this. I hope I can convince my kids to learn from my experience without necessarily finding out the hard way on their own.
Simon
Vered - MomGrind Says:
May 15th, 2008, 22:26 pm
I’m not sure how you managed to become so wise, but wow.
I’m pretty sure that the person who can live by this letter, is a happy person. I hope little Seth will be able to. I’m still struggling with many of these, but I sure hope I can live and feel and give like this someday.
Joey Says:
May 15th, 2008, 22:27 pm
This was a beautiful post. Thank you.
Some parts of it reminded me of one of my favourite poems/readings: “Desiderata” by Max Erhmann.
SpaceAgeSage Says:
May 15th, 2008, 22:35 pm
I wish more parents could pass on these lessons. How much better the world would be.
Laurie Says:
May 15th, 2008, 22:57 pm
I can’t take the credit for the box idea. The idea comes from a book called “Letters from Dad” I can’t remember the author’s name.
Jarrod - BudoLife Says:
May 15th, 2008, 23:01 pm
That was excellent.
It’s very nice to hear something so open and honest.
Thanks
Corey - Simple Marriage Project Says:
May 15th, 2008, 23:03 pm
Let love be your rule. Great advice for everyone, especially children.
The Crazy Colombian Says:
May 15th, 2008, 23:09 pm
Leo,
what a heart-felt letter. Thanks for bringing a sense of joy and inspiration to my day. You may also want to check Dan Millman’s recent blog article “Children’s Life Purpose”.
Laurie,
even if it was not your idea, thanks for sharing it here - I will certainly put it to use! Although I am almost 100% a ‘gadget man’, I think I will put pen to paper for the purpose of writing those letters to my son. The level of connectedness that comes from reading a hand-written letter can not be replaced under any circumstances!
PlanningQueen Says:
May 15th, 2008, 23:19 pm
I love the point that “Life isn’t a compettion.” With you modelling this philosphoy your son is already on a journey.
I wrote a poston a book titled Under Pressure by Carl Honore. This book fits in very tightly with the theme of the message to your son.
Under Pressure is about “how childhood has been hijacked by adults in a way never seen before in history and investigates how the natural instinct to want our children to have the best of everything and be the best at everything is backfiring on kids, parents and society as a whole.”
Hopefully for every parent who reads your letter to your son, they will take some of this on board and allow them to enjoy their childhood.
JasonK Says:
May 15th, 2008, 23:53 pm
I’ve been reading off your RSS feed for a couple months now. I always admired the work you have done in bringing gifts of productivity, tips on life, health, love and family.
But todays post really was something special. You are a lucky man to have distilled this information from your life already. Your son is a lucky boy for having a father who truly loves his son. And today I am a lucky reader for getting the chance to see what true love looks like even if it is through a computer screen.
Thank you,
Jason
Jodie Says:
May 16th, 2008, 0:03 am
Thank you for a beautiful heartfelt post, it renews my faith in love and life.
Shilpan | successsoul.com Says:
May 16th, 2008, 0:34 am
Leo -
Teaching simplicity at an early age can influence his life forever. Simplicity is the mother of happiness, a life journey that is based on conscious thinking and contentment. After all, we do not need a whole lot to live happy, fulfilling life.
Shilpan
Mak Says:
May 16th, 2008, 0:38 am
How lucky Seth is to have a wonderful father like you, Leo!
Thanks for sharing this beautiful letter.
Carol Says:
May 16th, 2008, 0:48 am
This is a beautiful article–Thank You. What you said about “Love Should Be Your Rule” reminded me of the perspective that in any moment we’re always choosing either love or fear….
D.K. Says:
May 16th, 2008, 0:51 am
I would like to express my gratitude to you Leo. Your post have inspired me. It has show me clarity. Sometimes I wish you did post more =] but it’s all good.
Thank you once again for all you do for us.
Zach Hale Says:
May 16th, 2008, 1:36 am
That was genuinely heartfelt and refreshingly inspiring. Thanks for encouraging me to feel great about life! Your son is with good company.
Abhinav Sonkar Says:
May 16th, 2008, 1:59 am
Hi Leo,
Yesterday, I finished with my graduation and within a months time I am going to start my first job. For the first time I would be leaving my parents house to go out their and face whatever there is, alone.
With your permission I would keep a copy of this letter with me all the time.
Thanks!
Lightening@Lightening Online Says:
May 16th, 2008, 2:19 am
What a beautiful letter.
I especially love the “life is not a competition it’s a journey”. I think we could all do with remembering this.
So much wisdom. I’ve bookmarked this to come back to.
Thanks. :)
Kelly@SHE-POWER Says:
May 16th, 2008, 2:25 am
That was beautiful Leo. I actually wrote a letter to my son in the first few days after he was born and I think it’s a lovely idea. I have no wish to share mine with others, but I like that you did.
Thank you.
Kelly
Anonymous Says:
May 16th, 2008, 2:33 am
Hello
I just wanted to tell you that I thought this was a really well thought-out letter! I’m sure it’ll confuse the heck out of your son when he first learns how to read, but it’s got some really solid advice. It was uplifting for me to read, anyway!
Thank you!
Oliver Says:
May 16th, 2008, 3:07 am
That are the most beautiful words I’ve ever read. You’re simply a great Dad, a great guy, and an inspiration for your readers.
I wish someone told me that when I was a kid.
Thank you, Leo!
Pixel Kid Says:
May 16th, 2008, 4:03 am
Reminds me of the poem by Rudyard Kipling called ‘If’.
Interesting that so many people recognise the wisdom of these words, yet so few seem to live by them.
Mags | Woo-Woo Wisdom Says:
May 16th, 2008, 4:22 am
Leo, thank you for sharing this with us - it was beautiful and inspiring.
I love Laurie’s idea about keeping all the letters you write to your son in a box for him to read when he’s ready, but I also hope that you’ll continue to post them here for us to read as well. We can all learn much from your love and wisdom.
Nic Wise Says:
May 16th, 2008, 4:52 am
I need to re-re-read it, but it sounds great :)
I’d add something which I only recently discovered, via the Oprah/Eckhart Tolle podcasts (look on itunes, they are FANTASTIC):
This, too, will pass.
I think they talk about it in episode 8.
Alixandrea Says:
May 16th, 2008, 4:53 am
Leo,
I’ve been reading your journal since late last year and I would like to thank you for all your wisdom and kind words. You have been inspirational to me and helped me to improve my life no end, despite having to do some scary things in order to do so.
This post - like so many others of yours - is wonderful and I think is relevant to anyone, not just a child starting out in life. All the points you make are ones that I think should be borne in mind by everyone, at all times.
I would like to say one thing about it that concerns me however. You say in the letter that your son might, “get your heart broken 10 times, but find the most wonderful woman the 11th time. If you shut yourself off from love, you’ll miss out on that woman, and the happiest times of your life.”
This is wonderful advice, but you are assuming one thing - that your son will fall in love with a woman. What if it turns out that he is gay? Would you still love him? Even if it meant you had no grandchildren through him?
I believe that you would, that when you say that you love him, “and always will” you really mean it. But I feel that it might be worth re-phrasing the part of you letter that I have quoted (and possibly the part about his children too) to make it clear that there is no pressure on him to conform to any sort of pre-conception about his potential future sexuality.
With love
Alixandrea
katie plowman Says:
May 16th, 2008, 6:28 am
the letter is nice but to be honest i think it’s just to play on people to get his blog noticed…
Brandon W Says:
May 16th, 2008, 6:59 am
Leo,
Fantastic letter, your son is a lucky little boy. I especially appreciate the part about life not being a competition, since I spent much of my life - until the past year - trying to be rich in money, trying to launch corporations, chase venture capital, and be the hot-shot entrepreneur. And then, one day, I realized it wasn’t making me happy. I didn’t want to be a high-roller, with lots of toys and money. I wanted to live a peaceful existence and truly enjoy life for the living, for friendship, love, and my community. The change has made me more at peace with myself. I don’t have the money, but I no longer care. Now my goal is to live simply, clear away my debts, live free, engage in my community, and love my friends and family/ I’m doing what makes me happy - writing - and putting my energy into making that passion my income. I’m enjoying the journey.
Dave Says:
May 16th, 2008, 7:00 am
I’m not sure that Katie (above) is right. Having followed this blog for a while, I don’t think Leo is the sort of person to use his children to ’sell’ a blog.
This is clearly a heartfelt and genuine endeavour, written by a father who clearly loves his son.
Daniel Scocco Says:
May 16th, 2008, 7:02 am
Great stuff Leo.
The bit regarding competition was particularly interesting. It is one of my biggest flaws, but I am trying to improve that.
Amram Jochabed Says:
May 16th, 2008, 7:03 am
All One! All one — teach your son!
Moral ABC’s, if All One he is to be!
All one, all one!
Code Red, truth said. All red into his head!
Show One to Son! All one or none!
Ridzwan Says:
May 16th, 2008, 7:21 am
Hi Leo,
What a beautifully-written letter. I enjoyed your post, especially the part where you asked your son to live his life by love. Love makes the journey all the more meaningful and worthwhile. I hope that one day, your son will be able to gain wisdom from reading this letter and I’m sure he will.
Ridzwan
Giancarlo Angulo Says:
May 16th, 2008, 7:38 am
Hi,
Thank You for this. You’ve inspired me to write something similar!
mikemc Says:
May 16th, 2008, 7:38 am
Great Post. I’m getting ready to be a first time dad in September, and this post really hit home. Thanks for sharing…
Tony Says:
May 16th, 2008, 7:59 am
I started to write this to my kids, never got around it, great job
Flint Says:
May 16th, 2008, 8:03 am
Awesome, awesome post Leo. Thanks very much-your son is very lucky to have a role model like yourself to learn from :)
eneru Says:
May 16th, 2008, 8:23 am
Wonderful…i’m i father too, and i agree to all except for “Life is too short to waste on a job you hate”.
Here in southern Italy, find a job is a really miracle, believe me….sometimes you have to be satisfied anyway
Amram Jochabed Says:
May 16th, 2008, 8:43 am
All One!
All one … life is not just fun in the sun!
All One must lead your Son!
All One or none!
Code Zero for the Truth; speak Zero, Leo!
All One! All one or none!
JamesSpratt Says:
May 16th, 2008, 9:06 am
I write a letter every month to my now 6 month old. I mainly started it to document everything that was happening in her life.
I know there’s a debate about whether this kind of thing should be kept private or put out there for the world to see. But I want the world to know about my baby. Pictures included.
Month 1 is here:
http://jamesspratt.org/blog/2007/11/20/dear-frankie-month-1/
Marc and Angel Says:
May 16th, 2008, 9:06 am
Wow, Leo! Extraordinary advice! It really does make sense for parents to write letters like this to their children well before their children are able to understand them. They can be saved and used as an archive of life lessons. I also like the recommendation about giving them to your child years down the road.
Soroush Says:
May 16th, 2008, 9:45 am
This was a beautiful article/letter! I really enjoyed it, and I’m sure your son will enjoy it when he learns to read and understand it!
Marcus Says:
May 16th, 2008, 9:47 am
An amazing and insightful letter. Its sad that we only really understand our life when we look back on it.
You’ve got true talent.
Chris Austria Says:
May 16th, 2008, 9:49 am
Leo–You are right in advising your son that not everyone will be nice but he should practice love anyway.
Life indeed is a journey and your son will be proud someday to know that his father has taken a journey to touch other people’s lives through his simplicity and wisdom.
Someday, I hope to read your son’s writing as well.
Jeff@My Super-Charged Life Says:
May 16th, 2008, 9:49 am
What an incredible message! Leo, you have definitely zeroed in on the important things here. Your son is truly blessed to have such an insightful dad. If we all lived as you suggest here, then the world would be a different place. Thanks for the wisdom!
Evelyn Lim | Attraction Mind Map Says:
May 16th, 2008, 9:50 am
Definitely, a beautiful letter! I hope that he reads it one day!
f_x Says:
May 16th, 2008, 9:58 am
Thank you for sharing that with us. Your son is lucky, having a father that loves him so much.
B Smith @ Wealth and Wisdom Says:
May 16th, 2008, 10:08 am
Leo-Great post and a wonderful letter. I like how you addressed competition and loving your enemy. These are hard concepts to grasp for most people.
I do recommend you use this letter yourself. Use it as a guideline on the skills he needs to learn. Use it to remind you what is important when he is on the baseball team and the other parents are crazy competitive. Use it as a reminder when he is a tean and driving you nuts!
Jonathan Says:
May 16th, 2008, 10:17 am
I have been keeping a journal for my son, hoping to share with him all that he teaches me and impart some wisdom of my own onto him. Your letter has distilled everything I have ever wanted to share with him in one eloquent work. It is simply beautiful, Leo.
I don’t know if I could write anything better to my son, no matter how heartfelt it is or how long I work on it. I would like to add this letter to my son’s journal with your permission.
Marcel Says:
May 16th, 2008, 10:20 am
Lucky son. Sometimes we learn these things too late. Your son won’t.
Ryan Neumann Says:
May 16th, 2008, 10:26 am
That was truly beautiful. My eyes welled up just reading it.
Wow.
Escobar Says:
May 16th, 2008, 10:28 am
You gave your son a very very valuable gift, he is very lucky
Renato Says:
May 16th, 2008, 10:41 am
Leo,
Once again, you have made my day! Your son is a very lucky boy, and you gave me a great idea to do the same…
I already do this with my wife, and she keeps them all, since she was my girlfriend.
This is a great blog!
Peter Says:
May 16th, 2008, 10:57 am
This blog is just you eulogizing yourself in every article. Can you not shift the focus away from yourself ? it would me more magnanimous you know ?
Gavin Bong Says:
May 16th, 2008, 11:04 am
What a great idea. If I ever have children, I must do this. Also read what this blogger wrote to his son:
http://jollysocratic.blogspot.com/2006/08/letter-to-uriel.html
Kenneth King | Destiny Building Says:
May 16th, 2008, 11:10 am
Another nod to the idea of “letters from dad”. My son is turning 10 next month, and it seems like just the other day he was three and I was taking him to the train station to see the big engines he loved so much. Time passes quickly, but a father’s love remains steadfast.
Gregg Sandler Says:
May 16th, 2008, 11:18 am
This was so honest and touching. Everybody starting out in life or at some point during should receive a letter like this.
Alejandro Says:
May 16th, 2008, 11:28 am
Great letter, excellent view of the life a 3 year old will find :)
I particularly like this phrase:
“I will be there for you when I can”
Very honest, less romantic than ‘ill always be there’, and more true as well. You wont get to be there all the time and thats part of his process :)
Thanks for sharing something so personal with us…
MacEwen Says:
May 16th, 2008, 11:39 am
Coincidence? I think not.
I literally unpacked this three days ago at my son’s request. We just moved into a new apartment and he loves this.
I delivered this to my son, Romeo, on his 4th birthday, July 30th, 2003
Romeo;
This is a letter to you on your 4th birthday. I’m hoping you’ll hang on to this letter for life. Inn it I want to share with you how much your presence in my live means to me. I want this to be something you read often. Something that you learn to read with. I want to share what I’ve learned by being your Dad…
First, I’ve learned that you are a child of God, I am lucky to be the Father to you.
Second, I know that you are here to lengthen my childhood.
Third, I understand my purpose and that you will find yours while you are here.
I also want to share what I love about you…
First, you are good at sharing your thoughts and feelings with me.
Second, you are great at listening and cooperating.
Third, you enjoy being a friend to people.
These are thing I will always strive to live up to…
First, I will love you in the way I know best.
Second, I will do my best only to help you in any situation — not to judge you.
Third, I will listen to you with an open mind. If I am busy, I will make myself available as soon as possible and give you my attention.
Together we can…
Live life to its fullest.
Fell all our feelings as the come, fearlessly and for good.
Support one another in our ambitions, encouraging and empowering.
I love you for life. I will always be here for you. And when you close your eyes you can see me in our heart.
Dad
So good to see other Dad’s doing this sort of thing. Here’s some more Kid-Adventures you might enjoy. This one’s getting rave responses.
http://masterycenter.blogspot.com/2008/05/dad-whats-masturbation-kids-questions.html
Eugene (Editor, Varsity Blah) Says:
May 16th, 2008, 11:50 am
What a beautiful post! I wish I was given something like this earlier in life. But I’m glad I eventually realized it anyway:
“And of all the values I wanted to live by, one stood out. More than anything, I wanted to be an independent thinker. I didn’t want to be one of those people who believed certain beliefs just because I always had or lived a certain life just because everyone else did. I didn’t want to be one of those people who hopped on whatever bandwagon happened to be pulling into town without ever taking the time to think for myself.
“I needed to be my own person. I needed to stand up for myself and the things I believed in most, even if it meant being unpopular. I needed to stop accepting things at face value and start question the status quo, even if it meant being criticized. I needed to become comfortable with who I was. It was the only way I’d be able to set my own standards, make my own mistakes, and live my own life. It was the only way my life would be worth living in the first place. It was the only way I’d be able to make a real difference.”
(From Work in Progress)
Mr.Negative Says:
May 16th, 2008, 11:55 am
Thanks for sharing this, Leo. I really admire your openness and willingness to share this with everyone.
I have to agree with eneru… An unfortunate reality of life is that you can’t always find a job you love. And if I choose to be a father, and financial supporter of my family, that choice may require sacrifices in other aspects of my life. If my job is not perfect, I can find joy in the other 16 hours of the day knowing that my sacrifice is allowing me to better the lives of my kids and family. My focus will be on working so that I can enjoy life, rather than living so I can enjoy work.
Michelle Says:
May 16th, 2008, 11:55 am
Such a beautiful letter Leo. Your son is very lucky to have you for a father. You have timeless wisdom to share with him. You will be there to coach and gently guide him through life. So true about love. Always choose love… there are only two options in every moment- fear vs. love- choose love. Thank you for the beautiful post. Reminds me of one of my favorite quotes:
“Too often we underestimate
the power of a touch, a smile,
a kind word, a listening ear,
an honest compliment,
or the smallest act of caring,
all of which have the potential
to turn a life around.”
–Leo Buscaglia
Jmann Says:
May 16th, 2008, 12:17 pm
It’s nice to see that are people out there who do realize what is important… thanks for reminding me of my perspective…
-jmann-
Chica Dificil Says:
May 16th, 2008, 13:40 pm
You are being so REAL with your son and helping him understand that sometimes we have to go thru the BITTER to really appreciate the SWEET.
Life is Bittersweet.
You are an imperfectly perfect father!
Kazuoskk Says:
May 16th, 2008, 13:54 pm
Great post, I´m a new father. it is very deep and beautiful. Thanks for share this joy. :-)
manuj Says:
May 16th, 2008, 14:12 pm
hii , i started reading your post , and when i read it i read it with my heart , as posts by you are one of the good things in my routine. So could you not have gif image ads on your blog near your posts , just asking i know it may not be in your control , neways luv!!
i will now continue with my reading
Amrit Hallan Says:
May 16th, 2008, 14:53 pm
Hello Leo.
I know you already have thousands, but you have gained one more admirer today :-). Your son is lucky to have such a lucid, level-headed dad who sees life in its true hues, not through the glasses of prejudices, opinions and materialism.
Me Says:
May 16th, 2008, 14:58 pm
Easier said than done. You’re right on some things but there are some others that I don’t necessarily agree with.
Namaste.
Pete Aldin Says:
May 16th, 2008, 14:58 pm
Re: the comment way above that accuses you of focusing on yourself.. I’ve only read this post, this letter. I feel like this is exactly the advice and perspective I was missing as a young man who had to go find it for himself.
I wish my Dad had resisted micromanaging my life from a distance and just laid out the facts for me to do with as I chose to.
For mine, if this is any indication, I think you are setting your son up for a balanced fruitful and contented life.
Sean Kelly Says:
May 16th, 2008, 15:02 pm
“All you need is love.” ~John Lennon & Paul McCartney
Great post! :)
Tiffany X Says:
May 16th, 2008, 15:05 pm
Leo, I’m in awe. You have created such a beautiful prose for your son and for us all to have a peek. Thank you. One thing I might add is that your son may not necessarily fall in love with a woman.
CIRQUO Says:
May 16th, 2008, 15:24 pm
Great post. Seth is a lucky little guy. You put in words what I have thought. I hope I can do the same for my little guy. He’s 13 monts now, cutest little man ever.
Evan Says:
May 16th, 2008, 15:36 pm
Hi Leo. I really enjoyed this post. It really got me to thinking, and I have a question. I couldn’t help but think of how I would have felt if my own father had written this letter for me. As a gay male, I wondered how I would have responded to and/or felt as a child/teen reading this letter from my dad. You’ve mentioned dreams of him loving his wife and children. I know my own father had those same dreams, and after almost ten years of knowing that I’m gay, he still can’t get beyond those dreams. It is truly heartbreaking for me. It was very difficult for me to live up to his dreams for me to have a wife and children. I realize most people never even contemplate the possibility of their own child being gay. However, here is my question. If you knew at this exact moment that your son is gay (Let’s say you find out 15 years from now that he’s gay), would you make any changes to this letter? If so, what would you change?
Leo Says:
May 16th, 2008, 15:39 pm
Wow, I am overwhelmed by this response! I had hoped that you guys would find some value in this letter, but I honestly didn’t expect such a strong, positive, encouraging, and especially heartfelt outpouring of comments!
I’d like to thank all of you, for your continued positive support, for sharing your perspectives and experiences with your kids, for your honesty. I really appreciate it.
@katie plowman: Interesting comment … I’ve actually been thinking about it for the last 8 hours, so you’ve really given me pause to think. Honestly, I didn’t write this letter in order to get my blog noticed … that wasn’t my intention. I shared it on this blog not only as a way to help my son, but to help all my kids … and to share my perspective with all of you, in hopes that you’d find it of some value. The reason I gave your comment so much thought is that I sometimes do have the desire to reach a wider audience … so the criticism did strike home with me. However, I think I’ve reached a point where I’m satisfied with my audience, and while I always welcome new readers, I’m not actively trying to attract large numbers of people to the blog with gimmicks and such. I appreciate your honesty, though!
@Jonathan: Of course you have my permission to include my letter in your son’s journal! :) I’d be honored.
@Peter: I appreciate your feedback … I honestly am not trying to eulogize myself, but it’s an interesting perspective. I guess my thinking is that people learn from others … and rather than sharing impersonal tips and advice, I’ve found that readers of this blog are interested in finding out what I’ve gone through and what has worked for me. Now, I don’t claim to be any kind of mystic guru or expert on most things … but I think there is value in sharing experiences. I know that many readers have shared their experiences, in comments and guest posts, and I’ve learned a lot from those experiences. However, I’ll give your comment some thought.
@manuj: the ads on this site are the only things that allow me to live my dream! :) However, I’m working on trying to minimize them so there aren’t as many — it’s an ongoing experiment, and I apologize if there are too many.
Tom Says:
May 16th, 2008, 16:06 pm
Hmm…
If I had a letter like that from my Dad, and read it today (being 17), I think I’d laugh at him. That’s probably because I’ve been brought up in a family where sentimentality isn’t expected or encouraged. He would never have written me a letter like that, so I would never expect or appreciate one.
Of course, your family will be very different. You’re obviously bringing your son up in a way that means he will (probably) appreciate this letter. That said, I can’t help but feel it’s a bit cliched. The ’slogans’ “Life can be cruel” and “Love should be your rule” make me feel nauseous just reading them. Neither of those two lessons is really wrong, but you have to admit that they’re some of the most cliched bits of wisdom you’ve read (or written, in your case!)
I can’t say for sure whether your son will appreciate this letter. He may well do so, and you can’t underestimate the importance of the fact that the way your bring him up may ultimately cause him to do so, but personally I find it sickly sweet and annoyingly self-righteous (yes, despite the fact you even warn against this in your letter - felt a tad ironic to me).
Although, with all that said, I do wish I had a better relationship with my parents, and that they’d tried a little harder, and I suppose your over-doing it is better than not doing it at all.
rohit Says:
May 16th, 2008, 16:28 pm
lovely post Leo. I especially like the point - life is not a competition. One needs to finds its own passion and most importantly enjoy this journey, taking life as a competition makes us think about the end result of success or failure and in the process losing out on little pleasures on the way
Marelisa Says:
May 16th, 2008, 16:31 pm
There’s a book called “Life’s Little Instruction Book” which is basically a list a father created for his son when the son was going off to college detailing the different lessons the dad had learned throughout his life. Life doesn’t come with an instruction manual but I think that if a parent can write down what he/she has learned through their own experience and pass it on to their child, it’s something very valuable. Also, we never know for how long we’ll be around (that is, alive) and maybe letters like these are the only way a child will be able to know his/her parent, what was important to them, and what they thought about.
Leo: About the advertisements on your site, this is your business and I think you’re entitled to have it grow and give you more income (as long as people aren’t hit over the head with advertisements blinking and shouting at them when they come to your site, which isn’t the case).
applegrass Says:
May 16th, 2008, 17:29 pm
this reminds me very much of a beloved poem by max ehrmann entitled desiderata (latin for desired things). here’s a link to it:
http://mwkworks.com/desiderata.html
thanks for sharing your desiderata for your son with us.
lots of love,
-april
Leo Says:
May 16th, 2008, 17:56 pm
@Alixandria: I forgot to respond to your very interesting comment … you make an excellent point, that my letter assumes my son will be heterosexual, and have kids, which isn’t necessarily true. I will admit to a bias, as I was raised in a childhood where being gay isn’t one of the main options presented to children … but that is changing in my culture. If my son is gay, of course I would love him … it would be no different, and you’re right, I shouldn’t try to steer him in one direction or another. Thank you for that great reminder!
@Tom: I will admit that I didn’t know that these were cliches … “let love be your rule” isn’t something I’ve heard a lot, but is something I’ve learned on my own. And it’s worked very well for me, cliche or not, so I think sometimes even cliches have a lot of truth in them. As for “life is cruel” being a cliche, you’re probably right … but my point was that beyond the cruelty can be growth and beauty, and that’s the true wisdom — turn the negatives into positives. “Life is cruel” doesn’t really teach you much … but it’s how you react to that cruelty that is important.
Nate Nead Says:
May 16th, 2008, 18:15 pm
I just stumbled across your blog. Awesome post. I’ll be returning. I love to read these type of things. Inspiration at it’s best~
Matthew Says:
May 16th, 2008, 18:30 pm
Hi Leo,
I want to let you know I have been a long time observer of zen habits and I have outstanding respect for you and your journey.
I find you posts uplifting, inspirational and on point with reality.
I am 20 years old and currently studying biology in college. My friend Brett and myself want to start a blog about our journey and about life from the perspective of a people our age.
I have a few questions I would really like to ask you about your motivations and where you plan on taking things in the future. It would be great to learn from the best. If you can e-mail me or reply back that would be great. I love your abundance mindset, and I look forward to speaking with you.
Matt
Leo Says:
May 16th, 2008, 19:05 pm
Thanks Matt … feel free to post your questions here. I can’t always answer all questions but I’ll do my best!
Mike Says:
May 16th, 2008, 19:22 pm
Leo,
I’ve been following your posts off and on for the past several months…I checked in late on a friday not expecting much w/the book, yada, yada. But WOW…you hit one out of the park today…As a dad w/three kids my first reaction was that I need to write my own letter to my kids. But then I realized you’ve pretty much crystalized more wisdom in this post than I could draft this weekend (or probably this year!).
I’m sending your post (w/full attribution to you) to my older kids that will understand such things (and I hope will add you to their RSS feeds) and I’m customizing much of your wisdom to be relevant to my youngest son.
Thanks Leo,
Mike
Brad Spencer Says:
May 16th, 2008, 22:03 pm
Hey, I just wanted to add to this amazing chain of people. I think this is one of the most brilliant posts on any blog. So many posts are “Top 7 ways to do this or that” and sometimes it’s good to have a post be a journey rather than a roadmap. Road trips can be amazing coming of age experiences.
Thank you for the enlightening and inspiring letter. If only more children (and adults for that matter) received this letter!
Cheers
Lea Says:
May 16th, 2008, 22:25 pm
I just got home from a terrible day at work, and this cheered me up so much… I know it seems simple to “enjoy the journey,” but we all need reminders. Thanks!
Rose Garden Says:
May 16th, 2008, 23:40 pm
My father never left me such a loving letter, but I have some memories that are indelible. Things I remember about my father, gone for two years now:
… sitting in his wheelchair on the driveway, asking me to play pass with a basketball; when I hesitated, he looked at me soulfully and asked me again, to play with him while he still could…
… waking up in the middle of the night, hearing dad alone in his hospital bed in the room that had been mine growing up, unable to get himself out of bed, calling out repeatedly, as I tried to get some sleep so I could go to work the next day… “Is anybody hoooome?? Is anybody hooooome???”
…. sitting in church with my father, banished to the room set aside for families with small (loud) children, my hand buried in his large gentleman’s hand to help mask his tremor, the involuntary movement, gentle but unyielding, making both of our hands and arms roll and shake; we’d grip a little harder and try to minimize the movement, and he’d smile at me…
Treasure the time you have.
Tiffany X Says:
May 17th, 2008, 1:41 am
P.S. Someone needs to photoshop a goatee on Seth. I love it when children are the spittin images of one or both of their parents!
Michael Moniz Says:
May 17th, 2008, 4:36 am
Such simple but easy life lessons to help your son along.
A friend of mine is writing a books where different people write letters to their younger self helping them in their life. This was an eye opening experience. It is amazing how much you can help others through our experiences.
But the most important thing was that I realized no matter what happens in life, we come out ok. Life has up and downs but in the end it is a great ride!
Clare Whitehead Says:
May 17th, 2008, 4:54 am
Just last week in my Daily Journaling Prompts blog I was talking about writing a letter to someone you love… and here this is - such a wonderful example of that kind of writing. It’s absolutely beautiful. Zen Habits never ceases to inspire!
