Life, I have discovered, is filled with little epiphanies. I
had another one today.
A refugee family new to our country and our congregation
experienced the tragic death of their teen-age son in an ice-related auto
accident a few months ago. It was a multi-car crash and so, of course, has
become a battle of insurance companies. The grieving father was told by
relatives that he should get a lawyer, and – still “new to our ways” – asked me
to ascertain if that was true, and to check out the recommended attorney. (I am
humbled by the degree to which members of this refugee community are moved to “ask the pastor” about any number of things.) I did what I could,
and ended up feeling that, yes, a lawyer would be good for them, and yes, this
guy seems OK.
It’s interesting, however, that as I was checking on the
lawyer, I assumed that he would be an ambulance-chasing sleaze-bag. After doing a little research and meeting with him with my friend, I was a little red-faced at how
suspicious I had been. This is not to say that he is not, in fact, an
ambulance-chasing lawyer (one who works on contingency and makes his income
from a healthy share of the settlement – no charge to the client), that is, if
you want to engage in the stereotypical labeling of a personal injury attorney.
I serve in an occupation that is vulnerable to stereotypes: To some, I’m the preacher-man; to others, no doubt, a snake-oil
salesman. (I want to burst out in applause whenever I see a movie in which the
clergyman is a regular guy.) My wife is a schoolmarm; my daughter is (must be)
a hair-in-a-bun shushing librarian; my friend, the funeral director, is an
ashen-faced, top-hat-wearing vulture hovering at the graveside; my doctor lives
on Snob Hill and drives a Mercedes (well, that one is true… Just kidding!). Are
you pigeon-holed with a stereotype, dear reader? Have you – as I have – applied them to others? In
Malcolm Gladwell’s “Blink,” the author relates the tale of how a car salesman’s
encounter with a hayseed farmer cured him (the salesman) of making judgments
about customers as they walked through the door. (The crudely-dressed hick
turned out to be one of the wealthiest clients the salesman had ever dealt
with.)
1 comment:
Here's one I've been known to chafe at in bygone years: stay-at-home mom. And another one I expect to face before long: retiree. Stereotypes may have a "grain" of truth, but they are so one-dimensional. Yuck.
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