A Good Reason
to Look Up
When I was in junior high school,
what my friends thought of me was real important to me.
During those years I grew much taller than most of my peers. Being
so tall made
me feel uncomfortable. In order to keep the focus off of me,
and my unusual height, I went along with the crowd who would
play practical jokes on other kids at school. Being one of the class
clowns gave me a way to make sure that the jokes were directed
at others and not at me.
I would pull all kinds of pranks,
which were hurtful, and sometimes even harmful to others. Once before
gym class, my friends and I put Icy-Hot* in the gym shorts of one
of
the kids on the basketball team. Not only was he terribly embarrassed,
but he also had to go to the school nurse's office. I thought it was going
to be funny, but it ended up
that no one thought it was -- least of all my father.
My parents didn't always think
that my behavior was funny. They reminded me about The Golden Rule: to
treat others as I would like to be treated. Many times, I was
disciplined for the hurtful way that I was treating others.
What I was doing was hurting other kids, and in turn hurting
my reputation as someone to be looked up to. My friends were looking up
to me because I was tall, but what did they see?
My parents wanted me to be a leader
who was a good example to others -- to be a decent human being. They taught
me to set my own goals, and to do the best at everything
that I set out to do. During the lectures I got from my father,
he told me over and over again to be the leader that I was meant to be
-- to be a big man in my heart and
actions, as well as in my body. I had to question myself
whether or not it was important to be the kind of leader -- and person
-- my father believed I was inside. I knew in my
heart that he was right. So I tried my best to follow my father's
advice.
Once I focused on being the best
that I could be at basketball and became a leader in the game, I took my
responsibility to set a good example more seriously. I sometimes have to
stop and think before I act, and I make mistakes occasionally -- everyone
is human. But I continue to look for opportunities where I can make a difference,
and to set a good example because of my father's advice. I now pass it
on to you.
"Be a leader, Shaq, not a follower.
Since people already have to look up to you -- give them a good reason
to do so."
by Shaquille R. O'Neal
The Los Angeles Lakers
from Chicken Soup for the Kid's Soul
Copyright 1998 by Jack Canfield, Mark Victor Hansen, Patty
Hansen and Irene Dunlap