I grew up in
Wisconsin and lived there most of my life.
As you might already know, Wisconsin is “America’s Dairyland” and it is
known for its cheese (Colby, Kaukauna, and Land O’ Lakes, among others), milk, and
butter. It’s a farming state with some
industry and manufacturing thrown in for balance and because of that, farmers
are heavily dependent upon the weather.
These farmers have the weather and seasons down to a science. They know when to plant and when to harvest. Cows even know when it’s milking and feeding
time.
When I lived in
Wyoming, the ranchers were similarly dependent upon the weather as their
Wisconsin brethren. They would look up
at the sky and wonder what the day might hold, but pretty much had it down to a
science. When to time calving,
harvesting of wheat, and when to brand.
They knew because most of them watched their fathers and grandfathers do
it all way before they had their own children.
Kim watches the
weather each night before heading to bed.
She wants to know if it will be raining, or too cold, or too warm for
her to run. There are times when she
gets up only to come back to bed grumbling that, “The weatherman got it wrong
again!”
There is a common
joke about weathermen.
People will
laughingly state that they wish to have a weatherman’s job, because it seems
they get the weather wrong about fifty percent of the time and yet still get to
keep their job.
A baseball player
is kind of like a weatherman.
In 2013, Dee
Gordon of Miami led the majors with a .386 batting average. In 2014, Jose Altuve of Houston led the
league with a .341 average.
Gang, I know I’m
not a mathematician, but those averages mean that the batter who led the major league
hits the ball only one-third of the time.
The other two-thirds of the time, the batter makes an out.
And yet, if a
major leaguer is hitting .300 that is quite the achievement! It’s celebrated! If the batter does that on a routine basis
year to year, he’ll end up in the hall of fame, which is the pinnacle of the
major leagues. The Mt. Olympus of Major
League Baseball, if you will.
But if a
weatherman is wrong some of the time, and if a major league batting champ only
hits the ball one in every three at bats, what does that say about Perfection?
Got me thinking .
. .
You know, we’re
human. We take chances and we make
mistakes. We say things that we’d rather
not have said. We do things that are embarrassing
to ourselves and others, perhaps even mean.
We fall down. Sometimes, we give
up. We might set a goal, but never quite
make it or just barely reach it or perhaps fail miserably.
Human beings are
seldom perfect. Seldom if ever perfect.
And while I
subscribe to the idea and ideal of Perfection, always in the back of my mind is
effort. I believe that effort supersedes
and is more important than Perfection. I
believe it is the willingness to try, to strive, to struggle and overcome that means
so much more than Perfection. Because
ultimately, while Perfection might not ever be achieved, effort is always
present if one pursues Perfection. And
while it is wonderful to achieve Perfection . . . should that actually ever
happen . . . the real celebration should be of the effort that goes into the
pursuit of Perfection. What should be
celebrated is the effort that goes into living one’s life. Now that’s something to celebrate! Something to think about . . .