Pea Ridge Times

True role models harder to find

- LEO LYNCH Former JP, Benton County

Being a grandparen­t to six grandchild­ren, my concern for many of our most publicized events is much different than 50 years ago when their fathers were being raised. Having only a minimum of contact with their families due to distance, it is difficult to speculate on how high-profile events affect them and their perspectiv­e of life. One of them, a grandson, just turned 13 and in a brief note to him in his birthday card, I mentioned that the “teen years” greatly affect our character developmen­t. Other words which came to mind as I sought the appropriat­e phrase included honesty, integrity, responsibi­lity and moral values to name a few. With a younger brother, he is automatica­lly a role model for the younger sibling.

As I contemplat­ed his role-model responsibi­lity, some of the recent publicity concerning cyclist Lance Armstrong came to mind. The winner of seven consecutiv­e Tour deFrance races from 1999 to 2005, he was an internatio­nal celebrity. Cycling is not just an individual event, but really a team effort, but one person is the leader and receives the majority of the recognitio­n when they are successful. Even though there were claims of illegal drug use during his career, the recent highly-touted interview when he finally acknowledg­ed he had used drugs, and successful­ly lied to cover it up, came as a major disappoint­ment. He suddenly plunged from history’s greatest cyclist to cycling’s most successful cheater and liar. He now stands as an individual willing to do anything to win, including lying to his own children. That is not a role model I would recommend to my grandchild­ren.

As the story of Notre Dame football star Manti Te’o’s “girlfriend” unfolds, we can see evidence of fame and fortune affecting one of football’s most respected awards (the Heisman Trophy) and one of America’s great universiti­es (Notre Dame). Whether Manti Te’o was a victim or a participan­t, we do not know, and we may be subjected to ongoing speculatio­n while never finding the complete story. However, as a young man, of Samoan descent and a native of Hawaii, he certainly was a role model for many — including my 13year-old grandson who also plays football. The question of the relationsh­ip with the fictitious girlfriend probably had no effect on his football performanc­e, but certainly tarnished his reputation and very well could have affected his play in the National Championsh­ip game against Alabama since the truth was coming out then.

We need more positive role models like Stan Musial, the St. Louis Cardinal baseball star who I remember best as a true gentle- man, a positive role model as I was growing up, and an extremely talented athlete. One of my very early memories of Stan Musial was an article (I believe it was in Reader’s Digest) where a father wrote about meeting Stan on the beach in Florida. The kids on the beach were playing catch with this unknown person when the writer (the father of one of the boys) walked up. Recognizin­g that one of the boys knew the man who just arrived, Stan Musial tossed the ball to the father and said, “Here, you can do this better than I can,” and left. Only after he had left the area did the boys acknowledg­e it had been Stan Musial. The article was titled “The Most Unforgetta­ble Person I Ever Met.”

True role models are hard to find. It takes more than one great game or even seven years of successful cycling. A desire to risk the loss of fame and fortune, if need be, to achieve an unblemishe­d life is undoubtedl­y the first step.

With the news media looking for flaws in the life of today’s celebritie­s, true role models may be a thing of the past. We can have “heroes” as long as athletes hit ninth-inning home runs to win a World Series, or someone scores the game-winning touchdown in a Super Bowl, but the moment is quickly lost in tomorrow’s headline of another spectacula­r finish. And, we can’t look to our political leaders who are so caught-up in the Washing- ton game playing that we still don’t know the truth about Benghazi or even the fine details of Obamacare. George Washington and Abraham Lincoln are still role models to me, as are Generals MacArthur and Eisenhower. Lucky for me and for them, history has not destroyed their image and there was no e-mail to tell the details of questioned events and no one had a chance to reveal personal informatio­n on Facebook, only to regret it later.

Life was less complex when my kids were small and I used Bart Starr as a role model and an example of an athlete with character and Vince Lombardi and Tom Landry as leaders to whom they could look. It seems like respectabl­e politician­s have been hard to find, but maybe that is just the world they have chosen to work in and the circumstan­ces draw them down. The current commercial exposing former Senator Hagel’s connection­s intended to derail his appointmen­t as Secretary of Defense makes it obvious we can’t have much respect for those who go to Washington and allow the temptation­s to affect their judgments.

Editor’s note: Leo Lynch is an award-winning columnist. He is a native of Benton County has deep roots in northwest Arkansas. He is a retired industrial engineer and former Justice of the Peace. He can be contacted at prtnews@nwaonline.com.

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