Seek First to Understand
By C.S. Bezas
One day I was fairly discouraged
after having taught a challenging seminary lesson. One student
in particular had been defiant. This student, for whatever reason,
had decided he would not participate.
Understandably, I was concerned for
the student and frustrated with the impact his attitude had on
the overall class. It was during that moment of frustration after
the students had left, that the Spirit whispered one small phrase:
“Seek first to understand, then to be understood.”
I could see the significance of that
statement, even though (at the time) I didn’t particularly want
to hear it. Truth be known, I was bugged at how hard I’d tried
to reach the kids and how some of them had pushed back that effort
(especially the one student in particular).
Seminary teachers make sacrifices
to teach other people’s kids. Seminary teachers generally are
sleep-deprived — for example, most early-morning seminary teachers
rise at about 4:45 a.m. or earlier. They also are away from their
families in the morning, when perhaps they’d prefer to help their
own kids get ready for school. And early-morning seminary teachers
take time from their families reading, studying, and preparing
lesson materials for other people’s kids the next day.
Whereas most volunteer early-morning
seminary teachers are stay-at-home moms, many are not; many are
moms (or dads) who work at another job and then arrive home in
the evenings, needing to make dinner, help their kids with homework,
keep the household running, and still find time to prepare a seminary
lesson that will inspire sleepy teens!
Don’t get me wrong. It’s a tremendous
privilege to serve in these capacities. But it can make for heart-challenging
moments when this level of sacrifice is met with defiant and/or
ugly attitudes.
There are a lot of things that kids
do not comprehend when they see their seminary teacher standing
in front of them each morning, working to love them and be there
for them, even if the kids have surly attitudes or defiant natures.
Yet on that morning so long ago,
the Spirit did not “support” me in my frustration with all this.
Rather, the Spirit quietly taught me a profound principle: “Seek
first to understand, then to be understood.” And during
that moment, I learned an important truth. It does not matter
how much a person sacrifices, per se. What matters is where that
person’s heart and mind are during the sacrifice.
As I began to work towards understanding
my students first, rather than worrying about “me” being understood,
magic began to happen with my interactions with those seminary
kids.
Understanding Begins With Seeing
We as adults often cannot see the
pressures and levels of temptation these seminary kids face each
day at school or elsewhere. There are days that my own son will
come home from school shaking his head. When I ask “What’s up?”
he’ll simply reply, “It’s so worldly out there.”
I’d have to agree. For example, girls
now wear to school what in my era constituted underwear. Not only
must it be tough on a young man to have to sit behind or in front
of those girls in class, but there are other considerations. Even
if a kid is not tempted being around immoral or lascivious lifestyles,
it still can be quite the “downer.”
Been to a high school dance recently?
Just ask your students about the kind of dancing that is called
“freak dancing.” It’s pathetic what our kids have to face.
Another example: it is all too common
now to hear teens at school talk openly about their “pharming”
parties and “trail mixes.” And no, they are not talking about
a farmer’s lifestyle nor are they referring to health food.
No, what’s going on in many teens’
lives (that our seminary kids have to associate with, by virtue
of being exposed to this verbiage in school hallways) often is
far darker. For example, “pharming” is a teen’s term for the prep
each kid does prior to a party. They go into their parent’s medicine
cabinet and swipe two pills from their parent’s prescription medications.
They bring these two “Russian roulette” pills to the party and
contribute them to what the kids now call a “trail mix.”
The teen host/hostess then swooshes
all the pills around to mix them up. The teens sit around that
bowl of colorful little pills in various shapes and sizes. Each
kid randomly draws two out of the bowl and cavalierly swallows
them whole. The purpose is essentially to watch each other in
the circle to see what happens next.
I learned of this practice from our
high school principal at a recent back-to-school night for parents.
He was exerting great effort to inform apparently clueless parents.
He told the parents in the audience that night that the high schools
of today are a far cry from those of just years ago when he first
began as a principal.
He told the parents they would not
believe what the kids now talk about blatantly in school hallways.
He also warned the parents, “If your kid goes to a party and then
calls home, asking to spend the night at a friend’s, say no. It
might sicken you to find out what’s going to happen. You just
need to say no.”
He also talked about how, if parents
would just enforce an 11 p.m. curfew for teens, how many sad situations
could be avoided. All this from a principal who is not a member
of our faith, but someone who associates with the kids out in
the world on a daily basis and who is alarmed at what he is seeing.
Consider the hours each day this
principal is with the teens at his school, observing them and
listening to them for nearly six hours a day. Now think about
the average parent who maybe steps onto his kid’s campus only
twice a year. Who is going to have the clearer picture as to what
is going on in our children’s lives today?
In fact, other than perhaps parents
who homeschool, principals and teachers are generally with our
seminary kids for more hours than even their parents. Thus, this
principal ― and others like him who are sounding similar
alarms ― need to be listened to as witnesses for the times
about our young men and women.
Yes, this is the world that most
of our seminary kids walk through and associate with, on a daily
basis. And since they’ve grown up immersed in this culture, they
know no difference. All of this seemed to be what the Spirit wanted
me to understand when I was quietly told on that morning some
time ago: “Seek first to understand, then to be understood.”
The hardcore rap music that so many
of our seminary students listen to takes an additional toll. The
cumulative weight of all this that they face is heavy ballast
indeed. Is it any wonder then that sometimes these students act
up or out?
Even the finest of our young men
or women will be influenced by their peers, if they associate
with them long enough without any counter-pull. Our youth must
have fine associations with those who would build them up spiritually,
not with those who pull them down into demeaning activities, activities
that tear down their morals, their perspectives, or which ridicule
the very standards the Lord would have them live.
Summary
If a student is surly in seminary,
if a student appears disinterested, our job is first to seek to
understand his world and his paradigm, before we ever consider
trying to be understood ourselves. I think when we do this sufficiently,
we might be surprised just how valiantly these kids are fighting,
even though on the surface it may not appear that way.
Yes, may we forever learn that we
must “seek first to understand” before being understood. Our teens’
lives depend on it.
Watch for C.S. Bezas book, POWERFUL
TIPS FOR POWERFUL TEACHERS: Helping Youth Find Their Spiritual
Wings, in LDS bookstores or at http://deseretbook.com/store/product?sku=4977585.