You shouldn’t count out mom and dad so quick
STEVE SMITH
They are newlyweds, a couple in their early 30s who eloped in Las
Vegas just a few months ago.
A few days ago, the husband was waiting to hear the verdict in a
trial in which he was accused of a very serious crime. If found
guilty, he was expected to receive a jail term of no less than three
years and no more than eight.
I know this couple. I know the husband much better than I know the
wife, but during this nightmare he has told me much about her and
although we’ve met only twice, I feel as if I know her fairly well.
Last Tuesday, he was on call to go back to court when the jury
signaled that it had finished its deliberations. I saw him on his way
to court and gave him my cell phone number. “Call me or have your
attorney call me when you know something,” I said.
He looked at me with a puzzled face and said, “Well, I’ll call
you.” It occurred to me then that he did not realize that if he was
convicted he would not be able to call me because he would be led
away in handcuffs.
A few hours later, his wife called and left a message. The jury
had found him guilty.
When she was called back, his wife said among other things that
she had not told her parents 30 miles away, her only immediate
family, about the charges against her husband, the trial or the
verdict. “They wouldn’t understand,” she said. Apparently, the only
person she decided to confide in was a cousin.
Years ago, there were things that I kept from my parents because
they, too, would not have understood. And while this man’s wife
probably attributes her belief in part to some cultural differences,
I always believed my parents were just too old or too obtuse to get
it.
That was a mistake. I realized later on -- too late -- that there
was very little I had been through or was going through that my
parents had also not experienced to some degree. When I was broke,
which seemed to be for a rather sustained period a long time ago, my
mom could have given me budget suggestions.
When I was single and going through my latest relationship
challenge -- also for a sustained period a long time ago -- I could
have asked my dad for advice.
But I didn’t.
I never gave my parents the chance because I knew it all. I knew
how to solve my own problems and I knew that they didn’t know
anything about what I was going through. What a mistake.
What I know now is that my parents not only would have jumped at
the chance to help me with advice, they would also have given me
advice that was worthwhile. After all, they had been throughout the
Great Depression and would surely know a thing or two about making,
spending and saving money. And having married outside their faiths,
plus having done some dating on their own prior to their marriage,
they probably could have told me what to do in many of the situations
I found myself.
But I never gave them the chance.
Now, this young bride of this convicted criminal is alone. Oh
sure, there are some friends around but she has shut out her parents.
That is a mistake.
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and a freelance writer.
Readers may leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at
(949) 642-6086.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.