It took me a long time to find the value of a verb in the party of nouns.

What is the difference between a house and a home?

This question has a special place in my becoming who I am. My guardian angel, Sethi uncle, our father’s friend, repeatedly asked us (me and my siblings). He is my first English teacher, my first role model.

During all those childhood flashes that I remember, his question stayed the same and held the space for my answer to develop.

When I was learning the language, my answer was that house and home start with the same letter but different logography.

When I was learning to make meanings of my thoughts and put stories, my answer was that the house is made of bricks, walls, and a ceiling, and home is where my family lives.

Later, my answer shifted from the description of a house and home to the feeling: any place becomes the home when common values connect everyone living in it, and all enhance part of each other’s life journey, bitter or sweet, Sethi uncle stopped asking that question.

Any place becomes the home when common values connect everyone living in it, and all enhance part of each other’s life journey, bitter or sweet.

I thought that he had stopped asking the “house and home” question because I am now grown up, until recently when I found the verb in the party of the loud nouns.

A role model is not a noun; it is a verb. It is who you chose to be and become.

Having a good role model is very important. Role models inspire us to work harder on our goals and become successful.

It is easier to follow the goals when we know how someone else achieved them. When we choose a role model, it usually means that they have succeeded in a specific field.

But isn’t the term “success” entirely subjective? It has different meanings for different people at different times. Each one of us has personal values & intentions.

Teachings from experts make us self-confident and encourage us to set bigger goals. To achieve the big goals, we tend to emulate another person’s actions and values.

No one person or personality type can be a role model. The approach they took, the behavior they demonstrated, the value they lived are role modeling. The starting point is finding who we follow to learn what we need to know to reach where we want to go. It’s important not to get obsessed with them.

Be yourself. Everyone else is already taken. ~Oscar Wilde

We all face obstacles in our lives. Successful people, who we role model, have their share of hurdles to overcome and mistakes to learn from. Different people may discover other lessons from the same mistakes.

We are unique, and so are our skills, experience, and approach to achieve our goals. To acquire what we strive for, we don’t necessarily have to follow the whole of our role model, but role model (verb) the part of them.

Speaking to oneself and reflecting helps us see the path we have tracked until now and feel pride and self-compassion. Introspection also helps us not feel upset with the people around us and see everyone as discoveries-in-progress.

With developed stamina of not giving up on obstacles, respecting self and others, we develop the capacity to see the truth, beauty, and goodness in others.

No one in the world is perfect. We all are part of living and breathing space and finding our path forward.

Role modeling opens the pathway to new experiences, ideas, opportunities, and victories for ourselves and those around us.

Yes, the sweet victories are often hard. The REAL role models take the hard out and leave us with precious lessons and fond memories, like Sethi uncle.

People seldom improve when they have no other role model but themselves to copy. ~ Oliver Goldsmith.

The REAL role model knows that role modeling is a verb. They act as the coach, enable us to practice compassion, and see our growth. They train us until we learn what they are role modeling in the most natural ways. Like Sethi Uncle. Like Charles Barkley.

I’m not a role model… Just because I dunk a basketball doesn’t mean I should raise your kids. ~ Charles Barkley.

The feeling of being around them is one of the profound feelings, like finding oneself.

We usually know when we see the person who is role modeling. But there are some observations we can make to discern well:

  • We can look for the people who achieved similar results as what we are going after.
  • We can look for people who struggled with similar problems in their journey as we are facing.

We can try these questions too

  • What kind of person do I want to be?
  • What do I want to achieve, and find the circles of people who have achieved that?
  • Who empowers me with their words, vision, qualities?

Everything starts with knowing what we are looking for and needing empowerment, guidance, direction, and inspiration. Who is your first role model? What does role modeling mean to you?


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