"Hero" is an overused word these days. The entire concept has,
unfortunately, become devalued to the point of being nearly
meaningless. No sports figure is a "hero" for being a sports figure.
Not everyone who serves in the armed forces is a hero either, no matter
how much we may value their service. No heroes are rare by definition.
Which therefore should cause me to question using it in this post, where
perhaps the word "mentor" would be better, but I just don't like the
word, so hero it is.
So here is the topic. Do you have personal heroes? That is, heroes in
your occupation, or even your life, that you hold up as a standard?
The reason I've started thinking of this is that, as I recently noted
here, is that I've been doing a little reading on some of the State's
Founding Fathers, and I'm not too sure I like them. It leads me to
question why that is. A lot of them occupied the same professions as I
do, some of them occupying both professions I do, and yet I can't find myself
really liking them, even though I'd like to. Perhaps that reflects s
deficit of the right kind of ambition on my part. Cal Thomas recently
quoted a famous person (I've forgotten who) to the effect that ambition
was the "road" to success. Perhaps it is, but I think that perhaps that
fails to acknowledge that some types of ambition lead to pretty rocky, rural,
roads. Thomas quoted those for the proposition that anyone could
become financially independent if they had ambition and were willing to
work hard. Perhaps.
Anyhow, what this has caused me to ponder is people in my fields who I
admire as examples. Surely, I thought, I'd be able to find some and
hold them up as historical standards. I'm having a tough time of it, to
some degree, however.
With law and lawyers I'm finding it quite difficult. Maybe that's
because the type of people I might admire just don't fit well into the
mold of lawyers we might know. In thinking on it, I can really only
think of a few examples. Abraham Lincoln is one, but I probably admire
him more for other reasons than his career as a lawyer. John Adams is
perhaps another, as a man who was able to mix a career as a farmer with
that of a lawyer. Indeed Adams is probably the only example I can
really hold up. There are other lawyers I can think of, but they did
not distinguish themselves as such. John J. Pershing had a law degree,
but of course he never practiced law. Thomas Jefferson I somewhat
admire, but in terms of his legal practice, which was slight, he might
actually define the wondering mind nature of many who enter the field,
and he never actually liked the law, and didn't have to to practice due
to his circumstances.
Of course, if I go way back, I can think of a few, but they are all
highly admirable for a variety of other reasons. St. Thomas More is the
greatest lawyer of all time, but because of his dedication to the
Truth. He would not be an example of worldly success, as his dedication
to the Truth and Faith cost him his life. That tends to be the sort
of example I really admire, but obviously that's not going to really
inspire me while writing a brief. St. Augustine is another, but he fits
in to a whole hosts of such examples of bright, highly intelligent men
of Faith who were lawyers, and left the law due to their Faith. The
same talents that they had as lawyers were useful in their subsequent
careers, but their success was due to their following their calling.
Some people I know will sometimes mention individual lawyer they know.
Old well respected lawyers, old judges, etc. I guess those provide good
personal examples, but I can't really think of any myself.
Agriculture is a bit different. I can think of lots of farmers and
ranchers, some of whom I know, and some who were historical figures,
that I really admire. But here too, I can't use them for personal
inspiration at my desk, as they didn't work at desks. If I ponder them
I'm going to want to go outside, and I have indoor work to do that I
cannot avoid.
I suppose in this later category I'd note Wendell Berry, who is a farmer
and an English professor, a poet and an author. I do admire his
writings. But I'd note here too that Berrys' philosophy is the
antithesis of what most hold up as a philosophy of success.
I don't know where any of this leads to. Perhaps this. Do you have any personal heroes?