Sunday, January 27, 2013

First the worst: the secret to success



We are brought up in a society that makes us believe that in order to be successful, we must be strong leaders and wealthy consumers. The American dream: You’re happily married, with three beautiful children and a dog. You’ve got one or two fancy cars, a big house, and a stable job. As a college student pursuing majors in occupational therapy (what?) and East Asian languages and cultures (what can you do with that?), I am constantly bombarded with messages that claim that they know the secret to success. What’s the secret, you ask? Working hard. That’s what I’ve always been told. Get A’s in your studies and go to med school. Find rich people, network and make connections. Work hard and you’ll get what you deserve. 

That’s what I hear everywhere else. And then I go to church and the Gospel reading is about parable of the workers in the vineyard (Mt 20: 1-16). The owner of the vineyard hired laborers throughout the day and paid them all the same usual daily wage at the end, a concept which challenged me greatly. If I were one of those laborers who had been working there since dawn, I’d be grumbling too! Yet the owner says, “Are you envious because I am generous?” The rest of society pushes me to come in first place, yet this passage tells me that “the last will be first and the first will be last.” 

So where is the balance? To this day, I am still constantly torn between what the world says is success and what the Church teaches is success, and I don’t think this contradiction will be resolved anytime soon. It’s frustrating. Seriously, what do you want from me? Sometimes I wonder if the middle “average” path is the easiest way to go. If monetary gains, material wealth, and social status are fleeting, then where do we put our worth and identification of success with? Is it a sin for me to feel happy to get a paycheck?

John M. Breen, a professor at Loyola Marymount University, presents an alternate approach to success in his article “Catholic Lawyer and the Meaning of ‘Success’” in the Catholic Lawyer journal. In this article, he highlights the importance of the motivation behind wealth and monetary success. Success in our world may be measured quantitatively by how much money is in your bank account. However, Breen elaborates that the motivation and the drive that leads to success should not be greed or selfishness, but rather the perfect love as exemplified by Jesus Christ. Yes, big bucks can make a difference in your life, but what matters more is how you have reached out to others and transformed their lives for the better through the work you do. 

The late Pope John Paul II stated in the encyclical letter Centisimus annus, that the desire to be better off only becomes wrong when you define being better off as “having” rather than “being.” Perhaps the success that really counts is not about your salary, connections, or grades. Maybe instead it’s about being loving and generous, like the owner in the vineyard, despite the criticisms. The Church encourages us to focus on who you are, how you love and sacrifice for others, instead of what you have. The world tells me to work hard, but even having achieved the American dream, it only remains a false representation of success. It seems rather risky to invest in something intangible like loving others, but when one truly offers one’s own life as a gift, it brings out the good and the talents of others. That, I personally find, is a much more enduring  form of success to strive for and to celebrate when it is achieved.

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