SOMEONE TO LOOK UP TO

Some years back,I attended a wedding of a young couple  where the groom’s speech left his father a humbled and incredibly happy and fulfilled man.

The groom had said with great appreciation , “ As far as  I can remember, I ‘ve always wanted to grow up and be like my father. He loves, respects my mother and always consults her about almost everything. He regards her as the most important person in his life and is always ready and willing to do things for her. That’s what I want to be to my dear wife.”

Six years and two sons down the line, he has loved his wife and children and they are all as happy as they can be. Becoming what you want to be is a lifetime process that requires focus and intention. Every single day that dawns, you are becoming that person.

To this young man, his father was his role model: he had values, principles and practices that the son admired and motivated him to be like him.  The psychologists tell us that our parents especially the same-sex parent has the biggest influence on a child’s development and the influence lasts for a lifetime. The groom’s journey to becoming a loving, caring and generous husband had started in his childhood.

Humans actively learn from each other and one Bible proverb tells us that:Iron sharpens iron.

The Oxford Advanced Learner’s dictionary defines a role model as : a person you admire and try to copy.

Parents are the child’s primary role models. When you start school, then the teachers are added on this list followed by any other person in your community whom you consider competent, an achiever and carries herself/himself with respect. The most visible in our environment like athletes and actors tend to drive many people to become the best they can be. The role models  teach us to identify out true potentials and how to strive to make use of them fully.

Among the many are:

Stephen Kiprotich, the winner of the Men’s Marathon during the London 2012 Olympic Games.

Phiona Mutesi , known as the Queen of Katwe, the young international Chess player from the slums of Katwe in Kampala.

The late Rotarian Sam Owori whose passion to serve others helped him leave Uganda a better place than he found it.

Usain Bolt, the 9-time Olympic gold medalist.

Lenin Moreno, the 44th President of Ecuador  who is also known as the “the President in a wheelchair.”

The other side of the coin is that there are also negative role models who demonstrate harmful and disruptive behavior in our communities.

Positive role models are badly needed by all young people as they struggle to develop their own identities. The psychologists tell us that each one of us has the responsibility to act in ways that make the world a better place. We cannot contribute to making the world a better place unless we know who we really are: our strengths and weaknesses and embrace them fully.

There are two ways in which one can find her/his true identity:

  • By finding and following what you love- in this respect one is guided by the positive role models in the world around us. In them we see what we want in our lives and they demonstrate, motivate and inspire us to become what we want to be.
  • By being totally different- These take pride in their uniqueness and their indomitable spirits turns them into Trail Blazers. These include people like Emeritus Professor Josephine Nambooze, Engineer Proscovia Njuki.

Role models help us to find our own identity and strength, open up possibilities for getting what we want in life. They empower us to chart our own career paths. We learn from them and take responsibility for our own lives.

Since childhood I had wanted to care and help people and somehow I felt I could achieve this by becoming a medical doctor. In the late 60’s , when Dr. Alex Sempa  who happened to be an old girl of my school , became the second woman medical doctor after Dr. Josephine Nambooze, my future was more less sealed. I just wanted to be like Dr Sempa. From that time, I trusted myself that if I worked hard and smart, I would become a doctor. Later, when I met her in person, she became my idol. She offered me an insight into the realities of being a doctor. In today’s jargon I would say from that day, I started faking it until I made it.

When I joined the Makerere University Faculty of Medicine, and Dr. Josephine Nambooze was one of our senior lecturers in Public Health, I felt I wanted to live my dream so badly that I worked extremely hard and smart to achieve it.

I grew up in a different world where a child was brought up by the local village. Today’s children operate in their own world where the internet has shrunk the world into a global village. In this Global Village, things  are changing all the time and fast too and the environment is generally harsh. The students have many options and sometimes they are spoilt for choice so they need more guidance than our generation; they need more role models.

We are all ‘Works in Progress’ needing modeling and reshaping.

Adults also need role models to push them from mediocrity and develop into greats. Positive role models are human just like any of us; facing problems and obstacles in life but they strive to overcome them. Observing them and sharing their experiences ignites the same passion towards life.

Whenever we receive motivation, inspiration and mentorship from these role models it gives us the responsibility to become positive role models for the young generation. This is what keeps the conversation going.

By the lives we live and how we behave and carry ourselves in our communities we are influencing many people around us especially the young ones. May we all strive to be positive role models who will leave the world better than we found it.

One last quote: “ One man with courage makes a majority.’’ By Andrew Jackson

Thank you for taking time to visit my Blog and reading this post. Kindly leave a comment about it and feel free to share it with your network of friends. Please keep coming back to read more posts; I post one article every week.

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4 thoughts on “SOMEONE TO LOOK UP TO

  1. Thank your for your writing. We are what we are because of those who had a big impact on our lives during our childhood and in our adult life.

    Like

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