Stay Away from the Churning Waters
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Kerry
Patterson is coauthor of the New York Times bestseller, Crucial Conversations: Tools for Talking When Stakes Are High. more
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When my
best friends and I were kids
growing up along the shores
of Puget Sound, the water
was our favorite playground.
It’s a good thing, because
we certainly had a lot of
it. It fell from the sky in
unrelenting sheets of cold
misery until it eventually
gathered about us in a giant
recreational hodgepodge of
lakes, streams, and inlets.
Hardly a summer day passed
that we didn’t find a way to
float in it.
By age
fourteen we had widened our
tastes from floating safely
in placid lagoons to using
the water as a thrill
park—particularly the water
found underneath the docks.
This was back in the early
sixties when fish canneries
still spewed a red stream of
cast-off salmon heads and
slimy innards straight into
the bay. Sharks gathered at
the entry point of the
disgusting flow in a feeding
frenzy of pink froth, teeth,
and terror.
Few
people have ever seen a
sight such as the one found
outside those canneries. Few
people would want to see
such a sight. Unless, of
course, you were fourteen
years old and pretty much
lived for the chance of
throwing yourself smack dab
in the middle of just such a
biological curiosity. Which
is exactly what we did. My
buddies and I took one look
at the tangle of teeth and
fins and knew that we had to
find a way to study it up
close.
After
scrounging logs and really
thick string for a couple of
days, our intrepid gang
cobbled together a raft for
just such idiotic purposes.
We christened our highly
unstable craft “Death on a
Log” and then promptly
paddled straight to the
heart of the toothy
treasure. It’s hard to
describe the sheer visceral
pleasure of gliding into a
foaming pool of frenzied
sharks. There we were,
virtually surrounded by a
pulsating mass of fins,
teeth, and
eyeballs—completely
swallowed up by the roar of
gushing entrails. It was
fourteen-year-old heaven.
At
first, we just stood there,
triumphantly ensconced in
the epicenter of this
ecological nightmare,
drawing strength from the
electric energy of the
moment. And then, one part
adrenaline, two parts
testosterone, and ten parts
boy took over. First, we
smacked the throbbing mass
with our paddles. Take that
you nasty sharks! Smack!
Smack! Smack! Then we poked
at the tangle with assorted
sticks. Poke. Poke. Poke. We
capped off the experience
with a series of whoops and
grins—shouting and gyrating
on the very edge of sanity.
It was a perfect teenage
moment. And then Frank
stepped over the edge and
tumbled into the churning
waters.
Movies
generally show such
life-threatening moments in
slow motion. That’s because
in real life they happen in
slow motion. When Frank
fell, it was as if time had
slowed to one-tenth its
normal pace. The tumble took
forever. First, Frank’s left
leg slipped off the edge.
Then his body hung in space
between the raft and death
for about an hour—until
death took the upper hand.
As we stood, frozen to the
raft, Frank plunged into the
roiling sea. Only he didn’t
really plunge. He hung in a
grotesque, cartoon-like
position above the danger
below until he finally
lurched toward the
outstretched hands of his
friends. He exerted just
enough strength to propel
his body to a spot six
inches from the raft—except
for the back of his head,
which found the outside log
with a sickening thud. He
was out like a light,
floating in a boil of
ichthyoidal rage.
Tom,
closest to the edge of the
raft, jumped into the
frenetic foam without so
much as a second’s
hesitation. It was stunning
to watch him leap straight
into the jaws of death (no
metaphor here, these were
the jaws of death). Okay,
maybe the Puget Sound sharks
weren’t thirty-foot great
whites. Maybe they were only
four to six feet long, but
their rows of teeth were
deadly enough and the danger
was heart stopping. Somehow
Tom managed to pull himself
and Frank back onto the
raft, but not before both
had received several nasty
bites. For five minutes we
huddled together in a mist
of foam, blood, fear, and
gratitude. Then we slowly
made our way back to shore.
For
those of you who have never
been a fourteen-year-old boy
who has just escaped death
by a whisker, you might
think that we then gleefully
returned home. We didn’t.
Instead, we did what we
always did under such
ridiculous circumstances. We
struggled to come up with a
cover story. We couldn’t
tell our moms that Frank and
Tom had fallen into a
whirlpool of sharks. They
would have asked questions
about where the sharks came
from and how we happened to
be so close to them in the
first place. So we made up a
whopper, sneaked into
Frank’s house, and
administered to the wounded.
I
eventually told the heroic
version of the shark story
some twenty years later,
while standing around a
campfire at a father-and-son
outing. By the time I was
through, the crowd was ready
to erect a statue in honor
of Tom’s valor. In fact, I
made all of us kids out to
be a fanciful combination of
swarthy adventurer and
swashbuckling daredevil.
Then, as I noted my own
boys’ reactions (they hung
on my every word), I
reversed course. With time
and the advantage of
perspective, I took to
adding the following
editorial comments whenever
I told the story anew.
Many
acts of modern-day heroism
are immediately preceded by
acts of utter
insanity—requiring the very
acts of heroism that we’re
bragging about in the first
place. If we hadn’t been so
completely insane as to
paddle straight into the
middle of death and then
jump and hoot and slip
around until one of us fell
in, we wouldn’t have needed
a hero. Hero stories persist
because it’s not nearly as
fun to avoid death by five
hundred yards as it is to
climb into the mouth of the
grim reaper himself and
then, at the very last
second, scamper out in a
flamboyant feat of
derring-do. Now that’s
entertainment.
Fortunately, when you’re
talking to your own
children, reason prevails.
You encourage your own
precious offspring to avoid
danger by a safe margin.
With them, you give crystal
clear directions: You can go
into the water. No problem
there. Just don’t swim into
the churning waters. In
fact, don’t go near the
churning waters. Stay a full
five hundred yards away from
the churning waters.
What
Does It Mean to Us?
I tell
this story because it
reminds me of what typically
happens during training
sessions when the topic
turns to diversity and
harassment. As class members
discuss the always amazing
and sometimes moronic things
employees have been known
to do to one another, a
certain percentage always
asks what they can get away
with. They want to know how
far they can go. Mostly it’s
because they’re trying to
understand the boundaries.
Nobody wants to cut off
human interaction in its
entirety. A huge part of
their life unfolds at work
every day. Everyone wants to
go into the water. They are
going to talk with others.
That’s a given. They are
going to tell jokes, flirt,
and tease. They just want to
know where the safe waters
end.
After
the tenth person has asked
if she can still tell blonde
jokes (after all, blondes
aren’t protected by law), or
if he can tell a woman at
work how good she looks in a
sweater (because it’s about
the sweater and not her
body), I’m reminded of the
sharks. There are some
topics and actions that are
obviously dangerous. They’re
a veritable whirlpool of
potential hazards. We all
know what they are.
For
example, if you start
telling jokes that make fun
of someone’s race or belief,
you’re in dangerous water.
If you’re attracted to
someone who you’d like to
date but who has shown you
no interest (save for an
occasional “bug off”), and
you think to yourself,
“Maybe she’s just teasing. I
think I’ll keep after her
until I wear her down and
she finally agrees to go out
with me,” you’re in
dangerous water. If a
coworker has annoyed you and
you’re trying to come up
with clever ways to get
even, you’re in dangerous
water.
What
did we learn from the shark
experience? To stay five
hundred yards away from all
things dangerous. So here’s
what I tell anyone who asks:
Don’t engage in socially
risky activity. It’s that
simple. Don’t tell blonde
jokes. Sure, you might get
the occasional laugh, but
there’s a good chance that
you’ll offend someone too.
Don’t start a sentence with,
“You know the trouble with
women . . .” or “You know
the trouble with men. . .”
You may think that women or
men have certain
characteristics in common.
However, throwing all of
them into one big gender
bundle (and a negative one
at that) is bound to offend
people who prefer to be
viewed as individuals (i.e.,
most sentient beings). If
you start a discussion with,
“I know this might offend
someone, but . . .” you’re
in dangerous water. Warning
people up front doesn’t
lessen the risk. Quite the
opposite. Warning others is
akin to announcing, “Hey
everybody, I’m about to say
something really offensive,
insensitive, and stupid, so
listen up.”
Experience has taught me that when we start making exceptions to safety rules,
we eventually run risks—and why run a risk when it comes
to our lives? It’s just not
worth it. Social issues are
no different. The stakes are
similarly high, so why take
risks when there’s so little
to be gained? Here’s the
punch line: If you know what
you’re about to do is risky,
then don’t do it. Stay five
hundred yards away from all
things dangerous. Stay away
from the churning waters.

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