Valor.
The Mancave definition
is “Great strength that enables a man to encounter danger with courage, as in
battle.”
Are you a man of
valor? Am I?
I recently watched the
movie, Act of Valor, starring real-life Navy Seals depicting a
fictional storyline based on actual events. Part of the story is told through
the voice of Chief Dan as he reads a letter he wrote to the unborn son of his
best friend and comrade, who died in battle.
Below is part of the
letter:
Before my father died, he said the worst thing about growing old was
that other men stop seeing you as dangerous...I've always remembered that how
being dangerous was sacred, a badge of honor. You live your life by a code. An
ethos, every man does…Your father’s grandfather gave up his life flying a B24
in WWII; he kept the liberator aloft just long enough for everyone to jump and
then he went down with the plane. That's the blood coursing in your veins…
Before your father
died he asked me to give you this poem by Chief Tecumseh. I told him I'd fold
it into a paper airplane and in a way...I guess that's what I'm doing, sailing
it from him to you…
(final
stanza) “When it comes your time to die, be not like those whose hearts
are filled with the fear of death, so that when their time comes
they weep and pray for a little more time to live their lives over
again in a different way. Sing your death song and die like a hero going home.”
So what is a man of
valor? Is it only attainable for fierce, dangerous
warriors that fight in gun battles in the name of freedom and honor? If so, I
am in trouble. I engage in battles at my work as well, but rather than have to
maneuver around the chaos of rapid fire machine guns, I dodge boogers and
hormones…literally. In the eighth grade, some kids seem like they graduated
kindergarten the day before entering my classroom, while others try to dress
and act like they are interviewing for the next opening on Jersey Shore.
There are times when I
feel like I am swimming upstream in a river that is going nowhere, making no
impact in a battleground that doesn’t exist. Those are the days I don’t feel
like a dangerous man of valor at work.
The same kind of
feeling happens at times at home. When my wife complains that my toenails and
waistline are expanding to undesirable levels, my daughter has her 17th
temper tantrum before we sit down to breakfast, and my son’s butt is stained
purple from yesterday’s blueberries, I don’t feel very dangerous. But if there
is one group of people that needs me to be a man of valor, it is my family. My
wife needs a husband that is dangerously in love with her. My daughter and son
need to see a daddy that is dangerously in love with their mommy. They need a
daddy that will skip nights out watching basketball with the guys to be home
reading Bible stories and Curious George.
The blood coursing in
my veins needs to show my son how to be a strong man, husband, father. It needs
to show my daughter what she deserves from her future husband. It needs to show
my wife she is still the princess she was on our wedding day, leading her to
uncover all life’s beauty as she follows me down our path.
At the end of life, a
man of valor will not beg for more time and extra chances to do things better.
He should sing like a hero going home, knowing that he prevailed in the battle
he was meant to fight.
Am I a man of valor?
Lives depend on it.
Am I a man of valor?
Lives depend on it.