This week I was reminded of a wonderful Dutch saying my
God-father taught me, which is “the tallest trees catch the most wind”. My God-father is also my uncle and one of my
most favourite, favourite people in the world.
He is also jolly clever and valued for his business brain. As a result of this cleverness, he was
working on a project in Holland years ago, and we spent a weekend together
there, with my aunt too. I will somehow
never forget this particular conversation, and this week, I was happy about
that.
The three of us were sitting on a canal boat drinking tea in
Delft, Holland at the height of summer. My
uncle, Dominic, and I were chatting about business matters (one of the things I
love to talk about – pretending of course that I know what it is I am talking about),
and I was telling him how much criticism a high profile businessman was
receiving at the time in Johannesburg, and how I didn’t understand it. Although my uncle has lived outside of Africa
for decades, he knew this chap and was listening with interest as I was
defending an individual who I felt was being unfairly burnt at the business
stake. He said very casually, “well my
darling, there is a saying here in Holland that is ‘The tallest trees catch the
most wind’ and that is what is happening here”.
I asked him to explain to me what he meant, and he did. Dominic said, quite simply, that when an
individual achieves great things, makes a difference or indeed, “stands out and
above” the rest, like the proverbial tallest tree, they “catch the most wind”
i.e. they are the most challenged, the most criticized, the most judged. He agreed with me that it is not fair, but he
told me that whether I like it or not, it is human nature.
We hear that people criticise us to bring us down, or judge
us because of their own “stuff” and I guess this was true of this individual
years ago, and at some time in all of our lives, it will be true for us
too. We will be knocked down, we will be
caught by the wind that is criticism, and unkindness, and disapproval.
What was also explained to me that day is that it takes a
lot for those tall trees to be uprooted.
They may sway and twist in the wind, but they remain rooted where they
are and remain true to their nature – their leaves fall when they are supposed
to and new growth arrives on time too – wind or not.
Dominic said to me that even when the time comes when I catch
the winds of criticism, no matter what happens, I must remain rooted, I must
remain true to myself and realise a wonderful thing has happened, because “only
the tallest trees catch the most wind”.
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