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Lori Borgman: Once upon a time somebody said yes

Lori Borgman, Tribune News Service on

Published in Mom's Advice

"What do you want to be when you grow up?" is a question heard frequently around here with this small herd of grandkids.

Answers range from archaeologist to teacher, bluegrass musician, artist, builder and welder. A 9-year-old grand wants to be a NICU doctor because she's always wanted to be a doctor and loves babies. Win, win!

Of course, all answers are subject to change within five seconds.

I wonder how many people became what they thought they wanted to become when they were children.

At age 5, our youngest said she wanted to become a teacher when she grew up. She never wavered, except for a brief period when she said she wanted to be retired when she grew up.

Our son had an ever-changing list of what he wanted to be: Lego creator, taxidermist, park ranger, sculptor. He's an architect.

My husband knew from the time he held a camera at age 7 that he would be a photojournalist. He was, is and forever will be.

When I was in sixth grade, I was certain I was going to be a gym teacher. Who wouldn't love having recess all day, every day? The fact that I held the girls' pushup record in elementary school for doing 45 "boys pushups" in 54 seconds had a lot to do with that.

Yes, I do still have the medal. Thanks for asking.

I wound up in journalism school completing the writing and photojournalism sequences. I married a fellow photojournalism student from college. The old line is, "We met in the darkroom to see what would develop."

 

Thanks for laughing. Not many under age 45 get that joke.

My mother said our wedding felt like a spot news event. Many of our J-school friends came with cameras.

A few years later I became a mom. Then I became a mom another two times. It's hard to lug camera gear with three little ones hanging around your neck. I switched out the camera bag for a diaper bag and began working from home -- writing.

Eventually, I approached the Indianapolis Star with some sample family life columns. Thirty-three years ago this month, two editors decided to take a chance on an unknown. They said yes. My column was picked up for national distribution a few months later.

I'm forever grateful to a man named Ted Daniels and a fireball named Ruth Holladay who opened the door for me. I've tried to practice that same policy of saying yes when I can.

I hope some people along the way say yes to our grandkids as they explore different opportunities and paths in the future.

If you landed in a good spot a time or two, it's probably because someone along the way said yes.

Why not keep it going? Say yes.


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