This meditation on job loss -- and perspective building -- comes from Jeff Nelligan, author of Four Lessons From My Three Sons: How You Can Raise A Resilient Kid (Amazon Books).

It's The End of the World, by Jeff Nelligan

It was a chilly November Sunday at the local high school with the three Nelligan boys. We’d had contests to see which duo could get 100 consecutive throws of a lacrosse ball without a drop, played the end-zone tackling game, kicked footballs through the uprights using my left shoe as a tee, and ran sprints up and down field. Most fun of all was throwing routes to the boys, even though I have an erratic arm.

The afternoon was winding down and as a regular end to the weekend, I said, “Hey, two more completions and then let’s go get those donuts. Go long, pal,” I said to a kid and then I unleashed a rainbow throw down field.

As the middle kid maneuvered under the long pass, my two other sons were visibly upset. “But Dad,” said the eldest in desperation, “You got fired from your job!”

“Yeah, it’s the end of the world,” I replied automatically, watching my pass sail three feet beyond the middle kid’s out-stretched arms.

Junior was correct -- I had just been fired, one of the casualties of what happens when your candidate finishes on the south side of a national election. It was true adversity (what the kid didn’t even know was the employment scene for my particular skills was awful) and the whole family was increasingly anxious about finances, as evidenced by my son’s comment.

“OK men, let’s have a seat in my office,” I told them and we sprawled out at the 50-yard line.

“Look guys, I’m not going to give you any fairy tales. We all know I’m out of work. But I’ll find a job – you know I’m gonna rally. I have you guys to keep me company and besides, you saw me at QB today – I need to work on my throwing arm. So yeah, it’s the end of the world. Now let’s go get those donuts and when we can’t afford it, I’ll damn well let you know.”

“It’s the end of the world.” What a ridiculous utterance. But while I couldn’t ignore the obvious, I was determined to set an example of calm, lower the temperature big-time, and maybe even get a yuk out of it. Perspective, folks: Everyone has tough times and there are only three choices: Lie to yourself, wallow in self-pity, or drive forward. What good would it serve to overprotect them and not admit to them that dad was kind of on the back of his heels?

Acknowledging my situation with equanimity was the best way to prove a point to the boys and the light, sardonic utterance had an effect. “Yeah, it’s the end of the world" completely deflated the drama balloon. Almost instantly, the boys began repeating the phrase about problems they faced big and small. And I know for a fact that just one of the boys saying the phrase, even with casual grimness, made that kid feel stronger, more independent in confronting a challenge. There wouldn’t be this immediate running to a parent in panic, no days’ long despair. Heck, the old man had accepted his setback and was prepared to rally. My sons realized they could try to do the same thing.

*

Seven years later it was summer and we were at the same field on which I’d proved a second-rate QB but a candid dad. The boys were bigger, faster and stronger, and I was employed (thank God the post-election employment hiatus hadn’t lasted too long).

We were horsing around, doing sprints from goal line to goal line and whereas years ago I could hold my own, now even the youngest was beating the old man. Afterwards, we were lying on the turf, all four Nelligans staring at a clear afternoon sky, exhausted and satisfied. The eldest son observed, “Dad, we’re all faster than you now.”

A lost job, a lost foot race. They’re not the same. But a reflex in accepting failure with grace provides a Dad – and a kid – with the drive to rally.