Dear Logan,
I hardly know where to begin. I have written and rewritten this letter to you half a dozen times over the last three months. Each time, I cry a little more — tears of joy of course— because the man I look up to was once my little boy. Words never seem to fail me. But this time there is so much I want to say, and I fear so little space to say it in.
This week, you received the dreaded email informing you that due to the coronavirus pandemic, classes will not start as planned on campus this fall. Instead, the first semester of your freshman year will be at home – not at Lafayette in Pennsylvania. I know how frustrating this is for you — and no doubt, for many of your classmates across the nation who are experiencing the same thing.
This has been such an incredibly uncertain and difficult time as you all try to get on with your lives and your education. But I promise you, you’ll be better for it. As I told you on our drive together, Logan, distance learning and communication is how we now operate in the business world, whether through email, phone calls, or Zoom. In the business world, we learn in real-time and lean on friends, colleagues and mentors when we need help or guidance. Now, you too, will be challenged to do the same. I have no doubt it will make you a more curious, independent learner and require you to ask for help in ways you never expected — I hope teaching you invaluable lessons in growth and humility in the process.
I can’t tell you that everything will be ideal and “back to normal” after this semester, or the next, or the next. What I can tell you is that the best things in life happen when you least expect them. In living through the pandemic, you have had the privilege of witnessing the best and the worst of human behavior: on the one hand, the heroism of first-responders, healthcare providers, and on the other hand. . . well, at times, the occasional sad and cynical triumph of politics over science and good sense. For good and bad, you have been witness to history.
But you have choices in life. We all do. We can dwell on what doesn’t work and get tripped up in second-guessing and regrets. Or we can march forward building a new tomorrow and a more perfect world. There have been screw-ups over the last few months even in our home: mornings where there was nothing for breakfast in the house, and you stared at an empty refrigerator while mom was on a Zoom call discussing food-insecurity and our organization’s emergency school-feeding fund with partners and supporters. The irony of that isn’t lost on me.
RELATED: As the debate heats up around reopening schools, 5 critical pieces of advice for parents
But there are some constants in life, things that the pandemic and the resulting fallout to all our lives doesn’t change. I’ll call them “Mom-isms!” I hope they serve you the same way they have served me and give you the early guidance you need to thrive in the years ahead.
1. Covet relationships. Value them. Cultivate them. Know when to lean on friends, teachers and family members, and when someone else’s silence is a call for help.
2. If you say you’re going to do something, do it. End of story. A promise made is a debt incurred.
3. Pay forward every favor, good deed, or piece of luck you’re fortunate enough to experience. An act of kindness can change someone’s life, and that is a kind of superpower we all have within us.
4. Surround yourself with people who are smarter than you are.
5. Laughter really is the best medicine. So find people in your life who make you smile – and keep them there.
6. Try to enjoy the “process,” as much as you do the end result. Without the journey the finish line is far less meaningful.
7. Always listen before you speak – or better yet, listen instead of speaking. Silence is both an art form and a sign of confidence.









