Garth Heckman
The David Alliance
TDAgiantSlayer@Gmail.com
One of my good friends who is also my racquet ball partner, my tattoo artist and also a non Christian… has a great theory about life and retirement…
German Nobel laureate Heinrich Böll titled Anekdote zur Senkung der Arbeitsmoral ("Anecdote concerning the Lowering of Productivity").
The Story in a Nutshell
- The Meeting: An American investment banker (or businessman) is at a pier in a small coastal village. A fisherman pulls up with a few large tuna. The banker compliments the fish and asks how long it took to catch them.
- The Simple Life: The fisherman says it only took a short while. When asked why he doesn't stay out longer, he says he has enough for his family's needs. He spends the rest of his day sleeping late, playing with his kids, taking naps with his wife, and strolling into the village to play guitar with his friends.
- The "Advice": The banker scoffs, "I have an MBA! I can help you." He outlines a 20-year plan: catch more fish, buy more boats, open a cannery, move to the city, and eventually take the company public to make millions.
Good GK agathos - you did what God intended for you (in a personal sense) No more no less. You fulfilled your duty of service.
It’s often the "invisible" roles—the ones we walk past every day—that keep the world from fraying at the edges. These acts are small in the moment but have a massive cumulative effect on human dignity, safety, and well-being.
Here are a few examples of people whose "small" jobs carry immense weight:
1. The Crossing Guard
On the surface, they just hold a sign and blow a whistle. But in reality, they are the guardians of community safety.
- The Impact: They provide the literal "safe passage" for the next generation. Beyond traffic, they are often the first friendly face a child sees outside their home, offering a sense of security and neighborhood belonging.
2. The Night Shift Janitor (in a Hospital)
While surgeons get the credit for saving lives, the person mopping the floors is the one preventing the next outbreak.
- The Impact: Their meticulousness is the front line against Healthcare-Associated Infections (HAIs). A missed spot isn't just "dirty"—it’s a biological hazard. They provide the sterile foundation that makes modern medicine possible.
- High Stakes, Low Visibility: You only notice them when they don't do their job.
- Repetitive Nature: The impact comes from the discipline of doing the small thing correctly every single time.
- The "Butterfly Effect": A clean floor prevents a fever; a tagged photo saves a legacy; a whistle prevents a tragedy.