When I was a kid in Minnesota, watermelon was a
delicacy. One of my father's buddies, Bernie, was a
prosperous fruit-and-vegetable wholesaler, who operated a
warehouse in St. Paul.
Every summer, when the first watermelons rolled in,
Bernie would call. Dad and I would go to Bernie's warehouse
and take up our positions. We'd sit on the edge of the dock,
feet dangling, and lean over, minimizing the volume of juice
we were about to spill on ourselves.
Bernie would take his machete, crack our first
watermelon, hand us both a big piece and sit down next to
us. Then we'd bury our faces in watermelon, eating only the
heart - the reddest, juiciest, firmest, most seed-free, most
perfect part - and throw away the rest.
Bernie was my father's idea of a rich man. I always
thought it was because he was such a successful businessman.
Years later, I realized that what my father admired about
Bernie's wealth was less its substance than its application.
Bernie knew how to stop working, get together with friends
and eat only the heart of the watermelon.
What I learned from Bernie is that being rich is a
state of mind. Some of us, no matter how much money we have,
will never be free enough to eat only the heart of the
watermelon. Others are rich without ever being more than a
paycheck ahead.
If you don't take the time to dangle your feet over the
dock and chomp into life's small pleasures, your career is
probably overwhelming your life.
For many years, I forgot that lesson I'd learned as a
kid on the loading dock. I was too busy making all the money
I could.
Well, I've relearned it. I hope I have time left to
enjoy the accomplishments of others and to take pleasure in
the day. That's the heart of the watermelon. I have learned
again to throw the rest away.
Finally, I am rich.