HCBA Lawyer Magazine Vol. 28, No. 3 | Page 5

E D I T O R ’ S M E S S A G E E d C o m e y - L a w C l e r k t o U. S . B a n k r u p t c y Ju d g e M i c h a e l G. Wi l l i a m s o n resolving to Make a Difference even two hours helping others can make all the difference in the world. S ometimes I sit around, usually at the start of the New Year, and envision how different I’d be if I actually followed through on my New Year’s resolutions. In the past, my New Year’s resolutions were the same every year: work out more, read more about history, learn a foreign language, etc. The resolutions always start out overly ambitious. It’s not enough to work out more; I’m going to work out every day. Read more? How about a book a week. And I don’t see why I can’t be fluent in a foreign language by the end of the year. If I had come even remotely close to following through on those resolutions over the years, I’d be a hyperpolyglot with four percent bodyfat and an encyclopedic knowledge of history by now. Alas, every year would be the same. I’d adjust my resolutions almost as soon as I made them. After missing the first workout, working out every day becomes working out twice a week. After the first week, reading a book a week becomes a book a month. And after a month of spending no time on a foreign language, my timeline for fluency gets pushed back from one year to two years. By year end, working out more consists of taking the stairs in the parking garage at work; my Kindle has become a graveyard where books I’ve bought but haven’t read go to die; and I remain astonished that my six-year-old daughter is more fluent in Spanish than I am. So I’ve been determined to find a way to stick to my New Year’s resolutions. Two years ago, at my wife’s © Can Stock Photo / PixelsAway JAN - FEB 2018 | HCBA LAWYER suggestion, I started picking resolutions that were about improving someone else rather than myself. As I sat down to edit this issue of the Lawyer, I came across some great ideas for resolutions that would help others. Two in particular caught my eye. As part of his effort to recognize lawyers who “pay their rent to society,” Gordon Hill highlights in his President’s Message the extraordinary work being done by Carol LoCicero and Bob Kline, who’ve collected and delivered tens of thousands of meals to feed hungry children for their organization, End 68 Hours of Hunger. All it takes is an hour or two a week for volunteers to help pack or deliver food. Judge Miriam Valkenburg also has an article on the 10th Annual HCBA 5k Pro Bono River Run. In it, Judge Valkenburg challenges lawyers to take on just one pro bono case. So this year, I’m resolving to volunteer at End 68 Hours of Hunger and to take on pro bono work. By the way, in case you were wondering, focusing my resolutions on others rather than myself has helped me do a better job of sticking to them, at least marginally. Of course, I suspect that has more to do with me setting the bar so low before. Here’s the beauty of it, though. Doing a little exercise here or there, or reading a chapter or two out of a book, or occasionally doing some exercises on Rosetta Stone (which I’m still paying $7/month for) realistically speaking is meaningless. But even two hours helping others can make all the difference in the world. Best wishes for a joyful New Year! 3