When I was growing up, I learned that in order to talk with my father, I needed to learn his language. That meant that since an early age, I was steeped in the rules of corporate leadership and finance that he used in running the family company. You probably have not heard of Kendal Property Management like you are unaware of most small businesses that fill a vital role before the end product.
Dad introduced me to his world with a simple statement: "A corporation is a tyranny." That is, he explained, it has to act for itself first because no one else will. "A tyranny is just a power structure that runs to perpetuate itself, instead of for some social goal. It's not so much that we can't be nice guys," he would say, "but that we have to keep the bottom line in view at all times. Otherwise, the shareholders revolt, they take your company from you, and they'll run it into the ground chasing pipe dreams. There's always some newly-minted idiot who promises the world and then gets a job in France when the ballistic excrement hits the oscillating rotor."
I had to look up some of those words.
My name is Kay Kendal, and as you may have guessed, I work in the same firm. It's not a terribly exciting business, since we're a Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT), a corporation that owns and manages real estate. We negotiate hard for undervalued property, add it to our portfolio, and then our shareholders benefit from the increased value of our shares. The retirement accounts that your mom, dad, brother, or sister have probably include some of our shares, since we have for over forty years kept value rising.
At age 33, I consider myself fortunate to have it all: children, career, lover, and cats. You might notice there's no husband in the picture. Let me back up a minute...
Rule 1: Always identify the bottom line.
"Daddy, Davy's asked me to be his boyfriend."
I looked up at the gruff bear of a man who usually spent his time in the office. When he talked on the phone, sometimes I got scared. He had a loud, powerful voice when he spoke to adults, but when he talked to me, he used his best indoor voice.
"Well, Peaches, what's the bottom line? I mean, what do you get out of it?"
"Um..." I really had no idea. "Everybody at school has a boyfriend, and we can send valentines, and..."
"I think I understand," he said gently. "It's part of growing up. Just make sure you get what you want out of it. Tell him up front: you want the valentines, holding hands, kissing, conversation, whatever. then tell him what he can't do. Make the deal, kid, and you'll not regret it if he decides to change his end of the bargain later on."
I think I scared Davy, and probably all the parents who heard the story facepalmed at the corporate logic, but Daddy won me over a few weeks later when the various "boyfriends" of my friends started shirking on their part of the bargain. Davy stayed true, at least through the end of sixth grade, when his family moved to Brazil to manage a tire company.
Rule 2: Never accept renegotiation.
By the time I made it out of middle school and into ninth grade, having a boyfriend meant something more serious. I had learned by that point to soft-pedal what Daddy (now usually "Dad") had told me. If a boy asked me to go steady with him, I said, "So you mean... for like holding hands between classes, or kissing at the school dance? I can do that, but we'll have to talk if you want more."
Needless to say, my chance of going farther was very limited by this approach, but I was okay with this. My mom's sister, our auntie, had gotten herself into a bad situation where she moved in with some guy and he turned out to be bad person. Then she got pregnant. "Now she's locked in," said Dad. "He renegotiated by getting her knocked up, so she's tied to him."
When I found myself thinking a lot about Michael Hamilton, the boy from two streets over who was developing muscles and wavy blond hair, I asked my mom what I should do. She said something about girls having to be careful about which boys they said "yes" to, and then wandered off when the phone rang. It was one of her church groups that promotes compassionate capitalism in the third world. I looked at her back for awhile, and went to ask my dad.
"So you see a property you want to acquire," he began.
"Daddy!" -- he got the full pet name for being so rude -- "I -- he's not a property! -- it's just -- I want -- I don't know!"
"If two companies decide to merge, what are they?" my dad asked.
"Uh... properties, I suppose," I said.
"So you want a merger with this guy?"
"Dad! That sounds gross!" I said, wrinkling my nose.
"Oh, I know you
teenagers
," he said, mock exaggerating. "Turn my back on you for a minute, you'll be doing a horizontal merger in the back yard!" (It took me two semesters of economics classes to appreciate this humor fully.)
"Well, we're just friends," I said.
"And you want to be boyfriend and girlfriend?" Dad asked.
"Yeah..."
"So you're negotiating that deal, aren't you? Listen, Pumpkin, this sounds horrible, but life is like business. The rules we play by, they just work, because they take into account that most people are simply self-interested. They don't know any better, and when push comes to shove, they fall back on that 'I want' and 'Me first.' They don't think of others or give something back like you do in a loving family. So you assume that this is their motivation and account for it in your planning, and then you never get surprised."
"I think I get it," I said.
"You've got a few things of value. You have your time, your love or affection, and your virginity. They're all worth something."
"Dad!" I sang out in anguish, my cheeks reddening.
"Hear me out, darling," said Dad. "Anything that people want or need has value. You have things of value to give. I know this because I love you more than anything else, but putting aside my love, I can see that you're an intelligent, moral, and beautiful young woman. You have value. Love can overcome the self-interest of humans. When you love someone, you are bonding to them forever, pledging to care about them as much if not more than you care about yourself, like the man we read about in the news who died in a fire saving his family. He loved them more than his own survival."
"Okay, so..." I said, not sure where this was leading.
"So this guy you're tender on, he's got to bring something to the table. If he's not as intelligent, moral, and attractive as you are, then he's the cheaper property and needs to throw something else into the deal. You have to make sure he knows what he's trading for, and where he stands, before you give him anything. You won't be a virgin forever, and you have to hand it to the right guy, preferably in trade for something good. If he's your equal, that means his hand in marriage. If he's not, he better be rich or really good-looking, but I won't stand for you being with any man who isn't quality. I'll beat his ass and my lawyer will get me out of jail."
"He's just a boyfriend!" I was fully red in the face now.
"I know, Sugar, but you have to think of the deal in terms of your long-term strategy. Suppose you get his class ring or whatever, and things are going really well. You want to be able to turn around and transfer boyfriend-status into husband-status, someday, hopefully in the very distant future. But what if he turns out to be a creep, or a cretin, or just a boring disappointment? You want to be able to exit the relationship, like a contract between you, and git yourself on the high road out of town."
"Okay, that makes sense. So what do I do?"