
The younger of the two, Lars is interested in knowing when you become a man. Was it the sex? He asks his brother as if this "right of passage" would spell manhood for him. Gus is thrown off and kind of says yeah and kind of says no. Finally Gus is able to put it into words. "Well, it's not like you're one thing or the other, okay? There's still a kid inside but you grow up when you decide to do right, okay, and not what's right for you, what's right for everybody, even when it hurts." When Lars asks for an example, Gus continues. "Like you know, like you don't jerk people around, you know, and you don't cheat on your woman, and you take care of your family, you know, and you admit when you're wrong, or you try to anyways. That's all I can think of, you know - it sounds like it's easy and for some reason it's not."
It's not easy is it? To do the right thing for everybody even when it hurts. It takes most everything we have and then it seems we come up short sometimes. So tell me: How'd you know? That you were a man?
I'm still learning. I still look to you to show me what it means. An elderly neighbor might be able to drive to the hospital just fine when he has to follow the ambulance with his wife in it. No one will probably notice if I don't go see a coworker's father who is in hospice. The young man interning with my company might be just as well off doing busy work as spending time with me doing learning what it is that I really do and belief and hope for. Without you how would I know?