Except for J. Edgar Hoover, and the incredibly dull film that Leo DiCaprio made about his life, I have mostly positive feelings about the FBI. There was that TV show in the sixties, with Efrem Zimbalist Jr. that I wasn’t allowed to watch, but my sisters would sometimes let me sneak down to see when our parents weren’t home. And The X-Files, of course, we all loved Scully and Mulder around here, although I think the show gave our daughter nightmares. She’s a sensitive type.
Recently a young woman I know was accepted into the FBI training program. I met her when she was a baby; I remember when all she wanted for Christmas was a Little Mermaid doll in a wedding dress. Now I keep imagining her rushing into a building with her weapon drawn, like Clarice Starling.
I guess she wants more.
This young woman is a great believer in justice and she needs to take action – step right into the fight. None of this studying the issue or lobbying for it, she wants to get out there and make the right thing happen. This is all very admirable and I think she’ll make a great agent, but I’m uneasy. FBI work is risky. Scully and Mulder got into all kinds of tricky situations.
But there’s not much you can do when an independent young person makes up their mind. They’ll do what they do; it’ll work out or it won’t. I know a few twenty somethings who are on the verge of making big changes in their lives, all of them looking to shake things up, none of them opting for a traditionally safe path. All you can do is pull for them, kind of like Scully is always there for Mulder, no matter how wacky his plan.
F is for FBI – A-Z Blogging Challenge day 6.
(Anyone have thoughts or experience in the FBI? Any tips to share? Any wacky young people in your life who are doing their thing in a surprising way? Let me know in the comments.)
So many more choices today in careers for women. My daughter will be a freshmen this fall majoring in criminal justice crime scene analysis and wants to minor in Russian. It doesn’t come from us. I am a CPA and my husband a computer programmer,
It is interesting, isn’t it, to see the paths they take. I wonder if your daughter picked up some logical thinking skills from her parents, though? And don’t both of you spend time trying to solve puzzles of a sort at work?
I really admire these kids and the way they want to contribute to the world. Thanks for stopping by, Maryann!