b”h
There are
more people who won’t talk to me – nay look at me – than I care to
think. Truth be told, even one is too
many. No? Well I have a handful. But not for lack of trying to repair the
breeches. I’ve apologized. In one case, make that fourteen conciliation
attempts. Now it wouldn’t be nice if I
just blurted out and told you everything.
So I’m going to knead these women up into one person. I’ll call her…I’m tempted to say “Pinkellafant”,
akin to the proverbial white elephant we allow to sit on the living room rug
while we peek round its chunky hips and make pleasant conversation. But that doesn’t feel comfortable. You see, I really like her. For all the cold shoulders, I do. So I’ll call her Penelope instead.
We were
friends for over a decade.
On the
evening of our fall out, I needed to get out of the house for a bit. The apartment felt sticky to my soul. “Penelope!” I thought, and off I went. Outside it was even stickier but at least
there was space. On my way across the
street, a cop car idled by and pulled into action just behind my shoulder. The siren hit me with a slap. Maybe I should have paid attention and gone
indoors. But I just kept right on
walking. I knocked on Penny’s door. No answer.
I knocked again. No-one. So I called her on the cell. Often she’d be playing music in the back of
the house and not hear the bell.
“WHAT!” she
barked.
That’s the
way she’d been picking up of late.
Stressed, feeling down. I mostly
let it ride. Just walked straight past
the “what!” right into the relationship, like a guest missing her queue at the
door. But that night was different. I was feeling too vulnerable to push past.
“Uh. It’s okay.
Nothing.”
Silence.
“WHAT!?”
“It’s okay
Penny. Nothing.”
“Why d’you
ring?”
“Listen, I
can’t talk. I just have to go.”
“Don’t hang
up!”
“I’m not. I just have to go.”
“Shimona!!”
“Listen, I
can’t talk. Everythings OK. I have to put the phone down…”
At the
bottom of the brownstone steps lay leftovers from someone’s Wendy’s
dinner. The cops and a crowd were
gathered at the corner. It was too many
lights and sounds for 9:30pm. I sat down
against the low wall outside our building where grass from the garden offered
fragrant relief.
On the
corner, I saw Penny. She was advancing
towards me with the same force she puts out on her evening route round the
park.
“What’s
going on!?” she demanded. Her concern
was spiked with anger.
“I told
you. I’m okay.”
“I came all
the way over.”
“Penny,
now’s not the time.”
Her mix of
anger and concern was shifting with each push to talk and each “not now” I
countered with.
“I left
what I was doing…”
“It’s okay,
you can go back to it. We’ll talk
another time.”
Penny spun
round and walked away. “I’ll call her
from the cab on my way to the airport,” I thought as I watched her go. But she called first. She called minutes after I discovered that
both my driver’s license and passport were misplaced along with $500 to boot!
“Penny, I was
just about to call you. Can’t find my
license. My ride’s waiting
downstairs. I’ll be in the cab in a few
minutes. Will call you then…”
My check,
license and passport were still nowhere to be found and I was relying on some
miracle to get past security at the airport.
Mine was not what one would call an elegant state of mind. As soon as we pulled away from the curb, I
called Penelope. But by the time I
dialed, it was too late. I left numerous
messages that Sunday. And I apologized
when I met her on the street Monday morning.
“I want to
apologize for having hurt you,” I said.
The road to
reconciliation was closed and despite calls, a letter, more calls, an
invitation that she join me for lunch, going over there…well, other than a
hello, or a sentence about nothing squeezed out of air; that was the last we
spoke to each other.
As the
expression goes, “It blows my mind!”
Each time
something like this happens, I find myself confused and in pain. I’ve been told I’ve apologized too soon, that
I needed to “let the bird sit on the egg.”
I’ve apologized too late, in the wrong way, I should try again, or let
it go, or I didn’t apologize at all because my words were “I want to
apologize”. There seems to be an art to
this and it sure is one I don’t have the knack for! I’m left muddling over whether it’s only me,
and how much of this is about her.
Here’s a journal entry from my diary of a few weeks back:
Penny’s
husband advised that I send yet another email. This is where I’m at
though. I’ve spent many years
apologizing to people for things that were not bad or mean acts. They were mistakes or decisions that
others disagreed with…
Maybe
I’m sick? All this running to fix things
up. Does it stem from low self-esteem
and feeling that the other is correct in refusing to forgive me? The relationship has always been more
important to me than who’s right or wrong.
At least that’s what I think. If I’ve shared what hurt me and
inadvertently caused pain, or allowed myself to not be “on” in a dynamic, I
made a mistake yes, but is that something for which I should not be spoken to
for months, years, a decade! Where does
one go when the response to an apology is, “Forget about it!
It’s passed” – when in reality it’s the relationship, not the tension, that
has come to an abrupt halt? If our
relationship was so fragile that I couldn't share my experience of what-is, was
there really one to talk of? The question I ask myself is, “Has it been
holy or unhealthy behavior that has driven me for years to ask Penelope for
forgiveness?”
I’m fully
aware that one need only ask for forgiveness three times. It’s Jewish to forgive. That’s one of our distinguishing traits. The sages tell us that G-d expects us to say,
“It’s okay. Let’s move on.” And to then really do that! I’m also aware that it’s noble to keep on
trying and to go beyond the letter of the law when someone can’t forgive. But is persevering with an
apology ever undesirable.
I need to
figure out the meaning of a story in the Talmud. Here it is:
Rav had a
complaint against a certain butcher.
When the butcher did not come to him on the eve of Yom Kippur to ask his
forgiveness, he said, “I’ll go to him and calm him down.”
Rav Huna
met him on his way there and asked, “Where are you going?”
He replied,
“To soothe the butcher.”
“You will
cause his death. He should be mollifying
you. He will be punished on account of
your degrading yourself.”
But Rav
went anyway. When he arrived, the
butcher was sitting and chopping the head of an animal. Rav stood next to him. The butcher raised his eyes and saw him.
“You are
Abba,” he said with contempt, addressing the sage by his first name. “Go away!
I will have nothing to do with you!”
While he
was chopping the head, a bone jumped off, stuck in his throat, and killed him.
Some story.
Who’s
culpable? Rav or the Butcher. Rav Huna warns the former, “Don’t go. It’s not the time. Your attempt is going to backfire, and with
disastrous consequences.” But he goes anyway. Sooooo, if Penelope was not ready, I should
have “sat on the eggs” – just as her husband suggested! When I rush head-on into an attempt at
resolution and make things worse by forcing the situation, then who’s to
blame? I ponder, and rest much of it on
my shoulders.
But the
butcher had his issues too, to say the least.
It was the eve of Yom Kippur and he was sitting chopping the head of an
animal. Can you see it? Everyone else is dressing in white, going to
the mikva, thinking of mending
things, and there he sits with his butcher’s knife chopping at the head of a
beast. I’m not pointing fingers. I do that too. Obsess over what’s gone wrong and indulge in
grievance that is. But a couple of hours
before the Day of Atonement?! When Rav
walks in, you stand up. You wipe your
hands and say, “I’m sorry.”
Both felt
wronged. Ditto with Penelope and
me. Her sister later told me I’d, “Slammed
the phone down on her and essentially told her to ‘get lost.’” That was her reality. For my part, I felt let down by a friend and
pushed to the limits of comfort when she wasn’t there at the time I needed her;
and then demanded that I open up when she was ready but I wasn’t.
I’m not
playing Rav and putting her in the role of the butcher. Not at all.
I myself am “Rav” and the “butcher.” I pushed too hard for reconciliation. And I’m choking on my own bone. Stuck in my throat, plugging my life force is
the desire that there be peace. It
sounds like a noble ideal but m-a-y-b-e it’s just my ego. As I asked, has my pursuit of peace been
coming from a holy or selfish place?
That’s my question this eve of Yom Kippur. If I send Penelope just one more birthday
gift, just one more bunch of flowers, or email, if I call again, then I run the
risk of standing at the door of her discontent and being party to her gagging
on her own negative feelings.
So I say to
myself, I think this Yom Kippur, I’m going to sit tight. I’m going to listen to Rav Huna and a
different voice within. I’m going to
draw the arrow backwards with the intention of shooting it forwards. My sense is that my yearning for harmony is
largely about wanting to appear to others and myself as a “good person.” Well it’s time to let that go. The Work in this moment is to just do my next
best effort and let-others-live.
So
Penelope, if you’d prefer to hack at a grievance, then go ahead. And if you want to tell me the conflict’s all
over, that there are no pink elephants in the room or gripes on the table, then
so be it. My sense that I can change
your way of being in the world is a delusion.
I want to wear white (at least I’m going to give it a shot) and leave
you be. Let’s do things on your
timetable for a change. This Yom Kippur
I’m going to try spending the day confessing my own sins and not
worrying if you have any. And maybe I’ll
look up from my prayer book after a moment of intense concentration to find you
beside me, and you’ll say, “Shana Tova.”
To you too my friend.
But instead, I ignore the voice of Rav Huna. Call it co-dependency,
call it lack of self-esteem, or call it anything else. I have to ignore the
labels. Because just maybe my impulse to call is a real desire for peace and
it’s hidden inside those cloaks. So I pick up the phone to call “Penelope.” I
find it a more compelling notion than the thought that there’s ever a time not
to say, “I’m sorry.”
p.s. This piece was written a while ago. I'm going to give you the post script on this evening's Kabbalah Class Teleseminar. You can sign up here if you want. In the meantime, climb in to the fray. I'd love to know your thoughts.
This article was originally published on www.TheJewishWoman.org. Thank you Sarah Esther, my dear friend and editor for getting me to put some of what's in my head into print.
p.s. This piece was written a while ago. I'm going to give you the post script on this evening's Kabbalah Class Teleseminar. You can sign up here if you want. In the meantime, climb in to the fray. I'd love to know your thoughts.
This article was originally published on www.TheJewishWoman.org. Thank you Sarah Esther, my dear friend and editor for getting me to put some of what's in my head into print.
1 comment:
Thank you for sharing this. I relate!
What about wanting/needing an apology from someone?
Wondering what to do with the uncomfortable and frustrating feelings around wanting someone to apologize to me for attacking me, or for other terribly destructive actions?
Post a Comment