Wednesday, February 13, 2013

The Power of an Apology

     Last week on Friday, our class had lab exercises all morning.  I partnered with a person who sometimes rubs me the wrong way with their brusque manner.  Long story short, it wasn't too long before I felt that I was getting my intelligence insulted, that I was being rushed, that I was being viewed as incompetent, and it got me angry.  I let my anger show.  Then, I regretted it.  But no matter how nice I tried to be the rest of lab, I could feel the other person had withdrawn behind a wall, and there was nothing I could do to make the tension go away.
     Well, almost nothing.  It occurred to me during lunch that regardless of how I felt from my interactions with this person, the way I responded was negative and unhelpful.  And I can always apologize for my actions.  And furthermore, I can always forgive others for theirs.  So I resolved to forgive the perceived slight and I apologized to that person when we returned to class.  And I felt a LOT better.  The tension between us melted, and the weight of the negativity that I had been carrying around in my heart vanished.  In its place grew a sense of well-being and equanimity.
     Now this positive sense was not to last long, as an interaction with another classmate shortly thereafter put me once again in a foul mood.  I don't think I reacted angrily in person (as I did that morning), but I sure gave them a big piece of my mind in my imagination.  And inside, the outcome was just as destructive: my equanimity had left me and the ball of tension was back.
     I don't know whether karma has a metaphysical aspect or not, but within an hour something uncanny happened: the second person apologized to me.  And I felt a lot better.  And it made me think that maybe that's how I affected the person from that morning.  And it really drove the point home that apologies are powerful.  It made me think of a day at Tassajara...
     That morning, my friend said something really bitchy to me.  And it really hit me hard; my emotions were really raw almost all summer.  My mind took me for a pretty bad trip... like REALLY bad, really fraught with negativity.  I tried talking to him about it later but it just made things even worse.  And I had to get to work for guest dinner.  But while I was going about my business, he came up to me and offered me a sincere apology, and all that negativity just went *woosh* ... gone, gone, gone really far away... It was like seeing a dark storm far away over the ocean, on the horizon.
     And all this makes me think of a quote I saw in a meme on facebook:

Forgive.  Not because the other deserves forgiveness,
but because you deserve peace.

     Well I think in general most all of us do deserve forgiveness, but I don't want to labor that point.  It's a good reminder that the action of forgiveness, the action of an apology, the harmonious dance between those two complimentary actions, really has the power to put out a furnace of emotion inside us and to let us move on to a calmer, happier state.  So give it a try next time you think of it.  It works for me!

2 comments:

  1. Forgiveness is an act of acceptance

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  2. An individual's behavior tells us more about them than it does us.

    When we ask for forgiveness we tell the person what it is that we have done for which we are asking to be forgiven; we tell them what we believe to have been the effect of our behavior on them; we state that we intend to change our behavior; and, lastly we ask if they can forgive us. We accept whether they can or can't without comment. We move on.

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