Difficult Teachers

I was catching up on the tv show “The Good Doctor” earlier this week. This is the final season so I guess it’ll be extra dramatic…as if a drama needs more drama. Anyway, a main character was murdered. He was killed in an anti-Semitic, anti-gay hate crime. Being a card-carrying member of the LGBTQ+ community that was difficult to watch…even when it’s not real…probably because it is real. So, Asher died and there was very sad funeral. All the people were crying, and I started crying. Pretty soon I was sobbing…and sobbing.

Have I mentioned that I’ve been having a hard time grieving for my parents? I guess mostly for my mom. I have such mixed-up feelings about her. I’ve been pretty shut down…sad but shut down. I feel confused about grieving for someone I loved so much but was angry at and deeply hurt by. I have unresolved feelings about her and I’m not sure how to resolve them or come to terms with them…or even just how to not allow her to hurt me anymore. I realize she’s gone but I have an excellent memory…and she was a powerful figure in my life.

I read a story about Buddha where he talked about a personal attendant of his who aggravated him and made him angry. His attendant was difficult to deal with. Buddha had the choice to send him away, but he didn’t. He said that it’s the difficult people in our lives who are our best teachers. Those are the people who challenge us to really look at ourselves honestly. My mom was definitely one of those people for me.

Growing up I didn’t want to be like her. I was afraid of her. I think I developed my personality in reaction to her…or reaction against her. I am who I am in large part because of her. I had an idea of who I thought she was, or how I thought she was, and I was determined not to be like her at all.

I never thought I was much like my dad either until my parents lived with us. I have some the the same quirky habits he had. My wife would say annoying not quirky. If he wanted something to eat, he’d tell you, but he’d also tell you exactly how he wanted it. For example, chicken noodle soup in a cup, not a bowl, with a chicken leg in the cup so the soup would warm it up. Or 3 crackers with a small spoon of cheese spread, and 3 olives. My mom got so mad at him for that. I got mad at him for mansplaining to me how to clean up my dogs’ vomit…so I understand the frustration. When my wife offers to make me a sandwich, I give instructions too…very specific instructions. That is why she doesn’t make me sandwiches anymore. I get that.

In a song from the musical, “Wicked” called “For Good.” It’s Elphaba and Glenda singing about their friendship. When they first met, they hated each other…there’s a song called “What Is This Feeling” and what they feel for each other is loathing. But I digress…the change song talks about people coming into our lives for a reason, which we may or may not understand. They come to teach us something. We are led to people who will help us to grow. The women say that because of their friendship they’ve been changed for good…as in permanently. They question whether they’ve been changed for the better but definitely for good. At the end of the song, they say that because they knew each other, they have been changed for the better…and for good.

I became who I am because of my parents. I was definitely changed for good…and I think for the better. There’s an ebb and flow in relationships…all relationships. There are times we’re closer to someone and times we feel more distant. Sometimes we need the proximity and sometimes we need the space. Relationships are constantly changing and constantly in motion. That continuous flow changes us. Rocks are shaped by the movement of water. Water wore through rock over millions of years and as a result we have the Grand Canyon.

People are shaped by movement as well. The movement of negotiating relationships…all of them. Personalities rub against each other and the rough edges of who we are, the things we cling to smooth out over time. They change us for good. We are not the same person we were at the beginning of the relationship. They also change us for the better if we are intentional about our relationships and our interactions. We become more of who we were meant to be…we become more truly who we are.

Some people believe that we chose the life and family we’re born into long before we are ever born. Maybe I did. Maybe I chose all the pain and challenges I was born into. I know that because I knew my parents, as my parents, I was changed for good, and I was changed for the better. I am a better person because of them.

Let’s be real…we are shaped and sculpted by all the relationships we have in our lives. And we are a force that shapes others as well. Let’s lead with love in all of our interactions. Let’s be aware of what we’re doing and how we are impacting the people we come into contact with each day. Let’s love to change people for good, and because they knew us, for better. Because in the end all that matters is how we love people…let’s love them well.

Only If You Let It

We’ve all heard the saying

What doesn’t kill you makes you stronger

You can wear it as a badge of honor

For all you’ve survived

But only if you let it

 

I prefer the saying

What doesn’t kill you makes you kinder

Taking difficulties and transforming them

Into kindness, compassion, gentleness

Growing softer instead of harder

But only if you let it

 

Circumstances don’t sweep into our lives

Bend and twist us

In ways not natural to us

Contorting our form

Forcing us to be remade

Or maybe they do…

You were married, now you’re not

You could walk, now you can’t

You used to remember, now you don’t

You had a house, now it’s gone

Change happens

Whether we like it or not

We don’t control change

It’s as certain as death and taxes, right?

 

Change happens with or without us

We don’t have to be ready

Or agree

Give our permission

When it’s done, it’s done

You can fight it

But it already happened

You’re fighting reality

Shadow boxing as if you see a foe

But it’s just air

We’re the fighter and the opponent

You against you

But only if you let it

 

To become stronger, kinder, anything “er”

We have to allow it

Surrender to a process we’re unsure of

Submit to transformation

Lean into the sharp edges

The places that scare us

The unknown and unwanted

The uninvited guest

The pain in all its forms

 

Now all the possibilities

All the adjectives aren’t helpful

We can become meaner

Nastier

A complainer

Unforgiving

Self-centered

Withholding

Miserly

Detached

Ungrateful

Philophobic

Not stronger or kinder at all

Quite the opposite

But…only if we let it

 

We don’t control change

We do control transformation

When something hurts

We can harden in response

Or we can soften

Become curious about the pain

Invite it in to teach us

Strength and kindness

Whatever else it has to offer

Lean in and allow

There’s so much to learn

So much to transform

But only if we let it

 

We decide

We can become so much more

Or so much less

Whatever we allow

We must let it