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Say
You’re Sorry!
by Eileen Silva Kindig
“Long
experience has taught us that a sincere apology, well and simply
stated, clears the air when somebody fails to love, honor and pick up
the dry cleaning.”
We
were three couples out for dinner at a great new restaurant. While
waiting for menus, Tom, a rabid movie buff, began reciting famous
lines from films and asking us to guess their origins. Except for one
Woody Allen flick, we missed them all.
"Okay, here’s
an easy one," he offered. "‘Love means never having to say
you’re sorry.’"
"Love
Story!" we practically shouted. It was almost too easy.
Anyone who’d drawn breath in the early 70s couldn’t possibly have
missed Ali MacGraw’s infamous deathbed words to Ryan O’Neal.
"I never did
understand that," Caroline remarked, unfolding her napkin.
"When you love somebody, you never do anything to make them
unhappy, so you never have to apologize?"
Suzanne shook her
head. "No way. It means you don’t need an apology if you mess
up because you have an understanding that goes beyond words." She
flashed a grin at her husband and added, "It only works in movies
though."
"You can say
that again!" Tom agreed.
The men laughed
conspiratorially, and the movie trivia game abruptly ended. We’d
just stumbled across fertile, but untilled, conversational ground.
Between the six of us
we’ve logged 78 collective years of marriage (Did I mention that we
were very young in the 70s?) and not a one of us has made it through
without plenty of apologies. Long experience has taught us that a
sincere apology, well and simply stated, clears the air when somebody
fails to love, honor and pick up the dry cleaning.
Ingrid
Lawrenz, a
therapist with New Life Resources in Waukesha, Wisconsin, agrees.
"Taking responsibility is a sign of maturity," she says.
"It’s immature to get defensive or tell the other person they
did something worse [than what you did]. Responsible acknowledgment
staves off bitterness and sets the stage for change."
Change, of course, is
the operative word. An apology without at least some semblance of
improved behavior is as vacuous as a socialite’s air kiss. For an
apology to count, you have to express real remorse, want to change and
then follow Nike’s advice and "just do it."
"For years I
would come home from work and hang my suit jacket on the back of the
dining room chair," Tom admitted. "It made Suzanne crazy.
Personally, I thought it was no big deal, but I’d always mumble
‘Sorry.’ Then the next day I’d do it again."
"It was so
passive-aggressive," Suzanne contended. "And the apology
only made it worse because we both knew he didn’t care an
iota."
All too true, Tom
agreed. It wasn’t until a similar situation popped up regarding the
classical CDs he’d begun collecting that he got the point.
"It just
wasn’t important to me whether they all got back in their
cases," Suzanne explained. "It’s not like anything was
happening to them. If they got a little dusty, I dusted them. But Tom
saw it as a violation of the National Treasures."
Her husband readily
agreed. He also noted that Suzanne’s empty apologies had a certain
familiar ring. "I told her I thought it was the dining room chair
revisited. Finally we agreed that if something mattered to the other
person, it mattered. Period. What did it really cost to put a coat in
the closet or to stick a CD in a case? We still slip up, but at least
we try. That’s the big thing."
loose
change
Ah, but what happens when the apologies continue but change never
follows? That, we all agreed, is where things get dicey. For 20-some
years, Eric and I have bickered about my inability to file documents.
Our house looks like a page from Country
Living, yet the closets, drawers, shelves and the top of my desk
would give Martha Stewart the vapors.
"I’m
sorry," I say when I can’t find last year’s income tax
return. "It’s here somewhere. I know it is."
And of course it is
there somewhere, but that’s not the point. The point is that I do
not change. It’s not that I don’t try. I buy folders and plastic
organizing trays. I’ve scanned books about organization. Once I even
stopped writing in the middle of a deadline and watched an
organizational expert on "Oprah." But any effort I make
lasts maybe a week, tops.
"There’s a
certain amount of acceptance and forbearance that goes along with a
relationship," says Lawrenz. "When change doesn’t occur,
we have two choices--either to be angry all the time or to work around
the behavior."
Sometimes, she says,
it’s best to get off the apology train and take charge of what’s
bugging you instead of demanding that your spouse do it. "For
example, if a husband who is perpetually late promises to be home in
time to leave for a party and then doesn’t make it, his wife is
perfectly justified to leave a note saying she waited until the agreed
upon time and then took her own car and will meet him there."
Tom agrees that
apologies are only a beginning. "When you do apologize," he
says, "you better be prepared to deliver the goods. Roses are
nice, but it’s been my experience that actions speak louder than
flowers."
apology
overload
Ok, a heartfelt apology is definitely a good thing, especially when
accompanied by change. But is it possible to apologize too much?
"Yes!"
Caroline answered, punctuating the word with a wave of her fork.
"If an apology goes on too long it turns into a rationalization
or justification of the behavior. Make it short and sweet, and mean
it."
"Yes,"
Caroline’s husband, Garrett, agreed. "I spent the first ten
years of our marriage apologizing for stuff I didn’t even do."
But why? Lawrenz
contends that couples fall into the habit of over-apologizing for many
reasons. Justification of behavior is certainly one of them. But so is
being a pleaser. Very often, she says, a pleaser and a blamer will
team up because it feels normal to both of them. It’s behavior they
saw modeled as children, and they’re comfortable with it. Contrary
to popular belief, men can be pleasers and women can be blamers just
as easily as the other way around.
The problem with
apologizing when you don’t believe you’ve done anything wrong is
that you perpetuate the cycle of blame. While it’s tempting to go
for the quick fix--just say you’re sorry and be done with it--the
under lying issue never gets resolved. There’s also a sense of
control that comes from being a nonstop apologizer, Lawrenz says.
"If one person
carries the shame in the marriage, he or she sometimes feels a kind of
power. They say to themselves, ‘I can make it better. I know I can.
All I have to do is try harder.’"
Another much more
universal reason for over-apologizing is simple misuse of the word
"sorry." Just as we choose the word "love" to
describe what we feel for both our spouse and the curtains in the
Pottery Barn catalog, we say "I’m sorry" both when we
really did something wrong and when we are trying to convey empathy.
We say, "I’m sorry it rained for your company golf outing"
and "I’m sorry you had a bad day at work" when what we
really mean is, "I feel bad that those things happened to
you."
Sounds nit-picky,
perhaps, but, as Lawrenz points out, there is no way we can control
the weather or the outcome of a mate’s work day. All these
unjustified sorrys add up, diluting the effect of the heartfelt,
appropriate apologies that acknowledge times we’ve hurt or
disappointed our partner.
the
quality of mercy
Of course, the natural outcome of any sincere apology is supposed to
be forgiveness. But how long do we have to wait to be forgiven?
"Depends,"
Suzanne said. "If I’m on the phone and accidentally burn
dinner, I think that’s an offense that should be forgiven pretty
quickly compared to, say, if I deliberately told Tom’s mother that
he was thinking of leaving the family business when he’d asked me
not to."
Yes, we all agreed,
the seriousness of the issue is a huge factor, as is the depth of
contrition and the effort to make amends or demonstrate positive
change. But my husband brought up the fact that some personality types
are quicker to get over their anger than others.
"I tend to need
time," he said, "whereas Eileen can be mad as blazes one
minute and happy as a clam five minutes later."
It definitely helps
to know your spouse’s style and try not to take pouting personally.
If you know your mate needs time to regroup, then find something to do
and give him or her some time. When asked about this issue, Lawrenz
quoted from a sign that hangs in the waiting room of her office. It
says, "I am not responsible for how others treat me, how others
treat others or how others treat themselves. But I am responsible for
how I treat others and how I treat myself."
"It rests in the
other person’s soul to forgive," she says. "You can’t
force it. It’s very important to know when you’ve done your
part."
Forgiveness is a
process. Sometimes it comes quickly, sometimes it takes time. And
sometimes it even comes before an apology is offered. The offending
cat--or kid--does something cute, you laugh and poof! the annoyance is
gone. The bottom line, however, is that you should not have to beg or
grovel for mercy if you have responsibly owned up to your failings.
God doesn’t require it, and spouses shouldn’t either.
After the waiter took
our order, Tom hit us with one more trivia question.
"In the movie What’s
Up, Doc? what did Ryan O’Neal say when Barbra Streisand reminded
him that love means never having to say you’re sorry?"
Easy! He said what
any married person would say: "That’s the stupidest thing I
ever heard!"
___________________________
Eileen
Silva Kindig lives in Ohio with her husband, Eric, and her daughter,
Caitlin. She is the author of several books, including
A Simply Beautiful Wedding (InterVarsity
Press).
Reprinted with
permission from Claudia and David Arp at www.marriagealive.com.
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