So grateful for another season that Anna got to play ultimate frisbee
where the team spirit and camaraderie really are impressive.
It is unlike any other sport I've seen!
a post below from "Hands Free Mama" that I will be reading to the kids at dinner tonight
because it is so full of hope and perspective:
"I can vividly remember certain
times in my life when I have been deeply hurt, shamed, excluded, or violated by
someone.
I clearly remember wanting the
violators to understand the pain they caused, offer me a genuine apology, and
hear them pledge to never do it to anyone else.
That happened once.
All the other times, there was
either no resolution or no remorse. I walked away from the painful experiences
feeling angry, conflicted, hopeless, and confused.
When my daughters began coming to
me with their own hurtful experiences, I felt a familiar wave of unsettledness.
In a few cases, there was somewhat of a resolution. But most of time,
resolution did not happen. The person who inflicted the pain was either unremorseful,
unaware, or unchanged. My children’s hurt was their hurt to bear and to deal
with as best they could. As we talked through it, I wondered, is this it? Is
this all we can do when someone hurts us?
Then last spring, I came across a
powerful perspective offered by renowned author and speaker for young people, Kari Kampakis.
Kari wrote:
“Everyone in your life serves a
purpose. Everyone has something to teach you.
And while people who are kind and
friendly help teach you who you do want to be, those who are not kind
and friendly teach you who you don’t want to be.
So when you encounter someone who
hurts your feelings, lean into that feeling. Ask yourself what they did to make
you feel that way. Was it the words they chose? Their tone? The way they picked
favorites and then ignored everyone else?
Whatever they did, make a pledge.
Promise yourself that you’ll never treat anyone the way they treated you. This
is how you become a kinder and more compassionate person. This is how you learn
from their mistakes.
And when you meet someone you
really like, lean into that feeling, too. Ask yourself what they did to make
you feel so good. Then make a pledge to yourself to be more like them. This is
also how you become a kinder and more compassionate person.
Regardless of how anyone treats
you, you stand to benefit. While some people teach you who you do want to be,
others teach you who you don’t want to be. And it’s the people who teach you
who you don’t want to be that provide some of the most lasting and memorable
lessons on social graces, human dignity, and the importance of acting with
integrity.”
That’s it! I thought hopefully.
This empowering perspective was the resolution I’d been searching for all these
years. Kari’s perspective—that even hurtful, unresolved experiences can feel
resolved by viewing them as a learning experience—was both empowering and
liberating.
Just when you think there isn’t
anything you can do, there is.
That hurtful person can teach you
how to be a more compassionate human being who someday makes someone else’s
life better with that knowledge.
I knew I’d be using Kari’s wisdom
in my own life and with my daughters – little did I know the very day I read
her words, they would be needed.
As we were driving home from swim
team practice, my younger daughter, who was nine at the time, said something
happened at school that made her very sad. She has given me permission to
share.
When she told her friend she was
going to have to have surgery, the friend immediately went into worse surgeries
people she knew have had.
My daughter further explained
that each time she shares either bad news or good news with this friend, she
treats it like a competition and tries to “outdo” my daughter.
Talking to her friend about how
her response made her feel only caused her friend to become defensive and
angry.
“She walked away mad, Mama,” she
said sadly.
After talking for a few minutes
about what that response says about her friend’s own insecurities and how one
friend typically can’t meet all our needs, I had something empowering to offer.
“Take a moment and envision this
person as a teacher. While she may seem like an unlikely teacher or an
unqualified one, see this person as someone here to teach you something. What
did she teach you today?”
My daughter thought for a moment.
Then she said, “To be happy for other people’s good news and not be jealous.
And to give comfort when people tell me they are scared or when they share
bad news.”
“Yes, exactly!” I said. “I’m very
sorry you had that experience today. It doesn’t sound like that friend is going
to change anytime soon, but all hope it not lost because you can be the change!
Now when someone tells you something bad or good going on in his or her life,
you can respond with the compassion you would have liked to receive today.”
I told her it might be a good
idea to make a pledge of what she’s going to do, as Kari mentioned in her
article. When we got home, we made a pledge book. We both agreed to
use it whenever an unlikely teacher taught us something through a hurtful
experience.
Some of our pledges include:
I pledge to try and remember
to ask others, “how are doing?” and really listen.
I pledge to be honest.
I pledge to pick up guests on
time when they travel a long way.
I pledge to be nice to people who
are lost.
I pledge never to say, “You owe
me,” after I do something nice for someone.
I pledge to support someone’s
dream no matter how farfetched it is.
I pledge not to judge someone
based on appearance.
I pledge to give my full
attention when someone is talking to me.
I pledge to consider who I might
be excluding.
I pledge not to dismiss someone’s
feelings just because I deal with things differently.
I pledge not to talk about
someone’s weight.
I pledge not to jump to
conclusions.
I pledge to make it easy for
people to be themselves around me.
Our pledge book has been very
cathartic for us. Taking hurts and offenses and turning them into positive
intentions feels empowering and healing. I even revisited some of my unresolved
past hurts and made them into pledges. I was surprised at the relief and
closure that mere action brought to my soul.
But I must say, the pledge book
has been most helpful to us right now, in a time of great divisiveness and pain
in our country. Recently, my daughter’s pledge reflected what I have been
seeing amongst some adults. She gave me permission to share.
I pledge not to call
people bad names just because they have a different opinion.
She had been hurt. And when she
told the person that the name-calling hurt her feelings, she was met with anger
and opposition. While the tendency might have been to:
Lash out
Attack
Ridicule
Argue
Unfriend
Hold a grudge
Gossip
Or complain,
My daughter did something better.
She pledged to stop the hurt
rather than perpetuate it.
She pledged to be the
change she wanted to see.
She pledged to take a
negative and turn it into a positive.
And I am seeing it. I am seeing
the pledges in her book come to life through her actions and words–and mine
too.
You might say the pledge book
sitting on my dresser is A Playbook for Bettering Humanity.
Just imagine for a moment, if we
all had one.
When hurtful words are thrown
like confetti,
When harsh judgements are
made in a couple of keystrokes,
When pain cuts deep and
resolution is nowhere near,
We could pause and ask ourselves:
What is this person here to teach me?
And from that unlikely teacher, a painful experience
could become a heartfelt pledge, igniting hope for all of humanity."
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