“Self-pity in its early stages is as snug as a feather mattress. Only when it hardens does it become uncomfortable.” – Maya Angelou
On Thursday morning my son cried all the way to daycare. He is such an affable little person that I was stunned that none of the usual tricks could distract him. I pieced together from his two word sentences, Tay hoome (stay home) and EA come (his nanny come) he wanted to stay home and have the nanny come. When we reached his daycare and I was getting him out of the car, I started to stay, “When you cry like that, we…” and my daughter chimed in to finish the sentence, “suffer.”
I can’t say exactly what he’s thinking or how he’s grasped this but in the two weeks since his sister finished Kindergarten, he’s figured out that she’s staying home and the nanny is coming. I imagine he has some toddler sense of the unfairness that he still has to go to school three days a week. It’s unfair. Life is unfair. I think one of the easiest feelings to get stuck in. I think of this passage from The Book of Awakening by Mark Nepo:
I know now that, over the years, my own cries that life is unfair have come from the inescapable pain of living, and these cries, while understandable, have always diverted me from feeling my way through the pain of my breakage into the re-formation of my life. Somehow, crying “Unfair” has always kept me stuck in what hurts.
The Book of Awakening by Mark Nepo
At the time I first read it, I was stuck in unfairness. I was trying to undo the damage of the hurt done to me by an unfaithful ex-husband while everyone else seemed to be thriving. I read that passage and knew, really knew that the only thing keeping me in that place was me. That somehow I had taken the unfortunate chain of events that led up the implosion of life as I’d known it and made those my story, instead of the rest of me. There may have been a time that self-pity was fitting but then, as the Maya Angelou quote says, it had hardened around me and I was stuck.
I hadn’t intended to finish my sentence to my son with “suffer.” I was going to say, “When you cry like that, we don’t know what to do to make it better.” But suffer is pretty apt as well. When we get stuck in the unfairness of things, we suffer. No one around knows what to do to make it better. But all it takes to stop is to set the intention to find the beauty of where you are and do it again and again until one day you find you don’t need to. My son must have done some version of that because his teachers said he had a great day at school.
This is something I am still working on. Over a year and I still battle thinking it unfair the way I was laid off from work. I keep thinking it could have been handled better, then I remember where it was I worked and that better isn’t necessarily in their way of doing things. I also know that not working is for the best because I’m here for my parent’s. I know, it is simply a matter of overcoming hurt pride, and having to admit that it is a prideful thing to begin with.
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Oh, I understand, or at least I think I do, not wanting to assume too much. We believe if we had handled it better, there would be words that would bring closure or at least some sort of shared narrative we could agree upon. Something that acknowledges the loyalty we gave that was betrayed. But reading what you write, I think you are great at seeing the beauty of where you are at now and how God works within all the circumstances in our lives. May the re-formation in your life continue in beautiful ways!
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I think that as with anything else it takes time if we want it to last. We have to work on it daily so to come to full understanding. My main issue with myself, is I know where I am and pretty much why, I just have to let go of what was because it not only isn’t important, it is no longer a part of my life.
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Little children are so smart and we are fortunate when we understand that they teach us lessons all the time with their simplistic views which is often exactly what we need to see and hear. Great post!
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Yes!! Such a great way to put it – their simplicity resonates with the lessons we’ve made too complicated. Thank you for the lovely comment!
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