“BE HONEST ABOUT YOUR OWN FAULTS. Embrace the work and,the companionship here.”
Associate Professor of Psychology Eric Olofson offered that advice to Wabash freshmen during the third Chapel Talk of the fall semester. Then, after telling his story of being raised by a single mom, Olofson—who teaches a course at Wabash called “Fatherhood”—told students about his own father’s addiction to alcohol.
He concluded:
Finally, I want you to learn to forgive.
Fifteen years ago my dad sobered up, and I’m intensely proud of him and the work that he’s put in. He’s the first to tell you that he’s ashamed of who he was when I was growing up, that we had every right to reject him. He has told me, “You did not need to let me into your lives now, though I’m sure glad you did.”
I had come to realize that holding grudges would serve one thing and one thing only—to make me unhappy and to deprive my children of a grandfather they deserve. It’s more important that we get along and interact than to say, “I’m justified in being angry.”
With my dad, that means allowing him to show me that he is a different man today, a man I’m proud to call grandfather to my children.
Forgiveness may be hardest of all. It’s hard to see that I need to forgive, but I do, simply because that’s what I need in my life.
This winter, students gathering in Korb Classroom for a reading heard this story from visiting writer Brian Doyle:
Committed a sin yesterday, in the hallway, at noon. I roared at my son, I grabbed him by the shirt collar, I frightened him so badly that he cowered and wept, and when he turned to run I grabbed him by the arm so roughly that he flinched, and it was that flicker of fear and pain across his face, the bright eager holy riveting face I have loved for 10 years, that stopped me then and haunts me this morning; for I am the father of his fear, I sent it snarling into his heart, and I can never get it out now, which torments me.
Yes, he was picking on his brother, and yes, he had picked on his brother all morning, and yes, this was the culmination of many edgy incidents already, and no, he hadn’t paid the slightest attention to warnings and remonstrations and fulminations, and yes, he had been snide and supercilious all day, and yes, he had deliberately done exactly the thing he had specifically been warned not to do, for murky reasons, but still, I roared at him and grabbed him and terrified him and made him cower, and now there is a dark evil wriggle between us that makes me sit here with my hands over my face, ashamed to the bottom of my bones.
I do not know how sins can be forgiven. I grasp the concept, I admire the genius of the idea, I suspect it to be the seed of all real peace, I savor the Tutus and Gandhis who have the mad courage to live by it, but I do not understand how foul can be made fair. What is done cannot be undone, and my moment of rage in the hallway is an indelible scar on his heart and mine, and while my heart is a ragged old bag after nearly half a century of slings and stings, his is still new, eager, open, suggestible, innocent; he has committed only the small sins of a child, the halting first lies, the failed test paper hidden in the closet, the window broken in petulance, the stolen candy bar, the silent witness as a classmate is bullied, the insults flung like bitter knives.
Whereas I am a man and have had many lies squirming in my mouth, and have committed calumny, and far too often evaded the mad ragged Christ, ignored his stink, his rotten teeth, his cloak of soggy newspapers, his voice of broken glass.
No god can forgive what we do to each other; only the injured can summon that extraordinary grace, and where such grace is born we cannot say, for all our fitful genius and miraculous machinery. We use the word god so easily, so casually, as if our label for the incomprehensible meant anything at all; and we forget all too easily that the wriggle of holy is born only through the stammer and stumble of us, who are always children. So we turn again and again to each other, and bow, and ask forgiveness, and mill what mercy we can muster from the muddle of our hearts.
The instant I let go of my son’s sinewy arm in the hallway he sprinted away and slammed the door and flew off the porch and ran down the street and I stood there simmering in shame. Then I walked down the hill into the laurel thicket as dense and silent as the dawn of the world and found him there huddled and sobbing. We sat in the moist green dark for a long time, not saying anything, the branches burly and patient. Finally I asked quietly for his forgiveness, and he asked for mine, and we walked out of the woods hand in hand, changed men.
“A Sin” reprinted from Grace Notes by permission of the author. Doyle was a visiting writer at the College this winter.