Plunged_into_sea_platitudes

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Can I tell you just how much I have come to hate platitudes,
motivational tomes and the faux wisdom of self-empowerment gurus? 

After 13 years of posting prayer requests to my network of
women pray-ers,  of responding daily
during those years to the intentions of those who are struggling with some of
the most painful circumstances imaginable, platitudes make me see red.

What pithy phrase can you offer the friend who, within the
past 12 months has lost two sons – one to cancer and another to suicide? What
do you say to the family of the young man, a football player with college
scholarships lined up, who tried to cross the street only to be hit by an
18-wheeler? The doctors already had to amputate one leg above the knee and the
last I heard they were trying to save the other. He was still in a coma. Or the
young mother of three who was just diagnosed with a virulent form of cancer,
who is not expected to live more than a few months, or the father who
accidentally ran over his own child. 

We have prayed for spouses who have disappeared, new parents
of infants who have died, families who have lost everything, including family
members, in a fire, flood, tornado, hurricane; husbands and wives who have lost
their jobs after 40 years with the same employer, families who are dealing with
addiction or abuse or have become homeless – the amount of prayers sent up to
heaven in the almost 5,000 days since this group was founded is beyond
counting.

Or perhaps we should we have told them – Choose success! Change
your attitude, change your life. Pain is inevitable, suffering is optional.  Maybe a few well chosen happy faces or an
illustration of the power of intention would have helped them move forward in
their pain and grief.

I remember the first few moments after my father died. He
was in a hospital bed in the Hospice unit in the room next to my mother, who
was terminally ill. I sat at the foot of his bed and sobbed, yelling at God,
demanding that he explain why all this was happening.  Exactly what was it he expected me to learn
from all that I had been through in the past few years, and now, losing my
beloved father who hadn’t even been sick a week before. I received my answer
immediately – I have forged you in the fires of grief to form a jewel of
compassion. My response was immediate as well – I don’t want to be a jewel of
anything. I want my father back. I want my mother to be healed. I want my
children to grow up with their grandparents. I want my life to go back to the
way it was!

But it was in that moment that I truly understood that life
is suffering, as much as it is joy, perhaps more so.  And those who can move through the times of
struggle, of grief and suffering, with integrity, without losing  hope in the future, who get up every morning
and carry on in spite of the emotional or physical pain and find ways to help others
do the same – these are successful people, these are life’s heroes.

When I stopped trying to hold God’s feet to the fire, I
looked around and saw all the other jewels of compassion milling about the room
with me – people who would take their new found wisdom born of grief into the
world and be of support to others. I thought of Enid Starkies profound words:
Unhurt people are not much good in the world.

There’s nothing trite about that.

Posted in

One response to “”

  1. Morrell Jason Avatar

    Why is there no Facebook Like button? You gotta have that button so your followers can spread your word!

    Like

Leave a reply to Morrell Jason Cancel reply