Wednesday, November 29, 2006

Fall From Grace



In light of a recent transgression, I've been doing a bit of reading lately on this subject. What I'm finding is that there are many different categories of collapse; the United States for example, has been experiencing a cataclysmic fall from grace, and on a worldwide stage to boot. Setbacks, scandals and slips are all too familiar within the corporate world, where every penny earned hinges on maintaining a solid reputation. Celebrities keep the tabloid industry thriving with their public gaffes and indiscretions. Winona Ryder, Mel Gibson, and most recently Michael Richards have felt the full sting of consequences resulting from their actions; their reputations became unraveled and are seriously tarnished.

But I'm interested more in the everyday personal fall from grace, the kind an ordinary person experiences when they've done something wrong, something that appears to be terribly out-of-character, something that changes the view others always held of them.

I experienced a very serious fall from grace about 5 years ago, the repercussions of which resonate with me to this day. I was living in a marriage that was mutually loveless, held in place only by the children my husband and I both adored, and in my loneliness I drifted into an affair. Although he was aware of my infidelity my husband chose to ignore it, which in turn gave me a sense of entitlement to continue it.

That affair eventually ended, as all affairs do...but trailing in it's wake was the impetus to finally go ahead with the divorce we both had long wanted, but delayed for the sake of our children. The divorce was never about the affair, after all - but you can only stay together so long "for the kids" before even more damage is inflicted overall.

I didn't escape my indiscretion without paying a price, however. An email account inadvertantly left open and stumbled upon by one of our children changed everything. All the lovingly explained and carefully thought-out reasons we'd given them for ending our marriage became discredited and moot in light of this discovery. For children facing the trauma of a family about to be broken, it pretty much comes down to the black and white; who to blame. It was heartbreaking and painful - one of those life-altering moments you wish you could forever erase.

It was through this terrible fall from grace with my own children that I learned redemption actually does exist. It's taken understanding and patience, love, and lots and lots of time, but my children are proof of this fact.

I'll never be the shining model of motherhood they once believed I was, and in my grief over how I hurt them that was a significant loss - but I also realized that they would've begun discarding that ideal regardless, simply in the process of growing up. Every child eventually begins to see their parents as the real and imperfect human beings they are, complete with flaws and foibles - but it's the children who can see beyond those things that have learned firsthand for themselves what forgiveness means.

No matter if it was a major or minor transgression, a fall from grace isn't something to be dismissed or taken lightly, but neither do you have to let it define you. There will always be the inevitable fallout and unintended collateral damage, and saddest of all, the ones who may never quite trust you again.

All part of the consequences you have to bear, albeit made more tolerable when paired with the knowledge that redemption can and does exist, you need only to seek it by making reconciliation, and hopefully in time you will find it.

5 comments:

TenaciousK said...

In these days of 8 second sound bites and commercial competition for you divided attention, there seems to be a regrettable movement away from the idea of character as a multilayered concept. What we have, instead, is a continual onslaught of reports of the most inflammatory nature [designed to draw your attention]. Back in the day when news was more commonly read than absorbed through multmediated osmosis, individuals accused of damning acts were afforded some latitude to execute a recovery – because matters remained in the public consciousness for longer periods of time, coupled with the relative lack of background noise compared to what we’re continually confronted with now, people were invited to form impressions of distant figures that were far more complex and multidimensional than most people bother with these days.

I believe this has had an unfortunate and pervasive impact on individual identity development within our culture – it’s why we can’t seem to find anyone of great character to run for public office. People of great character do not believe they have to appear virtuous in all things, at all times.

And they know how to save face. Unfortunately, the broader public no longer takes the time to allow them the opportunity.

Redemption is about saving face on an individual level – doing the hard work, and figuring out how to feel good about yourself in a manner that neither minimizes your transgression, nor leaves you wallowing in shame.

Honey, I’m sorry about all of this – from the beginning right through to the sordid end. I wish you’d come back, though – set an example for people who’ve made mistakes, and encourage people to acknowledge that humanity is a learning curve, that mistakes are an integral aspect of the process, and that redemption can be accomplished without defensiveness or compromise. Your children learned that even the best of people make mistakes they may consider grave, but they can still be good people. This might prove an important lesson, as they squirm on the hook of their own transgression at some point down the road, and your modeling the manner in which redemption is possible provides them with some clue of how to accomplish it themselves.

I hope your life is good in all respects. Please at least stop by – we miss you.

topazz said...

thank you for this, Tk. I'll be back eventually - but I'm finding the break to be a good thing for me right now.

As far as my children, they're quick learners. Each one of them have (of course!) used my transgression over and over as a way to wiggle out of being held accountable when confronted with a transgression of their own...pointing their finger right back at me, as in "what you did was so much worse!" I have to nod my head and say yes, but this isn't about me, now is it?

It may have stopped me cold the first couple times, but now it's to the point where it's kind of funny when they bring it up as a defense tactic. (but only in that context)

TenaciousK said...

Glad to see you're back, darlin'.

Can we expect a reappearance at the blog? That would be lovely.

TenaciousK said...

Oh, and by the way:

Nice comparison with your kids. Similar motives at work with other players too, I imagine.

Now all you have to do is convince yourself that the most obnoxious of people are somehow, beneath it all, adorable. It makes them so much more tolerable.

Keifus said...

I had some things to add, a bunch of them, but they were halfassed versions of what you already said. My kids are younger than yours, but I hope I can do so well at teaching them about fallability--mine (inevitably), as well as their own.

K