
Not sure if you had it when you were a kid but I know I did and I know I did the same with my children – “Say sorry” and then “tell them you forgive them” followed by “now go and play together nicely”. As if the perpetrator saying sorry made things alright and the one who had had wrong done to them just had to accept that.
In a book I was reading recently this young couple go from hating each other to not being able to get enough of each other when both say sorry and accept the others apology and forgive them. But I also have a friend who was in a bad accident in which he over took three cars and then hit a tractor that was the lead vehicle which was turning right. Either the tractor was not indicating or my friend did not see the indicator. As he says the road was long and safe for the overtake he just did not think the tractor was going to turn. So yes he was in the wrong and has apologized but the person he hit, he feels, has been antagonised by his apology. The tractor driver’s response has upset my friend greatly.
My friend is very genuine in his apology but I think the person he ran into was so badly shaken by the accident that he is not yet in a place to accept the apology.
I do wonder if, especially as Christians, we think that if we say sorry that will ease the situation but sometimes it makes it worse. I don’t know the driver of the tractor but I wonder if he’s thinking “it might be ok for you to be sorry but I could have had your death on my conscious for the rest of my life. And also I’ve now got to wait for the insurance company to sort things out before I can carry on with my job” I don’t know if that is what he’s thinking of if it is just a “f**k you” response because he is still shaken by it, still dealing with his trauma.
Jesus says we should forgive seventy times seven [Matthew 18:21-22] and forgive us our sins as we forgive others who have sinned against us [Matthew 6:12-14] – these verses are about asking God to forgive us not another human being. God, I think, is amazing and forgives us all things if we are genuinely sorry, but that’s because God doesn’t have all sorts of issues lurking about in God’s psych that inhibit that. All of us human beings come with traumas, hurts, played out scenes that our primordial brain goes to first and we react from there. We run through scenarios that often we don’t even realise we are doing but our primordial brain [elephant brain] does not forget and then tells our conscious brain how to react. From there we go into fight, flight, fawn, freeze, etc [meerkat brain] and from there react.
Some people will respond to an innocent request with anger because it has trigger something deep inside that they don’t even know about. So when we say sorry for something we don’t know what we are triggering within the person we are speaking to.
So I think we need to yes ask for forgiveness but then leave it there and not get upset if the person doesn’t respond to how we would like. Almost like leaving it in their porch and they can decide if they want to open it or not. And then we go to God to ask them to forgive us and to search our hearts. And maybe we also need to then forgive the person who did not accept our apology as we would have liked.
So we clear everything away from our hearts, give it all to God, realise it is about forgiveness rather than just saying sorry then who knows how much calmer and more peaceful we will feel?

5 replies on “Say You’re Sorry”
as a teacher of young children, I do not have them automatically say, ‘I’m sorry’ if they have hurt someone in some way, either on purpose or accidentally. I have both children come together, than the hurter will look the victim in the eye and first ask, ‘are you okay?.,’ no matter their response, the will then ask them, ‘what can I do to make it better/’ the victim with often say, give me a hug, play with me, a high-five, or tell them not to do it again. some with say how it hurt their feelings or body, so that the hurter will understand. the beginnings of empathy. practiced over and over again, it becomes second nature to them, and I’m hoping they grow up to continue this. many families have said that their children have begun to do it at home with their siblings, and that makes me so happy. if someone wants you to say you’re sorry, then that is always an option, but most choose another route. even the most aggressive child will stop to use these words
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Wow that is awesome. I wish I’d been taught that years ago. That makes so much sense. But also it takes more time, which sometimes people don’t like to do, often because they are too busy. It is going back slowing down and seeing about the other person first which I am sure makes it more genuine. I do wonder how often we say a quick sorry, yes because we are, but also because we want to move on. Your way makes each side think about it a bit more. Thank you for sharing all that X
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❤️parents are often shocked when we tell them how we do this at the beginning of the year
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Beth, I’m sure they are. But it looks like they see the results pretty quickly
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[…] is a follow on from my post the other day looking at Sorry. Please, if you haven’t read Beth’s comments about what they get up to at her […]
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