Sharon Olds writes about her childhood . . .
After 37 Years My Mother
Apologizes for My Childhood
by: Sharon Olds
like someone trying to walk through a fire,
when you swayed toward me, crying out you were
sorry for what you had done to me, your
eyes filling with terrible liquid like
balls of mercury from a broken thermometer
skidding on the floor, when you quietly screamed
Where else could I turn? Who else did I have?, the
chopped crockery of your hands swinging toward me, the
water cracking from your eyes like moisture from
stones under heavy pressure, I could not
see what I would do with the rest of my life.
The sky seemed to be splintering, like a window
someone is bursting into or out of, your
tiny face glittered as if with
shattered crystal, with true regret, the
regret of the body. I could not see what my
days would be, with you sorry, with
you wishing you had not done it, the
sky falling around me, its shards
glistening in my eyes, your old, soft
body fallen against me in horror I
took you in my arms, I said It’s all right,
don’t cry, it’s all right, the air filled with
flying glass, I hardly knew what I
said or who I would be now that I had forgiven you.
Forgiving someone who hurt you as a child, without the ability to defend yourself, is incredibly painful. I speak from experience. While I’m not going to get into specifics, I want to say that individuals who harm young people are not irredeemable. However, redemption comes at a cost—the need to face your mistakes and try to atone.
I know that sounds very Catholic. However, I firmly believe that forgiveness without some act of penance is meaningless. All abusers apologize to their victims after committing their abuse. Perhaps the apology is, in that moment, genuine, but if the abuser continues to abuse, that apology is also meaningless.
Don’t try to decode this post. There are no hidden messages. Family dysfunction occurs. Frankly, I don’t know any “functional” family. Humans are fallible. They fuck up. Mix in mental illness, and the result can be unbearable at times.
But, as a Christian, I also have to believe that everyone is worthy of being forgiven, depending on the actions they take to BE forgiven. As the old saying goes, actions speak louder than words. If saying “I am sorry” isn’t backed up by acts of true love and kindness, then those three words are only that—words.
Apologies are cheap, unless they are followed by grace and amends.
Saint Marty wrote a poem for tonight about dysfunction and love, based on the following prompt from The Daily Poet:
On this day in 1980, Washington State’s Mount St. Helens erupted, sending ash in the air for miles. Write a poem that compares a relationship, person, lover, family, job, or divorce to a volcano. Learn about the differences in volcanoes, such as the slow moving lava of Hawaiian volcanoes to the almost atomic-blast ash clouds of Mount St. Helens.
Volcanology
by: Martin Achatz
It’s hard to love him
with his magma tongue
in the caldera of his mouth,
never sure when he will blot
out the sun, fill my lungs
with ash and vog until
breathing is just memory
and I lie down, maybe
hugging a pillow or dog,
let myself be consumed,
calcified, even the thoughts
inside my hollow skull,
echoing like ocean waves
in the ear of a conch:
He loves me, loves me not,
loves me, loves me not.