Joe |
It involves mainly people from spotlight professions such as show business and news broadcasting and publishing, which is not to say that aberrance does not take place in grocery stores, insurance offices, and muffler shops all across the nation, because it does, to our national shame. I don't know if it's being in a position of power that adds an aphrodisiac quality to putting the mash on some other person, but it just needs to stop!
And the accusations are met with a combination of the following replies:
- "I absolutely swear on all that is good and holy that I did not do this, never thought of doing this, and would not have anyway."
- "I might have done this but I was too (CHOOSE ALL THAT APPLY:) drunk, depressed, drugged up, young, impotent, neurotic to remember it, if it even ever happened."
- "I am sorry. This is not who I am."
That last one - the "this is not who I am" defense - try that in case you're on trial for bank robbery, DWI, or nepotism.
"This is not who I am" is another cop-out, a way to say, "Maybe I did this, but my heart wasn't in it." Maybe you don't like the way you acted, but it was you who acted that way, so it's sort of hard to say it wasn't.
I don't want to hear that anymore, but I'm sure I will. If you do bad things, or used to, it's time to atone and take the responsibility for past or current misdeeds. If you're sorry, say so, but don't claim not to be the person who did it!
I like existentialism, the philosophy that tells us that we are each responsible for our own actions and deeds. We have all sinned, all fallen short of God's expectations that we do good things. Forgiveness is available, but receiving it begins with owning the sin. And then, we can say, "That is who I am. I did wrong and I accept the punishment and vow to improve."
Sorry for getting all philosophical. More bad jokes and jejune political jabs tomorrow, I promise. That's also who I am.
1 comment:
I've never committed any of the horrific "this is not who I am" acts, and I like to think that I've been a good husband and father. To carry your narrative though, I came to learn to be honest with myself and realize that who I was wasn't who I am, that's why I started writing: I took a step at being more me. Then, my wife set up my blog for me, enabling, as a team, me to be more who I am. So then I took another step, and now my family can see how happy I can get when I check my blog's stats and there are new visitors. I'm no hero, but I am more who I am than I was before and that's impacted my entire family.
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