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The price of reconciliation

Wed, May 5, 2010

Reconciliation

“Wouldn’t it feel good to be able to be close to your brother again?  To leave all of the baggage of the past?  To celebrate the great memories?  To plan important futures?”

She shifted uncomfortably in her chair and instinctively picked up her car keys, signaling her imminent departure.  I let my questions hover.  Finally, she broke her silence.

“Yes,” she started slowly.  “but . . .”

“But” is technically a conjunction, but it’s most common effect is that of an injunction.

“But what?” I asked.

“But I have a bad feeling that it will cost me too much.”  And with that she left the room and the mediation.

I picked through her words.   Reconciliation . . . would cost her too much.

Sitting at my table, parties spend a large amount of their time in deliberation — computing the price tag of peace.  Oddly, for most of them, the hope of peace and the balm of reconciliation is what brought them in.  Yet the fear of the cost torments them.  Not the financial cost.  Not the loss of access to property.  No, the fear that haunts them is the loss of power that the conflict brings them.

The power to disrupt someone else’s life.  The power to withhold something or someone from another who wants that thing or some semblance of a relationship.  The power to bring someone else to the mediation table to talk about the past only long enough to alter the future. The power of self-justification.

The price of releasing power is too great for some to pay.

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3 Responses to “The price of reconciliation”

  1. Matt Dodd says:

    I agree that power is one of the most important (if not unrecognized) factors in conflict resolution and reconciliation. So, if the price of reconciliation is too high, what’s the cost of not reconciling?…

  2. Rebecca Russell says:

    If we could only let go of the human power and embrace God’s power. We would be more willing to reconcile.

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Tweets from Joey & Foster Dog

Just Thoughts
  • Hope seen . . . slowly softens the crust of worry. Hope celebrated . . . melts worry away. Melted worry is the compost that feeds faith and destiny.

  • An abundant life is not one free from worry, but one filled with hope.

  • Have you ever been in a really big hurry?

    Have you ever been in a really big hurry  . . . and everything seems to go wrong?

    You drop your keys just as you get to the door. You leave your phone on the nightstand. You hit “reply to all” on the email that should have gone to one discreet individual. You can’t seem to hit the trash can with that one wad of paper. You find yourself face-to-face with the one person you don’t “really have time to deal with.”

    Frustration builds inside. Anger, dismay, and depression grow like grass in a flower bed. What can you do? What is the most effective action step for the moment.

    Slow down.

    That’s it. Slow down. Take a breath. Whisper a prayer. Hum a song.

    Slowing down allows tension to melt away. Slowing down allows your emotions to moderate. Slowing down allows you to gain control . . . by easing your grip.

    So, slow down . . .

  • “Constantly Pleasant.”

    That’s how she was described. Not a person attending the memorial service would have disagreed.

    As I sat and listened to the accomplishments of this remarkable person, I was somewhat awestruck by the thought that I had been blessed to know an individual who touched so many and did so much . . . while being constantly pleasant.

    What if I could become constantly pleasant? What would that change? How would I change?

    Thanks, Colleen. For being constantly pleasant. It’s just one of many ways that God shone through you.

  • If you’ll just let go, your hands will be free to  . . .

    • comfort a friend in pain
    • carry a stranger’s burden
    • steady yourself when your world is rocked
    • graciously accept a gift
    • smooth the wrinkles from the fabric of life

    If you’ll let go . . . empty your hands of things and your heart of worries . . . you’ll be delighted with what you find in those sacred hollows.

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