Ever
since I started this blog I have been inundated with statements of gratitude
from women who say I have “validated their feelings” and until 2 days ago, I
had no clue what they meant. 2 days ago I happened upon an article written by
my new favorite person on EARTH. I didn’t realize it, but for years I have been
waiting for someone to validate my feelings regarding what I believe to be a
cancerous statement: Everything Happens for
a Reason. The excerpt below was written by journalist, psychotherapist,
and my new best friend, Tim Laurence.
I’m listening to a man tell a story.
A woman he knows was in a devastating car accident, and now
she lives in a state of near-permanent pain; a paraplegic,
many of her hopes stolen. I’ve heard it a million times before, but
it never stops shocking me: He tells her that he thinks the
tragedy will lead to positive changes in her life. He utters the
words that are nothing less than emotional, spiritual, and psychological
violence: "Everything
happens for a reason." He tells her that
this was something that HAD to happen in order for her to grow.
But that’s the kind of bullshit that destroys lives. And it’s
categorically untrue. When I read these
words two days ago I felt as if I was breathing air for the first time. “Yes!!!!!!!!!!” I screamed at my computer screen. “Yes, yes dear God yes! That’s exactly what those words are: spiritual and psychological violence. Wherever you are Dr. Laurence, I thank you so
much for writing these words I have desperately needed to describe what it
feels like to be told, everything happens for a reason. As you can imagine, people
tell ME this a lot, and I mother fucking, cock-sucking hate it. Much like, “The Gift of a Special Needs Child”
these words rip a ripe new tear into my already ravaged heart every time I hear
them. I don’t know what you people are
actually saying when you utter those
putrid words, but I can tell you what us members of the, Nobody Wants To Be A
Member of This Club Including Us Club are hearing
when you say them. We hear: “You have no right to grieve your current
situation. Your inability to view Kevin
as a gift from God reflects your failure to recognize God’s plan and you should
now feel more ashamed and ineffective than you already do because you have
failed to see the bigger picture.”
And you really needn’t bother people:
I already feel like a complete failure most of the time.
After all these years
working with people in pain as an advisor and adversity
strategist, it still amazes me that these myths persist despite the
fact that they’re nothing more than platitudes cloaked as sophistication.
And worst of all, they keep us from doing the one thing we mustdo when our lives are turned
upside down: grieve.
Here’s the reality:
As my mentor Megan Devine has so beautifully said:’Some things in life cannot be fixed. They can only
be carried.’
At long last I understand what
you ladies have been saying to me. At
long, long last, someone understands how I feel.
As much as Kevin is some ONE, he
is also some THING I carry every day. For
example, it’s 6:00 AM right now and I’ve been up since 5. Kevin woke up and started
banging on our door telling me to get up and make him chocolate milk. When I refused to open the door he came
downstairs and poured chocolate syrup all over my furniture and the dog. When Kayla ran upstairs to inform us of what
he’d done, Kevin bit her and tried to push her down the stairs. And now that
you’ve heard the story of my morning please come on over and tell me everything
happens for a reason, because I think it might make me feel better to punch
someone in the face and make them bleed.
Do you remember my old friend
Karen whose name isn’t really Karen? She
and I have next to nothing in common.
The fact that she is a conservative republican and I am (what my
grandmother used to call) a flaming asshole communist liberal is just one
example. So why did I pursue a friendship
with this woman? Because the day Kevin
punched me in the face at the barbecue and had to be dragged away kicking and
screaming, she did not turn away and pretend nothing was happening. After observing the entire, humiliating
scenario she did not say to me, “Everything happens for a reason,” she said, “It
must be very hard being his mother.” Unlike
the first statement, the second one grants you the gift of acknowledgement. I don’t know what Karen was actually saying when she said, “It must be very
hard being his mother,” but I can tell you what I heard when she said it. I
heard, “I am so, so sorry,” and it made me feel so, so acknowledged.
Grief is brutally painful. Grief does not only
occur when someone dies. When relationships fall apart, you grieve. When
opportunities are shattered, you grieve. When illnesses wreck you, you grieve.
Losing a child
cannot be fixed. Being diagnosed with a debilitating illness cannot
be fixed. Facing the betrayal of your closest confidante cannot
be fixed.These things
can only be carried.
Let
me be clear: If you’ve faced a tragedy and someone tells
you in any way that your tragedy was meant to be, happened for
a reason, will make you a better person, or that taking
responsibility for it will fix it, you have every right
to remove them from your life.
I
have spent 2 days trying to wrap my brain around that last line: If you’ve faced a tragedy and someone tells you
in any way that it was meant to be, you have every right
to remove them from your life.
Here
was my problem: A lot of people I love
or respect believe that everything happens for a reason. In my youth and stupidity, I thought only
people who had never suffered true devastation ever used that statement, but I
was wrong.
Remember
the behaviorist who saved us when Kevin was 5?
She had 8 miscarriages. Yes you
heard me correctly: 8. The last one
happened at 22 weeks and she was carrying twins. How do
I know this? One day, she brought all 3
of her children to a therapy session so Kevin could rehearse the social
skills she’d been teaching him. “OMG they
look just like you!” I screamed. “Thank
you,” she said. “Everyone says that and
I just have to laugh because they’re all adopted.” I was shocked.
Me: Really??
Her: Yup. I
was lucky enough to meet their birth mother and we looked a lot alike.
Me: Looked?
Her: She died three years ago of a drug overdose. We already had Linda but once the mother
passed it came to light she had 2 other children living in foster care in
another state. Chicago DYFS asked if we would take them and of course we said
yes.
Me: Wow. I’m
sure I have no business asking this but were you unable to conceive?
And
that’s when she told me her horror story.
Me: I am so sorry
Her: It’s OK.
I’m grateful honestly. I don’t
think I could love my children the way I do had I not suffered so much before
finding them. Everything happens for a
reason.
I
used to work with a fantastic lady whose husband left her for another woman
when she was 6 months pregnant with their second son. Because his visits are as inconsistent as his
child support payments, she’s basically a single mother. Did I mention one of the boys suffers from
acute anxiety AND oppositional defiant disorder? She never complains, ever, about any of it,
and will tell you that everything happens for a reason.
I
hate that statement so much I can actually taste vomit every time someone uses
it, but how can I remove from my life the many remarkable people I know who
believe it????
And
then I had a revelation and started talking to myself, which I do a lot,
because I’m insane. “Wait a second Rachel:
The people you love, who believe in that statement, don’t apply it to
YOUR life, they apply it to their own, and they’re entitled to that. How people view their own circumstances is
deeply personal and none of your business.
Some people who believe everything happens for a reason recognize that
you don’t share their belief, so they respectfully keep it to themselves. YOUR feelings are more important to them than
their own convictions. That’s what makes
a true friend. If Karen and I ever
decided to talk politics I’m sure our friendship would be decimated within
seconds, so despite our deep seeded political convictions, we don’t talk about
them to each other, because our friendship is more important.”
Dear
Readers,
I
do not believe everything happens for a reason.
I believe SOME things happen for a reason, and others just sorta
happen. If you have suffered, and wish
to share with me your beliefs regarding how that suffering has served some
greater purpose, I would be happy to listen.
You are entitled to my respect and your convictions are deserving of my
consideration. However, if you have
never suffered, what ANYONE would describe as a devastating loss, and you go
around telling those of us who have that everything happens for a reason…..
SHUT…….THE…….FUCK……..UP
And
keep your opinions off my blog. They,
like you, have no place here.