"The evil that men do lives after them. The good is oft interred with their bones." – Act 3, scene ii, Julius Ceasar by William Shakespeare

Vancover mj   A couple years ago, two dear friends of ours divorced after thirty-five years of marriage and four sons. The all-too-predictable bitterness and recrimination attended the parting. The once vibrant flesh of their marriage rotted like driftwood ignored on some remote island. 

   Much of their anger remains. The lens of memory through which years of intimacy and tender moments were seen is now clouded with hostility. 

   One year ago, another friend of mine lost a hospital job he had held for twenty years. The place he had come each workday for two decades, where he had been welcomed as a colleague, where he had developed meaningful friendships, was suddenly a territory where he was no longer welcome.

   Shakespeare's lines apply to relationships and careers as surely as they do to the lives of disgraced heroes. Former Senator John Edwards, for example, did some good things in his career and their must have been happy moments in his relationship with his wife. But all that is now obscured by his late-career betrayals. The same can be said of a long list of once venerated men and women wounded like Achilles in some vulnerable part of their humanity.

   The more intimate and trusting our relationships have been, the more betrayal can blind us to the many rainbow moments the relationship held.

   This is deeply true of our long-married, now-divorced friends. During the three decades we have known them,  we shared countless laughs, sacred moments connected to the births and childhood of their sons, shared trips to Canada, and beautiful exchanges of poetry, letters, phone calls, as well as good news, and support during personal tragedies. We must now engage them separately.

   Why do we so often insist on burying so many of the treasured moments of our lives under the rubble of acrimony? Can't the accomplishments of a long career be celebrated even if the career ended with some moments of ignominy?

   Why do we let brief "evil" survive as the definition of a broken relationship while the good is interred in the bones of the past?

   Gladly, there are exceptions. Every so often, I encounter a divorced couple who are getting along great together and who do, literally, celebrate the good times they once had. Periodically, I come across a fired caregiver and find they are able to focus on the gifts their work career offered.

   These lucky few have found the answer. When we degrade every moment of a once-valued job or a relationship because of how it ended we have demeaned ourselves perhaps more than we have anyone else.

   Fear traps us in shadows. Love can always light our path to another way of seeing. It is only Love that can help us rediscover and honor the hidden treasure that each of our valued relationships once held.

-Reverend Erie Chapman, M.T.S., J.D. 

9 responses to “Days 226-227 The Hidden Treasure in Broken Relationships”

  1. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    Pure words of wisdom, Erie. I’ve heard it said that one of our main purposes here in life is to learn forgiveness. I think we humans find that the fuel of anger makes the break away from a life relationship or job less difficult. Yet, what could be more difficult? Beneath anger is the pain of loss and the accompanying painful but necessary grief work. Perhaps, those who don’t grieve can’t move beyond anger and get stuck in their anger without ever healing. Who are we really hurting?
    What rings so true is your statement, “when we degrade every moment of a once valued job or a relationship because of how it ended we have demeaned ourselves perhaps more than we have anyone else.”

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  2. Maria Doglio Avatar
    Maria Doglio

    Hopefully your friends will let go of their bitterness, because of you hang on to it, you can not live a fulfilled life. It’s not easy, and it took a long time for me, but once you let go, you can cherish the history and free yourself from emotional bondage. I shared a photo of me, my ex husband and 5 grandchildren taken at a recent family wedding. We don’t often get together in one place these days, so I cherish this “after the fact” family moment. It’s important for the children to see a good, forgiving relationship between parents and grandparents.

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  3. Maria Doglio Avatar
    Maria Doglio

    PS: Sorry, I meant to say: shared a photo on your FB site! M

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  4. Barbara Mason Avatar

    I enjoyed this so much. It is true, the sacred parts of a long and lost relationship are seldom remembered. This is close to my heart. I left my husband after 15 years. I walked away, head held high and way too proud to move on to greener pastures. Need I say more. The ten years that followed were filled with hurt, abuse and left me with an emptiness I had left in my 20’s. The true treasure I found was a humble walk with God. Thru that walk, and only that walk, my marriage was restored, renewed and relight. My husband and I now celebrating 5 additional years of marriage. I know water my own grass, tend my own weeds and am thankful for the fullness of humility. I only share this so that one heart might feel the tug to say, “I was wrong”. It is amazing how those three words can heal an entire family. Blessings and joy

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  5. candace nagle Avatar
    candace nagle

    The shift in perspective from focusing on how we have been betrayed to what we are responsible for and what we can feel grateful for, is a challenging journey. Cultivating gratefulness and self reflection can help us when relationships breakdown. You are so wise on this one, Erie. We really do need to learn how to keep the love and let go of the pain. We can’t let our own anger and grief keep us from cherishing our history…our lives.

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  6. Marily Avatar

    Even rotting driftwood ignored on some remote island sometimes could bring about hidden treasure unexpectedly… as it stands alone or along with others of the same fate, motionlessly waiting for a splash or two. One could say it was once vibrant swaying branch, now, its beauty rests there. Just there serving its purpose, satisfying nature’s call as your photo brings Rev. Erie. — So with love that meets our needs sometimes in unexpected ways, overcomes fear, lights our path, helps us rediscover and honor the hidden treasure that each valued relationships we once held, through sorrow and grief we can walk through. For His promises He keeps even when we do not… His healing power stands forever for all.

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  7. erie Avatar
    erie

    Thank you, Liz, Maria, Marily, Candace & Barbara. Your beautiful and honest contributions enrich the Journal and the lives of all those who read it.

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  8. Moncler Jacka Avatar

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  9. Discount Pandora Avatar

    Those are super cute. I like you on Facebook.

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