During a recess in seventh grade I saw a friend sitting on a school bench crying. From the storm that raged within her came words all of us know.
"I didn't get invited to Bobbie's birthday party," she whimpered.
Later that day, I saw her again. "You seem better," I said.
"I didn't want to go to that stupid party anyway," she replied.
"Hate is not the opposite of love," Dr. Roll0 May wrote, "apathy is."
In the face of rejection, it's so difficult to confront our pain that indifference looks like a fine refuge. But, when we turn to apathy, we risk cutting ourselves off from the very Love we seek.
Love's invitation is the best kind. It is full and continuous.
Love's invitation is never withdrawn. But, we can refuse to accept it.
When people are disappointed by some outcome in life, the temptation may be to condemn God's Love as meaningless. Once indifference to Love's gifts seeps in, we start shutting off Love's flow through our lives.
"To love means to open ourselves to the negative as well as the positive," May writes, "- to grief, sorrow and disappointment as well as to joy, fulfillment, and an intensity of consciousness we did not know was possible before."
Most people seem to have trouble with this. They express love in the midst of happiness and rapidly withdraw it when the snake of fear slithers by.
Love will never force itself on us. It awaits our invitation.
I couldn't see it at the time, but the answer for the crying girl was not indifference. Instead, the hard call would probably have been for her to accept her disappointment and thus let Love begin its healing in her.
Absent this, resentment can boil beneath apathy's cloak. Decades later, she may find that her unresolved pain is still dripping its poison.
Hard times are the best opportunities for us to invite Love into our hearts.
Easy to say. Incredibly hard to live.
It's so much easier to dismiss "difficult people": cranky patients, demanding visitors and hard supervisors. How much more powerful to try a different invitation – to let Love guide us in welcoming the needs of these "others."
In the midst of anger, it is only Love that can save us. Amid happiness, it is only Love that can sustain our joy.
-Erie Chapman
Photograph: "Stormy Sea" – Erie Chapman, 2012

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