My three-year old grandson has an older sister (as do I.) Little brothers learn how to deflect blame early.
At my son's wedding, that three-year old was the ring-bearer. Inevitably, he managed to loosen the rings from the pillow and they hit the hardwood floor with a double clang. "I didn't do it," he proclaimed to the crowd. "Daddy did it!"
Over the Christmas holidays the same little guy got into a fight with his sister. Stuck on what words to use he decided to spit instead. "No spitting!" I told him. "I didn't do it," he protested. "It came from the ceiling."
Punishment for our wrongs causes us to develop the art of blaming early in life. Why suffer when you can shift the heat to someone else?
You may have refined this skill in your adulthood. It requires courage to volunteer to your boss that you have erred. It is equally tough for a leader to acknowledge mistakes.
Chronic fault-finding with others poisons any setting. Real solutions go deeper than simple accountability.
In order to grow Love you need to shrink your ego. Love can only thrive in the garden of humility.
If you are spending lots of time blaming others than you are missing the chance to solve the problems in front of you and to strengthen your life skills.
Success never comes to those who blame. With his final breaths Michelangelo said, "I am still learning."
-Erie Chapman

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