Family Ties
The Circle Broken
Running Our Mouths
The number one thing that damages families is us running our
mouths. 99% of family turbulence would not exist if we’d just
shut the hell up. The troublemakers in my family, and, I am
certain, in yours, are those with sloppy impulse control. People
for whom you have to brace yourself before ringing the doorbell
because you know the visit is going to be painful. It never
starts out that way—with the hugs and smiles at the door—but
these are people who have absolutely no awareness or concern of
how hurtful they can be. They run their mouth and run their mouth
and run their mouth, complaining, ridiculing, disparaging people
who have driven great distances to be with them. These people
are—and please write this down someplace—idiots. I don’t care if
she’s your aunt or he’s your brother. He’s an idiot. Moreover,
most of these very same people would never invite a
co-worker or even a friend over their house and then browbeat
them personally. But they feel free to do this to you because
you’re family. We put ourselves through these
rituals—knowing full well many occasions can and will end in
fussing and crying—because this is what we’ve always done.
It’s what’s expected of us.
About a decade ago, I stopped traveling great distances and
stressing myself out rushing around trying to make everybody
happy. Holidays were an absolute nightmare for me because
holidays were always about other people. I am not advocating
you avoid your family gatherings, but I am advocating
accountability, responsibility, and loving not only your family
but yourself. Subjecting yourself to negative, hateful people is
not what God wants for us, not what He asks us to do. There is
an implied covenant, in I Timothy, where Paul comments,
“… if anyone does not provide for his
relatives, and especially for members of his household, he has
denied the faith and is worse than an unbeliever.” That
verse cuts both ways: they have a responsibility to provide for
you as well. If not explicitly monetarily, certainly emotionally
and spiritually. To be concerned for your welfare.
In his letter to the Church at Ephesus, Paul put it this way,
“…do not be foolish, but understand what the Lord's will is. Do
not get drunk on wine, which leads to debauchery. Instead, be
filled with the Spirit. Speak to one another with psalms, hymns
and spiritual songs. Sing and make music in your heart to the
Lord, always giving thanks to God the Father for everything, in
the name of our Lord Jesus Christ. Submit to one another out of
reverence for Christ.” —Ephesians 5:17-21
Submit to one another. That means be patient, be kind.
Don’t lord it over folks. It means bite your tongue if you have
to, but shut that mouth. The problem is, even if you’re
observing Christian decorum and applying these principles,
almost no one else at your family gathering will. Church Folk,
most especially, will run their mouths non-stop, usually in the
most critical and harsh expressions of hateful, gossipy
put-downs, at a time of year when love should dominate the
atmosphere. It’s been the extremely rare family gathering I’ve
attended where there wasn’t some heavyweight—some insufferable,
self-absorbed, Type-A dominant voice—who was being awful to
everyone. An aunt, an uncle, a grandpa, whatever. Shutting these
people down is not easy. I’ve seen them get offended at being
called on their hateful, awful behavior and get up and leave,
their leaving now casting a pall on the entire day. Worse, if
the function is at their home, I’ve seen multiple family
members leaving. Oh, they don’t say they’re leaving, they’re
going to the store for cigarettes or something, and we don’t see
them for hours. They come back, get a plate, and say their
good-byes. Many times, on many occasions, I’ve gone out and sat
in my car and listened to the radio, at times with cousins or
what have you joining me to escape the lunatic making everyone
miserable inside. Thanksgiving in the back of a Mercury Cougar.
I will admit my bias: I hate these things, these big family
things. These are people who have absolutely no idea who I am.
These are people who claim to love me but can’t bother to invest
any energy in discovering who I am. They operate in the past, in
who I once was. In the bespectacled 12-year old they remember.
I’m 50. Get used to it. At some point, I simply gave myself
permission to stop putting myself through this.
Listen To The Stories: Richardson-Whitfield and Todd in I Will Follow.
Brace Yourself
I would think there should be some class, some group
therapy, to prepare families for big reunions and
holidays. Some basic training on how to conduct
ourselves. Only family can push our buttons: chronically
self-absorbed aunts rifling through our kitchen
cabinets, parents making hostile, passive-aggressive
comments at the dinner table, asking leading questions.
It may be a cultural artifact, but I find it disturbing
that parents seem to grow more selfish as they grow
older. We’ve seen this in sitcoms: the unbearable,
painful visit from the parents. The disengaged father,
the passive-aggressive mother who invades our space and
browbeats us—politely—all evening long. Most of these
people have either no awareness or no consciousness of
how much their visit is dreaded. Not because we don’t
love them but because we do. We do love them, and it’s
difficult. Calling Mom on any of her passive-aggressive
attacks results in her instantly becoming offended and
then emotionally blackmailing you with a feigned
apology. It’s torture. It’s a nightmare. Uncle Billy
smoking refer in the basement. The teens piling into
cars and vanishing. The certain and unavoidable arguing.
Yet, year after year we go to great trouble and expense
to bring these people together. Mary J. Yerkes, writing
for
Focus On The Family, put it this way: “Families
matter to God. That’s why few things are more painful
than unresolved family conflict.” |
Preparing for a family gathering should mean more than just baking cornbread.
Families ought to send out a prepara-tory
note along with the Thanksgiving or Christmas invite
laying out the |
What is Family and How Did We Lose It?
Several mornings a week I ride my bike down a winding country
road past an old farmhouse where somebody’s grandfather is
usually sitting on the porch watching the leaves blow. He is at
least a generation behind me but I’m old enough to be chatted up
by this guy and so he’s become a routine rest stop on the way
back. I don’t know his complete story, but I am incredibly
envious of the treasure he’s got over there: his kids and grands
and all of that time. A vault of stories with which no iTunes
database could possibly compete.
I remember having Christmas dinner with friends out here, my
first friends here, who are now more like an adopted family. The
father, retired military, wanted dinner served at the tick of
his watch—12 noon precisely. Both he and his wife were amazing
cooks and an invite from them was a prize to any who received
one. And we’re around the table, the mother constantly getting
up to serve, the little daughter vying for attention. The older
boys, in their late teens, early twenties, kind of breezed in,
made plates, went downstairs to watch the game. That was the end
of them. And I remember thinking how sad it was that they were
taking this for granted. That, even on Christmas day, they could
not or would not slow down and retire from the self-absorption
of youth to give the only gift that means anything to a parent
or loved one: time. Turn off the TV, sit with mom and dad. Hear
the old stories.
My niece spent the week with me once. We’d come back from
wherever and she’d march into the house, head up the stairs to
her room, close the door, and that was the end of her. She
wasn’t angry, I didn’t take that as her not liking me or wanting
to be around me. We’d just spent most of the day together, and
we were done. I remember standing at the foot of the stairs,
looking up, marveling at this phenomena. She was a teenager.
This was what she was used to: she’s in her room, her mom is in
her room and we’re done. She’s up there watching TV and talking
on the phone, two things she didn’t need plane tickets to do.
This is, I suppose, the reality of parenting. Up the stairs,
close the door, a head full of secrets. History, wisdom and
experience are downstairs in the living room but she’s up there
watching booty-shake videos. These patterns are not universal,
but I’ve seen this more often than not, the invasion and
undermining of family life by the exponential encroachment of
media. We—you, me, the kids, everybody—are so plugged in, fed a
constant, 24/7 stream of entertainment and information, that
quiet, introspective scenes like those in I Will Follow seem alien and, somehow,
inauthentic.
Tribalism finds its foundation in both an oral history and
emulation of patterns of behavior. Your children will model your
behavior. You will hear your voice, your values echo in them.
But this only works if you actually make a concerted effort. I
was nine years old in 1970. There were no cell phones, no
Internet, no portable music players. There were cherry trees
blossoming in the backyard of grandma’s house, and all that
quiet. That magnificent quiet.
If only we could find our way back to that. If only we'd not
take what little we have left of that for granted.
Christopher J. Priest
27 November 2011
editor@praisenet.org
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