The
Sword of Truth
“...you
don't always have to chop with the sword of truth. You can point with
it, too.”
Anne
Lamott (Bird by Bird)
In
the quote above, Anne Lamott recalls the advice she gave a girl in
one of her writing classes who had severely criticized another
student's writing. The girl's words were honest, but hurtful.
Sometimes the “truth” is too harsh to tell. Southern women have
all sorts of ruses for getting around telling hard truths to others.
Expressions such as, “Bless your heart.” and “Oh my goodness,
that's special!” and “How interesting!” have other meanings in
our rhetoric. Most of the time we don't even try to point the sword
of truth. We just pull down the shade of sweetness and go on.
I
have to say, as much as I hate these stereotypical responses of
Southern Belles, I have learned a lot from them. Sometimes our best
teachers are people who make us grit our teeth, and, believe me,
Southern Belles make me gnash. I once had an adversary who fought me
like a scalded cat about bringing children with disabilities into a
preschool program she directed at our church. She wanted an
untarnished and affluent, white population, and not “those children”
in her school. I ranted and railed and told all kinds of “truth”
to the Board of Directors, while she smiled sweetly, and served them
cookies. I brow-beat that Board into having kids with special needs
in the school, but they turned right around and gave her credit for
the program! They even erected a plaque to her for her generosity of
spirit! It was pretty disgusting.
The
problem with chopping with the sword of truth, is that you leave a
lot of bleeding people in your wake. You go all “Gen. Sherman” on
them, and burn their barns and blow up their bridges so there's no way to get back
to where you started. Sometimes even pointing the sword at them is
too much because they have already decided you're the enemy and won't
hear anything you say, truthful or otherwise. It's usually good to
choose your words carefully, and while you don't want to betray your
own standards and beliefs, say what you need to say in a kind way.
This is a hard, but necessary, lesson for us Anti-Belles.
I
hope you're better than I am. I hope that today, you're kind to
everyone you meet and bring a note of cheer into this crazy old
world. We all need a sweeter, gentler approach to life. Instead of
chopping or pointing with the sword of truth, perhaps we could just
share a nice cup of chamomile tea, and maybe a cookie or two. I'll put on my white gloves.
In
the Spirit,
Jane
1 comment:
This blog is precious. Oh, my, you mirror our sweet ways. Bless your heart :)
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