Okay, so I yelled a little too loudly when I yelled at my daughter. Okay, so
maybe she didn't deserve as much of my anger as I let out. But, she did deserve
some of it, didn't she? I mean, after what she did, could I just let it pass?
Not say anything? Pretend it didn't happen?
Who would she become, then? Should I just tolerate everything for the sake of
not getting angry?
Okay, so it does make the house unpleasant and casts a pall over the evening
after I yell and she walks off with that look on her face and goes to her room
and closes her door.
You're right, it scares the other kids, who just sort of look away and stay
quiet for the rest of the evening, hoping I won't get mad at them.
And, yes, I was in a bad mood when I came home, and, yes, that did have some
bearing on the way I responded. But, still, should I have just let it pass? I
mean, doesn't Chaya need some discipline, sometime?
Your dignity, my wife said.
What? What does my dignity have to do with this?
When you yell like that, you lose your dignity, she said.
My dignity? I questioned with exasperation. I thought we were talking
about her, about her behavior, her need to be taught right
from wrong.
You can do that with dignity, she said, again. When you lose your temper, you
lose your dignity.
Okay, she got me. I sat down, ready to hear more. I took a deep breath and
tried to stuff my defenses in my pocket long enough to hear what she had to say.
Chaya loves you, she explained. She craves your approval, she continued. Your
slightest look of displeasure is picked up by her and all the children, she said
convincingly.
If you had simply grimaced, she continued, it would have given her the
message, taught her the lesson, and, yet, left your dignity in tact.
Just grimaced?, I asked, disbelievingly.
Just grimaced, she repeated. Chaya -- all of them -- are totally tuned in to
you. You are their father. They love you and want you to be happy with them.
When you're not, they notice and it matters. If you believed this, you wouldn't
have to get angry. And if you didn't get angry, you'd keep your dignity. And if
you kept your dignity, you'd teach them how to keep theirs as well.
Whoa! This was a lot to take in. Too much to take in. And how did my wife get
so wise? And where did she even find the courage to say all this to me, this
husband not especially known for accepting criticism in the lightest of ways,
especially from his wife; this person who often saw criticism when there wasn't
even any around.
Was there any around?
Well, I looked and I couldn't find any. It felt close to criticism. It had
some of the texture and smell of criticism. But, there was something in the way
she was telling me all this that didn't feel like criticism. But it did feel
really important. Like something I should hear if I could just get my ego out of
my ears.
You mean to tell me that if I just grimace the kids will get the message?
Yes, she said, though you might also have to explain what you're grimacing
about. But you don't have to yell to do that. Your displeasure is loud enough.
And when I yell? I asked.
Painful, she said. Straight into their little hearts. The hearts that love
you.
Oh, my!!
But I don't want to be so responsible with my behavior, I screeched. What
about spontaneity, I pleaded. Can I ever be myself again? I cried out to the One
Above.
Of course, she replied. (My wife, not the One Above.) Just don't get so
angry. You don't need to, and it hurts your dignity. And the kids want you to
have dignity.
Dignity. What a word. What a concept. What exactly did it mean? How could you
lose it? Where can you find it?
You're on your own. Figure it out. You'll get it, she said with confidence, and
in such a way as to preserve my … yes…. Dignity. We ended the conversation with
my ego intact.
So, I started my research where any good student would go: to the dictionary.
Dignity: The presence of poise and self-respect in one's deportment to
a degree that inspires respect; loftiness and grace. Syn. Decorum.
Intrigued, I followed the link to decorum.
Decorum: … suitableness of speech and behavior to one's own character,
or to the place and occasion… Poise in behavior.
Poise again. I had to check that out.
Poise: To be balanced; the state or condition of being balanced.
This is what my wife was talking about, wasn't it? "…suitableness of
speech and behavior to the place or occasion…", "poise and balance". My
anger had been out of balance with both the occasion and my daughter. I had done
the opposite of "inspiring respect."
I began to think of my little Chaya trying to receive and contain my outburst
of negative energy. I was angry for my own sake, not for hers. I had not only
lost myself, but I had forgotten my daughter, as well. She was simply
overwhelmed by my intensity, unable to absorb or understand it. She was
frightened, and I could envision her little mind and heart bursting from the
power of my voice and words and facial expression. There was no way this anger
could have any positive effect. My anger was only delighting in its own
expression. And in behaving like this, I had lost, as my wife said, my dignity.
And my daughter had suffered the consequences.
Later that day, I was studying a book on the Sephirot, the ten divine
"attributes" which G-d assumes in order to create and interact with our
existence.
I was learning about Chesed (Kindness/outpouring), Gevurah
(Restriction/containment) and their merger in Tiferet (Beauty, or what I
might now call Dignity).
In the description I was reading, the word "balance" was used to describe
Tiferet, as the dictionary had used this word to describe dignity,
decorum and poise.
The passage was describing the balance between "outpouring" and the
receptacle to contain it. When the ideal balance exits, beauty is the result.
When things fit together properly, when form perfectly matches content, when
balance occurs and proportions are correct, things are beautiful. They have
grace and poise.
And when applied to behavior, I thought, they have dignity and decorum.
The Kabbalists say that when the outpouring is greater than the vessel can
contain, the result is a "shattering of the vessel." When the outpouring is too
little, the result is a vessel left in need. But when, the outpouring is, as
Goldilocks says, just right, the vessel just big enough, the result is
beautiful, a perfect fit.
Again, it was not difficult to see the relevance to my daughter and my
behavior. And as I continued to read it was as if the words were printed over a
vague outline of her face looking up at me, sometimes smiling, sometimes
expressing the shock and anguish she felt as I yelled at her.
The passage continued to describe the way that G-d constricts and restricts
Himself so that each container, no matter how small, is provided just the right
amount of G-dliness without breaking, And I now had a glimpse of what was
required of me. As challenging as it seemed, I figured that since I was created
in the image of G-d, He had probably given me the resources I needed to
accomplish what seemed the impossible.
I would need to match the outpouring of my expression to fit my daughter's
ability to receive. And this would require that I come to know her ability to
receive, that I tune deeper into her sensitivities, the size of her heart, the
fragility and strength of her emotions, her capacity to understand her own
behavior and mine, and to keep this knowing foremost in my mind and heart.
Returning again to Chassidism and the order of the Sephirot, I related this
level of knowing to the sephirah of Daat, which precedes and influences
the sephirot of Chesed -- outpouring, expression -- and Gevurah --
restriction, containment.
Though Daat is both preceded by and a combination of the sephirot of
Chochma (Wisdom) and Binah (Understanding) it is not an
intellectual knowing, not a mind knowing, but a deeper knowing -- an intimacy
with the other that bridges the distance between subject and object, between
knower and known.
As I thought about my daughter, I related Daat to the kind of knowing
that occurs between parents and children at their best. The sort of knowing
available to those created of the same blood, seed and egg, the same DNA and
soul, the same family and home. It was difficult for me to contemplate this
level of knowing without imagining the deep love that would result and the
overwhelming desire to give and be kind to that which comes to be known in this
intrinsic way.
Thinking about this and my little Chaya, my love and affection for her filled
my awareness, and as I remembered yelling at her on this unfortunate morning my
behavior now seemed unbearably abhorrent and cruel.
Seeing now how ugly I had acted and the pain I caused her, I marveled at how
kind my wife had been to me. At the time, I could not have listened to a
description of my ugliness without shutting out my wife's words in my own
defense. In her wisdom, she had chosen words that I could hear and learn from.
She had spoken to me not of ugliness, but of dignity.
I now had this strange feeling that Chassidic teaching was telling me how to
be a better father and husband, and my daughter and wife were teaching me how to
better understand Chassidism, and myself.
I began to see that I would not, as I feared, be denied my spontaneity.
Though my behavior would no longer be controlled by outbursts of emotion,
neither would it be the artificial result of stiff, premeditated thought. From
coming to know my daughter -- or my wife -- in the ways that Chassidism
described, I saw the possibility that my expression could rise from a different
kind of spontaneity, one that sprung naturally from my best mind, from my open
heart, from my caring and love.
I saw the possibility of maintaining my dignity while giving my daughter the
ability to receive and learn from that which I wished to impart, as my wife had
given that opportunity to me.
And I saw that the result would be beautiful, in the way that all things are
beautiful when they fall from the mind into the heart to be expressed by our
actions and words.
To my daughter, my apologies. To my wife, my gratitude. To Chassidism, my
appreciation for the refinement you bring to my life.