We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - How to Make Wrongs Right with Rabbi Danya Ruttenberg
Episode Date: December 27, 20221. Why we should stop expecting people to forgive. 2. Rabbi Danya’s five step-by-step process for repairing a relationship. 3. What makes a good – and a terrible – apology. 4. What to do (and ...to not say) if you want to make amends and change. 5. Why repentance is a process that has nothing to do with the one who was hurt. About Rabbi Ruttenberg: Rabbi Danya Ruttenberg is an award-winning author of 8 books, including On Repentance and Repair: Making Amends in an Unapologetic World. She serves as Scholar in Residence at the National Council of Jewish Women, and her writing has appeared in the New York Times, the Atlantic, Salon, Time, Newsweek, and many other publications. TW: @TheRaDR IG: @rabbidanyaruttenberg To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
And it took some time, but I'm finally fine.
Welcome back to...
Sorry, I just feel a little playful today.
Oh, God, help us all.
Welcome back to We Can Do Our Things.
Thank you for coming back.
We are here again, and like I used to tell my third graders,
I just need everyone to really turn on their listening ears,
open their minds and hearts,
some life changing shit coming to you today.
And, and that's what I used to say to my third graders.
I wouldn't.
I would have learned so much more.
I mean, what is life changing shit?
Life changing shit.
Yeah.
Come home. I like life changing shit.
Yeah. Exactly. Exactly.
Exactly.
Exactly.
So during our episode with Dr. Galit,
she talked to us about how,
when they did a study with mothers and babies,
it became clear that 70% of the bids for attention
or connection between mothers and babies were missed.
That is how often we miss each other.
But then there was this moment following the miss where the mother or the baby looked
out to reconnect, to mend or repair the miss.
And in that follow up, to repair the miss is where connection is made.
Not in the initial ask for connection
or bid for connection or attempt for connection,
but that what we do is human beings is more often than not,
we miss each other, but then there is a follow up
which is a repair of the initial bid for connection.
And that is where connection is made or lost.
And we miss it as adults.
We miss the repair moment because we have shame.
So if you take this baby study and you apply it to children,
to adults, to companies, to institutions, to nations,
what happens is, yes, we screw it up the first time in our relationships.
And the person comes to us and says, I feel hurt.
There is the golden moment to get connection.
But since we don't know the power of repair, we shut down, we dismiss, we deflect,
we deny and we miss the golden moment.
It's true for babies, it's true for children, it's true for adults, communities.
When people tell us that we've hurt them, we don't know how to handle it.
We think that we're being told we're a bad person, so we have to defend our identity.
And then we surrender to our own fragility and we miss the magic.
We have to stop missing the magic.
So we are going to speak right now to the person
who is helping people stop missing the magic.
You all know her as rabbi Dania Ruttenberg.
She is an award-winning author of eight books,
including her latest, which I loved so much,
on repentance and repair, making amends
in an unapologetic world.
She serves as scholar and residence
at the National Council of Jewish Women,
and her writing has appeared in the New York Times,
the Atlantic, Time, and many other publications.
Welcome, Rabbi Dan, Rettenberg.
Thank you for joining us.
Thank you so much for having me.
I have been reading you and following you for years.
And when I need to know what the smartest perspective is
on any given issue, I often go to you first.
I think you're one of the reasons why I'm still on social media.
So thanks for all that you do.
I'm so honored.
I've been reading you forever too.
So it's a time we talk to each other.
Can you tell us, Rob Idania, why this issue of figuring...
At first, I want you to describe the issue for us about repair and repentance,
but how it came about why you decided it was so important
to put this into the discourse
of how we can repair breaches from each other better.
So five years ago, just about exactly,
Me Too broke in a big, big way in our culture.
Of course, Toronto Birken created the hashtag much earlier,
but that was the watershed moment for our culture.
And all of these dudes were named as sexual abusers,
and pretty much to the last, they all offered up these weak sauce statements.
I did it, but it's really gonna be a problem for my fans and, you know, oh no, the
impact on my family and, you know, wine and almost to the last did not mention
the people that they harmed. Right? And then there was this sort of like,
okay, we're just gonna shove them in the corner.
And then it's like, now what?
What do we do with them?
And as it happened, a friend of mine,
Jericho Vincent was writing on this
and came to me and said, okay, so now what?
And I wrote up a couple paragraphs
using my monodies,
when Judaism is like the guy on mending harm,
owning your stuff.
The word is, it's translated as repentance,
but maybe I should start like a little bit back.
In Judaism, when we talk about what's translated as repentance, it's not. Now you feel bad.
It's a series of actions. The word is chuva, which means return. It's about coming back to the
person you were supposed to be all along. It's about coming back to your integrity. It's about coming
back to the best version of you. It's about coming back to the path that you wanted to your integrity, it's about coming back to the best version of you.
It's about coming back to the path that you wanted to be on before you started screwing up
and harming because out of ignorance, out of pettiness, out of laziness, out of sloppiness,
out of all the reasons we hurt people. And there's selfishness and greed and all of that, right? But
people and their selfishness and greed and all of that, right? But even the little reasons that we hurt people and out of our brokenness, out of our trauma, right? And so you have
to come back and there's work to do to come back and come back to relationship with God,
if that's language that resonates with you. And how would you say it for people who don't use
religiously?
Come back.
You come to your integrity, to your self, to your values,
to who you wanted to be, right?
You don't, do you want to be a harm to her?
Probably not.
But in order to do that, there's work to do.
And so the guy in my tradition, ingenism, is my monodies,
most of my monodies, 12th century philosopher,
Torah scholar, all around genius, who took a bunch of earlier thinking
and sort of rearranged it in a different order and kind of came up with
what we call the laws of repentance. Repentance is this tune of this coming back.
So I wrote up a couple of paragraphs
based on what I think, my modalities sort of order
of repentance and we'll get into what the steps are.
Like if you're a famous dude whose impact
is not just on specific victims, right?
These harm-specific people, but you also
impacted the entire culture.
It's like rape culture, right? Millions of people are now watching also impacted the entire culture. Right? Right culture, right?
Millions of people are now watching to see what happens next.
And your choices will impact how we think about gender, power, safety.
What women are for, all of these things.
So I sense that my friends and paragraphs for the piece they were writing,
then I threw those paragraphs on Twitter.
And this thread started like I wanna talk about
forgiveness and atonement and repentance
and like the difference between these things.
People went bonkers.
I remember.
So our culture doesn't have this language for this.
Nobody, like it's like, forgive, right?
Oh my God.
Yeah, nobody knows what it means.
Nobody knows what it means.
So you offer a starving world.
Paths.
This is why none of you know how to make up.
This is why none of you, you're all just feeling guilty
because you didn't forgive because somebody told you to forgive.
This is why you don't know what to do when somebody tells you
their hurt. They're actually are ideas on how to proceed.
And one of the first most important concepts you present
is that repentance and forgiveness
are two separate processes for two separate parties.
Repentance is the work that the one who did the harm,
the herder does, correct?
Right, okay.
So give us an example and then tell us
what the first step of repentance is
because we're talking about me too and wider issues
but what I've heard you say is that you've never seen
this path not work in some way for individuals,
for mothers and daughters, for fathers and sons, for companies,
institutions. It just, it works for everybody. Right. When we talk about this stuff in Judaism,
it's usually been about individual relationships, right? Family systems or what happened at work
or whatever. And after this Me Too conversation, I started playing with it. And like, would
it work for institutions? And well, what about this case study? Oh, oh, this, this company
that did something really right, it actually maps onto the steps. And what about nations?
And I kept waiting for the system to break and it never broke. There's something there.
And it echoes other systems that work because there's something there.
So first step is confession on your stuff, which means there's some pre-work, which is
what did I do?
Why is this a problem?
And there's a lot of heavy work in having to cross that sort of cognitive dissonance of like
we have the story of us as the hero, I'm always the the guy, I never do anything wrong.
And we have to kind of cross that bridge and face the fact that like today I caused someone
else pain.
Today I was not the good guy and someone else's pain. Today I was not the good guy in someone else's story.
And I have some cleanup work to do.
And then you have to name without talking about what you intended
and what you meant.
You don't care what you meant.
We don't care about your great intentions.
We don't care what a great person you usually are.
Just name what you did, own it.
Ideally, I mean, definitely to anybody who witnessed
the harm you say something racist in a staff meeting those people need to see
the confession publicly if the harm was caused publicly the taking ownership needs
to be done publicly correct because the harm was done to more people than just
the person who was offended directly correct And it has to be at least as public as the harm was caused.
And it is praiseworthy to make it even more public than the harm.
It's not a name and shame thing.
It's not about putting you in the stocks.
It's about asking for accountability, saying, struggling.
I did something that's not my best self,
and I need help getting back on that path of where I want to be.
Number two, from the victim's perspective, this isn't an end to the gaslight.
Yes.
Right, I did this. It happened. It was real. Like, any question you might have had about
It was real. Like, any question you might have had about, whose fault was it?
It really happened.
You know, did I do something to, why did this happen to me?
You get your answers, right?
The leaf you call it, you give relief to the person who's struggling because they are
gaslighting themselves at this point, probably saying, did that really happen?
Are my feelings valid?
The other person, the hertor, is giving relief to that person by saying, yes, it was real. Yes,
I did this. Right. And whether we're talking about sexual abuse, we want to talk about larger
systemic harm. We could talk about the way internalized racism plays out. There are all sorts of
different ways that naming and owning that harm can really be critical for a healing process.
As you're talking, I'm thinking of the word reconciliation because usually so much of
what we think about reconciliation is like two people or two groups coming together and
making peace.
But really reconciling is accepting a situation or fact, even though you don't like it.
So, in a way you're confessing, is your reconciling to yourself, with yourself,
that there is this thing that I did, this way that I'm showing up, this internalized issue in me,
that I am accepting as just as true
as this wonderful part of me, and I am claiming it.
And so really the first reconciliation has to be with you
or else you're never going to be able to offer
the truth of a confession.
Yeah, deeply.
And you have to be able to do that separation between, you know, we have this thing in our society
where people think I can't possibly be, I'm not racist.
So the thing I said can't possibly be racist, not a racist phone in your body as opposed to
we are all human beings and we do things.
We have actions and some of our actions are helpful
and some of them are harmful.
And we can clean up our messes and that is not an indictment
of your whole self.
And that's, you know, Glennon, when you were talking about the shame,
I mean, it's that, right?
I want to ask a question about what makes a good, whatever the opposite of
gaslighting is, owning harm, naming and owning harm. Because I, what I notice a lot,
and I think whether it's just the PR agents that are getting a little bit better
or actual human beings, I don't know. I think there's a couple PR agents who have
read your book because some are getting a little bit better. But in terms of people are always saying, I did something that was out of character for
me.
Like that's the main message.
And I always think, but don't we do what is in our character?
Isn't the issue not, I did something out of line with my character, but my character
wasn't good enough.
And what I did revealed my character exactly.
And so what I'm going to do is make my character better.
Exactly.
Exactly.
One of my favorite confessions is Dan Harmon,
who was a showrunner for community.
And he sexually harassed one of the writers on his set,
Megan Gans.
And it was all of the gaslighting,
and when she sort of rebuffed him,
he then treated her badly.
And when he finally owned it on his podcast,
he said, and this is somebody
who very clearly identified as a feminist,
and he said, there's no way I could call myself a feminist and do these things.
I clearly did not respect women the way I told myself that I did.
And I lied to myself about what was going on.
And for making ends, it was so validating to just have it named and just all of the questions are raised.
But for him to say, the story I've been telling myself about who I am clearly isn't true
if these are the choices that I made.
And so that's why you get to step two, which is then you have to start to change.
Right.
And then you have to work to do.
We love to put the post on Instagram, right?
I'm very sorry. I did a thing. Yes. I shouldn you have to work to do. We love to put the post on Instagram, right? I'm very sorry.
I did a thing.
Yes.
I shouldn't have said it, but very few people will then back it up with the change.
And I want to emphasize, it's that idea that we all are like mugs of liquid of coffee and
or tea.
And when we get bumped, something spills out.
Something spills out. And so what happens with our behavior is what's bumped, something spills out. Something spills out.
And so what happens with our behavior is what's inside of us has spilled out, not an accidental
liquid that was from somewhere else.
Like, actually, what is inside of us?
And so, so what we say then, or what we hope to be true, is I'm going to change what's
inside of me, so that the next time I'm bumped, something else spills out.
Right?
Yes. who likes fancy things. But I grew up working class. My parents were immigrants with factory jobs.
And because of that, I think about class a lot.
And I wanna talk about it.
That's what we're doing on my new podcast, Classy.
And what did you all eat?
You know, trailer food.
I was like, girl, we're not doing that anymore.
You'll hear from people who told me awkward, I was like, girl, we're not doing that anymore.
You'll hear from people who told me awkward, embarrassing, and strangely intimate things
about what class means to them.
She said, you know, for the house cleaner, I hide the tag on the $6 bread.
And I just thought, don't you think she knows that you're wealthy?
You're hiding the tags from yourself.
Classy.
A new podcast from Pineapple Street Studios.
Available now, wherever you get your podcasts.
So let's talk about what is next.
Starting to change.
That feels hard.
So let's just use the example that you just used, Dan Harmon.
His apology or his owning was, it felt like a relief to me when I read it.
It felt like some man had stopped gaslighting and admitted what they all know.
It felt like an act of mercy. So what might someone do?
And let's give an example too of when this is personal, like a relational family situation.
We've made the owning. That would be like a mother coming and saying, I know that I did this.
Like how do you see it happening in families with the first step?
that I did this, like how do you see it happening in families with the first step?
So the first step, you always have to sort of name it,
own it, right?
I have been on my phone and not giving you my full attention,
and it's a chronic problem, and I get that.
Can you do a different one?
Because that one hurts my feelings.
So that one reads too true.
Yeah.
That's my character.
I mean, you know, 98% of America is a Fickley bus kid.
She hasn't reconciled that.
Right.
So I am taking out my anger about my bad day at home instead of dealing with the hard
stuff at work.
So you have to own it and you have to name it and you have to name it clearly, right? The fact that you were playing a little bit loudly really wasn't a problem. You were okay,
right? And to really the reaffirming and the validating and that's the confessing. It's me.
I'm the problem. I love it. Thank you. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm. I'm. I'm sorry. I'm. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm. I'm. I'm sorry. I'm. I'm. I'm sorry. I'm here for that. He's left. Okay, yes, it's me, I'm the problem. Hi. And then you have to, and then I bet what?
Like what are you going to do so that you don't keep doing the thing?
Because you're not going back to anywhere.
You're not becoming your better self, no transformation.
If you keep doing it, you keep harming.
So you have to do change.
And it depends on the person, right?
What is at the root of this thing?
Do you need therapy?
Do you need to call your sponsor
or get into some sort of rehab situation?
Do you need to separate from a group of friends
because you always behave horrendously when you're with them,
but you're kind of okay otherwise.
But you need to rearrange some of your social priorities.
Do you need to do some deep education on anti-racism
or trans liberation?
Are there places of ignorance that you need to be working on?
What is the thing that needs to happen so that you can start to become different and not
do the thing anymore?
Yeah.
What's interesting, Potsquat, is so far none of this has to do with the person, the person
who has been hurt doesn't have to do shit in this process, correct?
No, we haven't even engaged them because we haven't even engaged them.
We haven't even engaged them.
Okay.
Right.
Different than change, or moving on from change,
is restitution and accepting consequences.
So tell us about this because there's an example
in your book I think of someone who owned the thing,
said the thing, then said they were gonna change
and then tried to get out
of the sentence that they write.
That's the example that stuck with me in your book.
Oh, well, isn't this a hard one?
Because you have to say it, change it, and then accept the consequences for it.
I would argue that, but even the steps one and two are really victim-centric. You're ending the gas for it. I would argue that, but even the steps one
and two are really victim centric.
You're ending the gaslighting.
You are preventing future victims, right?
And then step three,
A, there's restitution, right?
What is owed to the person who was harmed?
You can't undo what you did,
but it's like that Japanese art of
Kansugi where you bring things back together, you impair pottery with gold.
So it's not unbroken and you can still see the brokenness, but there's
something. Do you owe the money? Are you going to donate to an organization?
Are you going to give time? resources, connections, I don't
know what they need, how do you find out?
You ask them because if you decide for them what appropriate amends are, then you're still
making them an object.
You're not centering their personhood and their needs.
So you're like re-inscribing the same harm.
So you have to ask them and that has to be negotiated. What are
amends? And you have to accept the consequences. Because the cup is broken.
Maybe you're not invited back to game night anymore. Even if you're totally
repentant, you do all the things great amends. You still don't get to come back to
game night. You lost that job opportunity. And so the story is, Barry Frendel is a rabbi who was caught recording over 150 women as they
undressed for the mix of the Rich Will Bath.
Recording anyone, as they are addressing, is already a profound reach of trust, but the rabbi
congregant relationship and the sacred space of the ritual path.
And I mean, people go there, you know, when they're trying to conceive, after miscarriages,
it's also a very emotionally laden space and I can't even convey the rage that I experienced when I understand
this. And so he was ultimately sentenced to significantly fewer of the crimes that
he committed than he should have been because of stature limitations. So his
sentencing didn't reflect the full amount of crimes that he committed, and he gave this
beautiful apology, this really, because he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's, he's,
he knows he's my man at mononies, he knows what he's supposed to say, right? He's got all
the same books I do. He's, knows what to post, but then he argued that he shouldn't be in jail
for very long because he really ultimately only committed one crime because they're all bundled
together, which tells us that he doesn't understand what he did.
Right. What's the egg shell plaintiff doctrine that your sister was adding her lawyer self to the?
Yeah, I was thinking about this as we were talking about
restitution. I was thinking about the way that the legal system approaches that and there's this
doctrine called the eggshell plaintiff that if you negligently cause an accident, you are responsible
for the actual damages caused.
So even if the person you hurt as is as fragile as an egg shell, you can't say, well, the
average person wouldn't have been hurt this bad.
Or it's unreasonable that this person suffered such a great injury.
You take your victim as you find them.
So if you bump somebody a little bit and they fall to
pieces, you're responsible for those pieces even if you don't think that's reasonable. And I think
that is fascinating as it pertains to all of this because if you do something, you can't say,
you know, you were too sensitive. What I did doesn't correlate to that kind of injury or to exaggerating.
You know, all of that kind of gaslighting.
I just think that that legal doctrine of taking a victim as you find them is fascinating as it
applies to this. Yeah. Yeah. So next, after we've accepted consequences, no matter how sensitive
or fragile the other person was, because that is not the issue here.
Then comes the apology, which is so interesting all the way at the end.
Yeah, all the way there.
Because think of it.
Right.
Because when you think about it, like if the apology is at the beginning, you're still
basically the harm doer.
Exactly.
The thing's changed.
You're still that person.
And so it's like checking off something of
box and it's it's the publicist writing the thing you post on Instagram under little
notes app. Like I don't know why that's a thing. It looks so organic. Yes. Because it looks raw.
How is this different than the first owning harm? How is the apology different than number one? You own the harm, right?
You say, I did this thing.
And then you have to do the work.
You say, okay, really, this is me.
Today I'm not the good guy.
And then you have to do the work to change
and make that coffee a different, you know,
put in some sugar, get some cream, whatever it is,
and the true coffee is sweeter and better.
And then you have this negotiated amends.
And so imagine somebody's going on a journey
of anti-racism, for example.
They said something out of deep ignorance.
And then they have to understand what they did.
And as they're learning, there's that moment of like,
oh, oh.
Yeah.
And then in the negotiated amends,
they start to, as they hear what the other person needs,
there's more understanding that really happened to them.
And the deeper empathy and connection, and so by the time you get to this apology, this
transformation has happened.
Yeah.
You have been transformed.
You're already someone else.
And that apology is flowing from a truly contrite heart.
Yes.
Yeah, well, you did.
And you're really sorry.
As opposed to the harm-doer, it doesn't understand it.
Oh, why everybody's so mad.
Baffled.
The harm-doer's baffled, right, in the beginning.
Because they didn't do something out of character.
They did something in character.
And then the world said, that character sucks. And then they're like, wait. And so by the time we get through
all the work and we get to the apology, we are of a different character. We can look back
on our previous self and have sorrow for the harm that that person did. I'm sorry means
not, oh, should I got caught? But I have sorrow in my heart. If we don't have sorrow in our
hearts, we shouldn't be saying, I'm sorry, right? have sorrow in my heart. Right. If we don't have sorrow in our hearts,
we shouldn't be saying I'm sorry, right?
Right.
And it's not about getting off the hook.
And notably, the work of repair that amends,
what do you need to do to sew up that hole
in the cosmos that you caused already happened?
Right, do the work first.
We don't want your words until you've already
done the fixing thing. Somebody's sitting there on the floor with a broken foot and you're
like, I'm sorry and the person is like, I'm really would just like you to pay for my hospital
bills or, you know, whatever. Like, do the work first. Right. Then, and then we can have the
conversation about how you feel about what you did.
And become safer for the person because you're not even safe to approach the person when
you're of the same character that caused the tell us some things that make horrific apologies.
It's awesome, right?
Ravidanya, when people say they're sorry and then cry and then get very victimy and then
make sure that all of the attention is on reassuring
that person. So that's good, right? Right. Right. I mean, that's the thing is that the apology,
it all has to be victim to eccentric. And what I love about the language that my mononies
uses in this section of the laws of repentance is that my monity says you have to appease the victim. So it's not
you have to do a certain thing. And it's like, what is going to appease? What is going
to, there's some other languages and there are some other words in Hebrew as well, but
you know, to care for to appease, to take care of the victim, like, it's going to be different
for different people. And it will be different depending on what happened. It's not, my monarchy says,
you have to say these three magic words,
and then you're off the hook.
It is, what does the person who was hurt need
in order to feel better?
What are their spiritual needs?
What are their emotional needs?
So that's, again, it's about having to engage them
as full people.
Yeah.
What about, there are many, many examples of times
when the perpetrator who's doing the repentance work
needs to not directly have contact
with the person who is victimized
because that would be bad.
And more hurtful no matter how much work the person's doing,
and that victim person never
wants to hear from this person again and will do their own healing work on their own.
And that is there and that is real and there are times and again, this is victim centric.
So if it's going to harm the person who was hurt to show up and say, it's a men's
and apology time.
So I can go back and, you know, do my chew of a work,
then you're not doing it right because it's not about the heart.
Do it.
So there are ways to do indirect demands, right?
You can instead of doing something directly for the person you harm,
you volunteer your time and energy at an organization that would make sense. Or you fight to get certain
laws passed, or you spend the rest of your life trying to transform our culture into a better
safer place. Right, you committed sexual assault. You should not work with victims of assaults,
right? But there are things you can do. And you just have to live with the consequence of not
getting let off the hook by the victim. That might be really uncomfortable for you. And that is your consequence for the
rest of your life that you don't get to possibly have that moment with your victim, where your victim
says, I forgive you. Well, and that's the thing, as we said at the beginning, like forgiveness and
repentance are different tracks. Let's talk about that. Yeah, so the person doing the repentance work can do all of their work and do everything
and not be forgiven. And it's still okay. My mom already says, if you're not, if you go
and you apologize and the person says, piss off, I'm not interested in this.
Then you come back with an accountability team.
You bring three people and they're there to watch you and see what your
language is and what are you saying and how are they responding?
And then maybe you debrief afterwards, like, what am I missing?
You know, why is this not landing?
And you do that a few more times.
You go back and forth and I am am on it. He says after you've apologized ultimately four times,
once on your own, and then three times
different people who are trying to help you make this connection.
If it's not landing, you have done everything you can,
and you are free to, and then this is where it gets Jewish,
like you're free to ask God for forgiveness,
unyom kippur, and the day of atonement,
and you're fine.
There's no place in Judaism for the sentence,
you have to forgive me because I can't finish
my repentance work otherwise, it doesn't exist. I'm just obsessed with how we as a culture, even our expectations and the onus and the agency
is on the person who had the harm done to them. If there is an injury, we don't look at the person
who did the harm and say, have they atoned,
have they repented, have they changed?
We say, oh, did they make up?
Are they forgiven?
Are they good now?
As if the victim of the situation is the one who's holding the ball the entire
time.
And for me, that's so frustrating because like culturally we could shift that and be
like, the victim is in charge of taking care of themselves and has zero other obligations.
And I'm looking at you and seeing what you're doing.
If you do harm, you get to be the passive one.
And just looking over and saying,
I'm ready to receive my forgiveness anytime.
I did my thing.
And so for me, I feel like forgiveness
is between you and you.
There is no two people in forgiveness.
So when you forgive, it's not letting the other person free.
When I have forgiven, it's not to let the other person free.
It is to let myself free.
And it's not like accepting what they did.
It's accepting that it happened.
So like the famous Oprah show thing of like forgiveness
is giving up the hope it would have been different.
Not that it was okay, but that it happened.
And I just think this thought of forgiveness
as like an exchange of value or a gift between
two people is horseshit because if you do it so that you are not a prisoner to the thing
that happened to you.
And I think the reverse is true that if you are the harm doer forgiveness is still between
you and you.
You don't go to the injured party looking
for gifts because a that's wildly inappropriate and b it's not even useful because it doesn't
actually express anything real. It's just if you are holding yourself prisoner because you did harm
that's your business and an apology might be part of what you try to do,
but it can't be what frees you.
Like you need to free yourself through your own work.
Yeah.
I experienced that a direct example in my past marriage,
rampant infidelity was revealed.
And immediately in my church, I was a project.
Like it was, it was, it was, it's okay, Craig's used to like, me talking about this. It's part of his repentance, I was a project. Like the, it was, it was, it was okay.
Craig's used to like, me talking about this.
It's part of his repentance.
I'm just joking.
I know, I'm not.
My reaction was, was, was just that visceral horror
at, you know, totally getting it.
Like, yes.
I was a project factor.
Like, it was like, he was unfaithful.
And then I was the project.
Like, I had to go to, to, to Christian therapy.
I had to go to the circles. I had to go to to Christian therapy. I had to go to
the circles. I had to read the books because my job was to forgive. Has she forgiven him yet?
But there was no, let's put Craig in the groups. And there was this compulsory forgiveness.
And I love how you talk about just talk to us about compulsory because it it served somebody.
And it's always the people in power. Compulsory forgiveness,
pretty much always re-inscribes existing power structures. Harm isn't always between
someone with more power and someone with less power, right? It's not the only way that harm happens.
But almost always to the last when one person is pushing or a bunch of people are pushing
one party to do the forgiving, it is in order to maintain the status quo so that nothing
will change so that systems won't change so that social dynamics won't change so that
we can just keep exactly everything as it is. Our pastor doesn't have to resign.
We don't need to ask any larger questions about the police force that enabled this black
motorist to be shot. We just push forgiveness and then everything can just stay exactly as it is.
Isn't unity often a euphemism for forgiveness?
Like we just all need to be unified on this.
I actually think that our country's obsession
with forgiveness came at the end of the Civil War.
Yes.
Right. When white northerners started preaching,
listen guys, we need to forgive the South
and we all need to be unified and we all aren't we all brothers and no, no, no, no, no, guys, we need to forgive the South and we all need to be unified and we aren't
we all brothers and no, no, no, no, no, no, right? Even abolitionists who were maybe against
slavery, but not against white supremacy. And they threw black Americans under the bus
said, don't worry about that. Violence you're hearing about. It's fine. Right? It doesn't
the lynchings. It's, it's okay. We are still friends.
We are all unity forgiveness is the number one thing.
And we started hearing forgiveness, forgiveness, forgiveness.
And it was a way to re-inscribe white supremacy at a moment when it was at risk.
Unity, right?
And then it's the same thing that happened right after January 6th.
And it is always at the expense of someone.
And you always have to look around and do the power analysis.
When you hear the words unity, the words forgiveness,
when they're getting pushed, see whose interests aren't
being served and why.
Unity at the expense of justice,
you ask who's justice.
And forgiveness, okay, forgiveness
without demanding what repentance.
Because as you point out,
Rabbi Danya, this unity is always demanded.
Nobody's even said they're sorry.
Nope.
We haven't even required that.
Yeah.
No, no.
After the Civil War, you had all these people saying, we're going to be friends and then
you had both black and white, other people who were like, can we talk about repentance?
Yeah.
For a Douglas saying, like, let the ex-sugglers what to do repentance work for.
I don't know in S sleeping human beings. And they
want to talk about how genuinely sorry they are that they did this and then want to war to defend
their right to do it. Sure, we can have a conversation, but this thing where they're not sorry at all
and we're just going to pretend nothing happened? Not only are we gonna pretend nothing happened, but we are in fact going to give reparations,
but it's going to be for the people
who enslaved people who have lost their property,
not for not reparations for people who lost
their lives and their ancestors lives.
But we're gonna reimburse you for that
because that is an offense that needs
atonement. And to bring it down to like the personal level also. This is what you see in families.
When the child comes and says, I was mistreated and then the mother says, we just have to forgive,
it's just the way it is. That is the same dynamic of like, we will keep power and we will keep
status quo exactly as it is without changing.
And by the way, in my previous marriage, there was no power differential like we were equal in
the hurt, but that process still protects power because by saying, Glennon is the one, the victim
is the one who has to do the work. Power is protecting itself because then all of the people above us,
the pastors, the men in powerful positions,
don't ever have to be the ones doing their repentance. So even if the two people in the conflict
have equal power, power is still protecting itself.
I think this whole conversation around power and the dynamics between perpetrator and victim,
I guess my question is, is forgiveness even possible? Because I don't believe in it.
To me, there's a big question in that it is to create status quo. It is like, oh, but
we all must forgive. That's just the way of the world. Religions have these, you know,
tenants that are based in it, but it's to keep those institutions central. I don't know if real forget, I just don't know,
and I'm curious from your perspective. What does it mean? Is it real? Okay, let's talk about
forgiveness. So in Judaism, there are two different words that get translated as forgiveness,
that get translated as forgiveness because nothing is uncomplicated. There's Michela and Slija.
So Michela is like a closing of accounts.
Like you stole from me, fine, you acknowledged that you did, and you figured out why you made
that choice.
Or you're like you're working on it, you're in therapy, you paid me back, you apologized really nicely,
we're done.
And remember, none of this includes reconciliation, right?
That's a whole different thing.
Very important.
Maybe we're friends again, maybe we're not,
but whatever, this story is over, we're good,
closing the books.
And then there's Slecha, which is like,
the more emotional, empathetic, like I see you,
and it's warm and fuzzy, and that's the one that's usually American culture is all about.
Like, you know, I forgive you kind of vibe. Jewish literature generally talks about
Michela. We're just closing the box. It's over. We're just the case closed. And so it's a much lower bar. And so if we're saying repentance
and forgiveness are different tracks. So A, we have the penitent person has gone and done all their
work. They've trotted off and are changed and transformed. Yeah. Okay. Good. And then the person
who was harmed now has to figure out where they are.
And if somebody is coming to them and they're genuinely sorry,
and they're genuinely doing the work, Jewish literature says,
A, don't be super petty.
If it's something that's not a major, major deal,
like don't be petty, don't lourd your wounds over them. Check yourself to see if
you're refusal to close the books on this situation is, if there's something in you that you need to
check on, because it may be spiritually bad for you that you're hanging on to. So you shouldn't do
that, and that's bad. And I have a whole extended disagreement,
very nerdy disagreement with my monodies
about some of the language and choices he made
in the section, we don't need to go there.
I love you.
She's a very good friend.
I'm a very disagreement with the 13th century Jewish scholar.
I used to refer to him as my dead medieval boyfriend.
Of course you do.
I don't anymore, but you know, well, I have those two
differentiations.
We need that.
We need that.
Because in your book, you said sometimes somebody else said this, but it was a quote,
sometimes forgiveness is wishing that rotten SOB peace and getting along with your life.
Yeah.
I can buy that.
That's whatever.
Yeah. Right. And it's just like go zoom. peace and getting along with your life. Yeah, I can buy that. That's whatever.
Right, and it's just like go, zoom.
And whenever I talk about this, I always make sure to make sure this is clear.
The Jerusalem Talmud is an authoritative source, says that if somebody slanders you, they
never, ever have to forgive them. And the, in reason why that's given by later commentators
is very much because, you know, if somebody talks crap about you, it's like the feathers have been
let loose in the wind, like you can never collect them all, like you can never get back. Everybody,
you know, the story is already out there. And there's no way to totally take it back. That is harm that can never be
fully repaired. So my read is that if you are harmed in a way that can never be fully repaired,
you are never obligated to forgive. That's how I feel. You're never obligated to forgive your abuser. Ever.
With trauma, never. You might, right, in your healing process,
as you do your work of healing.
And I think my personal take is that victims of harm
and we're all perpetrators, victims, and bystanders,
all of us all the time.
But when we are victims, like our job is to do the healing work
and to do everything we can to take care of ourselves and if organically in that someplace
at some time, we find that we have closed the books.
Okay.
And we can tell the perpetrator or not.
It's so good because it's often, it often feels like, can you forgive me?
Feels shorthand for, can we pretend that that never happened?
Can we go back to way that never happened?
And that feels like the opposite of forgiveness for the person,
which is accepting that it can never be different.
Like you have to accept it can never be different,
but the perpetrator gets to pretend like it never happened.
It's something.
It can't be both ways.
Right.
I want to ask you a heavy, serious question, but I know that you are the one to ask.
So you thought, and the writing in the book
is so beautiful and specific about really how you see
this repentance, not even really repentance for forgiveness,
but repentance for giving us process,
how it might be implemented in different conflicts,
interpersonal and institutional and international.
So how do you see this being implemented
in the Israeli-Palestine conflict?
It's so hard.
Obviously, Israel is the party with more power, right?
And human rights abuses are being committed in an ongoing way.
I'm very comfortable naming that.
I'm against the occupation. I've been a faculty against the occupation. And the fact of the matter is
that there are competing understandings of what is true. That is a reality. I've made it a project to
go learn and learn and learn and learn and learn and
shut up and learn. And there are a lot of things that are true simultaneously, even if it's not
convenient that they're all true at the same time. And you know, the first step of this work is
always confession, truth telling. And look at South Africa is Truth and Reconciliation Commission in the book as one kind of model.
And I really believe that with Israel Palestine, what we need to do is make space for all of the truth
to be told in one place. And that everybody hears all of the things and it's a massive project, right?
And I don't know if we start with everything
that happened in 1948.
I have ideas about which specific people,
or organizations we would bring in, you know,
but you get all of the things told in one place.
And then what does starting to change look like?
I feel a really belief, deep in my bones, that if we can get the truth telling done right,
like a real truth telling, that the next step will present itself.
What that starting to change will look like, will find itself in the middle of that process. And if you get the right people working together
to formulate what that could be,
it can and will happen.
Yeah, yeah.
You're making me think of one of them important keys
is complete surrender and presence in each step
without thinking forward to what the next thing is gonna be
because you're gonna become a different person
and more will be revealed in each step which will then make the next thing is going to be because you're going to become a different person and more will be revealed in each step, which will then make the next step clear.
So this is very straight thing-ish.
And when you're saying all of that, it rings so true because as you're speaking, I was
thinking about a family and like how impossible it is to you're saying this and I'm saying
this in this part of my life.
And the way you are is you're that way because of the generation before you.
And it's like the only way a family could heal
is if we could have one room with the ghosts
of our ancestors and our great-grandmothers saying,
oh, she's like that because I healed from this
and then she healed from that and then you healed.
And it would be like the only way a family could truly heal
is if with generations were in the same room
because all the things are true at once.
Right.
Right.
Right.
I had a friend sit in my house last week, a dear friend.
And she is a freedom fighter for all oppressed groups.
And she is Jewish.
And this is right after the latest Kanye fiasco.
And she sat on my couch, fire in her, sadness in her.
And she said, it just feels to me like anti-semitism
is the last permissible hate.
Talk to us about where we are in this country
with anti-semitism and why that ring so true.
So, after I kind of go back a thousand years, it's a sentence or two.
If anybody can do it, it's you.
So in beginning in the medieval Christian era, Christians didn't want to do money lending.
Jews are like, it's not,
or God against our religion, you don't care.
Y'all won't let us own land,
or taxing us ridiculously,
and keep kicking us out of different countries.
So having liquid resources is great.
So we get this association with Jews and money.
Then, little by little,
this game of blame the Jews not us starts up.
So any time someone is in power and things aren't going very well, they start to say it's
the Jews.
It's not us.
Those greedy Jews, it's not us.
Remember, we are mostly poor.
We are mostly like refugees from country to country because they keep kicking us out, but
they still play this game.
And so you get to like 1902, bizarre Nicholas writes his people write the protocols of the
L.A.S.I.N. right secret cabal of the Jews because things were going badly for him.
1905 revolution was getting going.
Blame the Jews not us.
It's always the people in power,
but the Jews are the scapegoat.
And so we have this ongoing story
of the people in the shadows
who are secretly behind the scenes,
pulling the strings.
You can't see them, but they're there.
And they're really behind everything.
And then we have Jews come to America and we are,
this is the best we've ever had it, honestly.
Anytime in history, things are kind of going okay.
The white Jews managed to assimilate into whiteness
in a lot of different ways, it's conditional whiteness,
but it's partly there.
And the same like shadowy Jews behind the scene trope continues. That's
why it's so hard to see because it's slippery and you talk about the deep state and you
talk about like a sorrows, you know, Rothschilds. Like it's an ancient trope. It's these little
things you just show the names of a few politicians. You know, you just raise up and it comes up again.
And again, and these, you know,
QAnon is now bringing up blood libel truths.
It's the same stuff over and over again,
but because by design, it's the folks behind the scenes
and it's hints and it's whispers,
we are somehow secretly pulling the strings,
even though white Protestants have been basically
running the country and Christophe fascism
is coming for all of us.
Of course.
You know what?
I'm sorry.
But somehow magically Jews are supposed to be
behind all of this.
But you don't say Jews.
And so it's in code.
You talk about the globalists
and you talk about those cosmopolitan people
and the rich people and the people on the coast, the elites.
And so it's in code, but we all kind of know
and it's half conscious and it's half not.
And that's why, because it's slippery.
The other thing is that the way that anti-Semitism operates
that is different from other oppressions is that,
unlike other oppressions, anti-Semitism even works better
when Jews are doing okay.
When Jews are actually doing okay in society,
like it continues to function and even thrives off of that,
whereas many oppressions are about keeping a population below under beneath.
And so that is also part of the slipperyness of it.
It looks like everything's fine.
It looks like we're doing fine.
The juice is fine.
Why are they complaining?
And it's like, well, because people keep gunning down our synagogues, kidnapping our
rabbis, if people would stop doing that, then that would be great.
Thank you for that.
Thank you.
So, we're going to close now.
We call this, we can do hard things.
I just really have come to believe over in my life, whether it's in a personal
situations, whether things I do online, that this process of really surrendering to a repentance
path, it's like getting on one of those when you're in the airport and you get in on one
of those little escalators that are just flat, but it moves you faster
than everybody else.
People move in.
Like in terms of spiritual evolution,
in terms of personal development,
actually surrendering to a repentance process
feels so uncomfortable,
and it is a speed track to be a better person.
And we are all missing it.
It's like if we had this one workout
since America's so physically obsessed,
it's like there was this one workout
that was like the magical thing
that would make you live longer.
And then just none of us did it because it was hard.
Like this is the equivalent of that.
It's a spiritual workout.
It's a spiritual workout.
It's a thing that you don't wanna do at first
and then it hurts and it's sweaty and icky
and then it changes you
and then it changes and it's sweaty and icky and then it changes you and then it
changes everyone around you and you can actually see the magic happen in your relationships
when you stop refusing it. And I think that your work because of that is so and also for
a million reasons. I mean, you guys have to read the rest of my darkness work. This is
just her latest. So important.
World-changing, life-changing.
Thank you for being who you are in the world.
And all of you, we can do hard things.
Pod Squad, follow Rabbi, Donia.
Check her out and end the book.
Thank you so much.
We appreciate you.
Thanks for doing hard things.
Thanks so much.
OK.
See you next week, Pod Squad.
Bye.
I give you Tish Melton and Brandy Carlisle. I chased, desire, I made sure I got what's mine And I continue to believe that I'm the one for me and because I'm mine, I walk the line.
Cause we're adventurous and heartbreak.
So, man, a final destination,
that we've stopped asking directions
Some places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain that our lives bring, we can do a heartache.
I hit rock bottom, it felt like a brand new star I'm not the problem, sometimes things fall apart And I continue to believe the best people are free
And it took some time, but I'm finally fine Cause we're adventurers and heartbreaks on matter
A final destination with that
We stopped asking directions
So places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be an old one
We'll finally find a way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do a heartache This world finished her rose and heart breaks on land
We might get lost but we're only in that
Stopped asking directions
Some places may have never been
And to be loved we need to be long
We'll finally find our way back home
Through the joy and pain that our lives bring
We can do hard things.
Yeah, we can do hard things.
Yeah, we can do hard things.
We can do hard things,
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