Do you remember the story of the person on the roof top in a flood
who prayed to God to save him? Three rescuers went by and shouted out
to the man to jump in and the man refused saying his God would save
him, and then, when the man drowned and went to heaven God said he sent
three rescuers to save him... you all may have heard this story several
times, it was even told in the movie, The Pursuit of Happiness. So now
I present a twist to a similar story in hopes that we all wash this
story out of our minds for good!
Yesterday,
a woman wrote into a radio station seeking help because she had been in
a relationship where she became an enabler and victim to a man who was
a crack addict, and for 20 years he abused her and the kids. I then
heard the radio personalities tear into her about how "stupid" she was
and pointing out all the things she ALREADY knew and felt PRIOR to
writing in. She wrote in for HELP and got ripped into. Then I heard
it... you've got to save yourself here!.... and I'm thinking....
WHAT?????????????????????????
Not
that there is anything wrong with self reliance, but there comes at
time when a person is disabled beyond their personal ability to help
themselves and this woman had been drowning in this for 20 years...
this situation required more and less than less was given.
So
then I'm annoyed because, who the hell are they to say this? I
instantly remembered the story of the man on the roof and what I
learned from that. Let me change that story for one moment. Let us put
this woman on the roof top in the story of the flood, only this time,
when she is waiting for help from God... the rescuers think she is nuts
and keep moving... which may have been what the rescuers in the first
story passing by thought anyway... yet this woman had enough courage to
write into the radio station for help, airing her dirty laundry to the
whole nation. IF the radio station would have considered itself the
true rescuers passing to help her... (and remember, there was plenty of
time to plan help for her considering the letter was chosen and
responded to prior to being aired on national syndicated radio) then
what stopped them from actually helping? They presented the whole
"JUMP!!!! OR YOU'LL DROWN" thing yes... but who of them got into the
water to swim to the roof to save her? Who of them asked her if she
could swim? Who of them that said she was crazy stopped and said...
'hey... wait... something is not right here... maybe we should let her
know WE are sent from GOD to help her (if we are sticking to the whole
story with the flood)' OR maybe, 'we realize she is unable to help
herself simply by the things she says' and then decide to go in after
her rather than blame her or laugh at her.
How
easy it is for us as a people to stand in judgment of the person in
crisis, blaming them for not finding the strength to get out of a
situation. You can shout up to a man in a burning building five stories
up... JUMP!!!!!! Having no idea that his lungs are filled with smoke
which have made him delusional and he can barely hear every other word
you speak. When he burns up we say ... 'he should have jumped... we
told him to jump... we had a cushion down here for him.' Yet who called
the fire and rescue, got the neighbors ladder, went into the building
to assess his possibilities of escape, since he may not be in his right
mind. It is so easy to judge and blame the victim of any situation. We
are slow to judge if we did or are doing our best for the person
requesting our help.
Yelling
"GET OUT" to a victim is hardly what saves them. Why could that station
not have said all they wanted and then say... 'but hey... you know
what... even though we think you're crazy for staying with this man for
20 years, we've called the local AL-ANON and they are prepared to
accept you into their program and further more, for the next one month,
we have set it up for someone to pick you up and take you there. Not to
mention, the local women in abuse shelter said they would be willing to
help you, so stay on the line and let us see what we can do to turn
things around for you.' How HARD would that have been?
I
can prove in one thought how easy it would have been... let that man on
the roof top or that woman writing in have been their child, young or
grown, they wouldn't have thought twice about JUMPING in to rescue them
rather than shouting JUMP! Even more... what if it was YOUR child? What
would prevented you? FEAR... fear of loosing or spending something
within ourselves that we did not plan to or feel the need to. Giving is
hard for those who stand in judgment but when we step out of judgment
and commit to the fullness of compassion through to the end, we always
feel better about ourselves... like we gained more than the sacrifice.
Yet... fear of getting involved... fear of needing to commit to helping
someone... fear of discovering something about ourselves that we did
not want to face or discovering that person may need us to extend
ourselves past the crisis... fear of taking the time... and fear of
having our help rejected... all this prevents us and so the easiest
thing to do is fault them for not saving them selves. Telling someone
to save themselves requires little of us and thus we feel no need to
commit to involvement, seeing it through.
So
through this situation, that radio station sent this kind message to
victims across the nation ... If you can't trust that asking for help
will get you any help, especially while mentally, physically and or
emotionally you are too disabled by your circumstances to free
yourself, then perhaps you'll be better off staying put, considering
the world will just beat you up and send you back to your pit of
destruction, if you dare ask for help. Who wants to be bothered?
I
don't know... maybe I am just responding in my own frustration right
now, but one thing I know, is we are all accountable for our rights and
our wrongs. People don't have to suit our standard of
living or belief system to be granted GRACE, mercy or our best efforts
in sincere help. That is what I have learned and I hope others can gain from it.
Love and light to you all...
Ms. Rachel E. Milano
"There are no dead ends, only detours... and some are not so scenic." ... Ms. Milano
