What is forgiveness?
What is forgiveness? For me, it had always been an
exchange of words: a mutual agreement after a wrong had been done that all was
forgiven. My life had been filled with moments where I or someone else had to
ask for forgiveness—and it always felt like an easy thing to do. In the past,
when I heard those sweet words, there was never a doubt that I would forgive the
person and move on. I felt I had mastered the art of forgiveness at every
opportunity that had presented itself, and now here I was . . . left with three
people I knew I had to forgive. Only this time, contrary to everything I had
experienced up to this point, I was never going to hear from any of them that
they were sorry. Emmett was gone. His chance to ever say the words I needed to
hear was gone. And the other two . . . well, I barely knew them.
Some months earlier, as summer turned to fall,
Emmett finally passed the bar. He started talking about a paralegal he was
going to hire. She wanted him to start his own criminal defense firm and she had
offered to come and lead his team. He said she wouldn’t be able to start until
after Christmas because she had to wait to get her giant Christmas bonus, so
she would just be sending him clients under the table from the firm where she
currently worked. Red flags started going off like sirens in my mind! I
immediately thought back to my single years, dating guys who were still
technically dating someone else but who were trying to get me to secretly date
them on the side. Emmett told me the paralegal had been treated badly by her
boss and she wanted him to file a lawsuit against him for maltreatment of her
and other former employees. She also told Emmett she needed protection from her husband, who was
verbally, emotionally, and physically abusive. She wanted Emmett’s protection
and help in finding a good divorce attorney.
“She is an older lady,” he told me. “She is like a
mother figure to me. She really believes in me and says I’m an amazing
attorney.” It sounded like trouble to me, and I told him exactly how I felt
about it. If anyone was going to come work for us, I wanted to make sure we did
it the right way, and had no baggage that could get us into a sticky situation.
My questioning didn’t go over well. Looking back, I realize I shouldn’t have
given up so easily . . . because that feeling that came into my heart was completely
accurate. This woman—who professed to be so picked on and abused—would not only
come to work for my husband . . . she would change my life forever.
Well, as good bosses tend to do, the paralegal’s
employer figured out that she had been sending his clients to Emmett and he fired
her. In a matter of hours . . . she had landed her new employment at Emmett’s bankruptcy
office. And so began their criminal law office. I think I got a phone call from
Emmett saying, “Well Kandi got fired . . . She is starting today and I am going
to make a lot of money with her here.”
Money—a very overrated replacement for relationships and love. A necessity I
learned to despise. And they did. They started bringing in a lot of
money.
One day, I had a doctor’s appointment downtown, and
I decided to go surprise Emmett in hopes that he had a minute to take me to
lunch—something we had never done since our move to our new town. I pulled into
the parking lot behind the office. Directly behind Emmett’s truck was her car. It was parked at an angle,
almost touching his. I remember just staring at it. In hind sight, it was like
she had parked behind him, as if to say . . . “I own you now. You don’t leave
the office until I do.” Her license plate read ‘Kandi’s.’ I got a pit in my
stomach. I hobbled my pregnant belly up the ramp and walked back towards
Emmett’s office. Everyone was looking at me as if I were wearing no clothes.
Was I missing something? His office door was shut. I was about to knock when
one of the secretaries said, “He is in there with Kandi. I dare you to just
walk in!” And so I did. They were giggling, and then turned and looked at me as
if I were a ghost. That was the first time I met Kandi. She had on a mini-skirt
and hooker boots. Her cleavage was everywhere! She was older . . . she looked like she was being paid for her “not-so-professional”
services. I felt nauseous.
I felt she was definitely not the type of woman to whom Emmett would be
attracted. She was older . . . and that
was reassuring to my poor mind that had been playing tricks on me at an
incredible rate since hearing about this situation. I felt like a crazy person!
One minute, my heart would tell me they were having an affair . . . and then my
logic would kick in and calm down my nerves. “She is old. …You are a great mother and wife. He loves you. … You
are the one who is the mother of his soon-to-be five children. You have always given him everything when it
came to being intimate. …You are enough. You are encouraging and supportive. …
Why on earth would he want her?”
And so began my many months of this internal
battle. I knew she was no good, and yet . . . I believed every word I heard
about her from Emmett; but I entertained every doubt that bubbled up inside of
me and that inner instinct was like a fire ready to ignite. Something wasn’t
quite right.
Kandi and I met on a few other occasions, mainly
when I showed up at the office. One time, after the baby was born, she even
held him. He had just fallen asleep in his car seat, and I really wanted to
just show him to everyone. Emmett was adamant that she hold him. She sent
Emmett home with beautiful gifts: blankets and outfits for the baby, and even a
care package for me. She even offered to babysit him so the rest of us could go
to a movie. That was an idea I quickly squelched because of my internal battle about
whether she really was just a kind, older woman who believed in Emmett . . . or
if she was trying to destroy my family. She was always kind. She even sent me
thank you notes on Facebook for her Christmas present.
I had no obvious reason to doubt Emmett’s assurance
that she was an amazing paralegal who would make him lots of money and help him
start his business.
Now for Rob. I had only actually heard his name one
time before March 11, 2011. It was just a few weeks earlier, on our way back
from the movie when Kandi had insisted on babysitting Tytus. All seven of us
were in the car. Emmett had posted something on Facebook about a run-in with a
Californian . . . “who could talk big . . . but couldn’t walk the walk.” I
asked him about it. He said that it was Kandi’s husband, Rob . . . “who needed
to get a clue.” I finally asked a question for which I had wanted an answer for
a long time. I said, “I understand that you are worried about an employee, but
why is it your job to protect her?” He didn’t answer right away. I am sure he
was debating in his mind what the real answer was, and what the answer he
wanted me to hear was going to be.
All he said was, “Well someone has got to.”
As a person, Emmett was a protector. He was an
amazing friend, and would always have anyone’s back. That was one of his
qualities that caused me to fall in love with in him. And yet, in that moment,
my heart wanted to pound out of my chest. I felt a panic, as if there were more
to this story about these people. He didn’t want to talk about it anymore. So,
I was left to hallucinate in my mind the “whats” and the “whys” to try to make
sense of it all.
Rob Hall. I knew his name, but I had never seen
his face. Then, for the year and a half after March 11, Rob Hall was just a mug
shot in my mind. A mug shot I would scream at while driving alone in my car. A
picture I would silently talk to every morning as I sat alone in my bathroom
doing my make-up. For a year and half, while awaiting the trial, his mug shot silently
consumed me. I saw him . . . or her . . . in every store I entered, and in
almost every person I passed. I scanned the room in restaurants before sitting
down to order my food. I looked out every window I walked past at my home . . .
searching for that mug shot, expecting him to be pointing his gun at me.
Three people; three different crossroads that had all
collided and exploded. Everywhere we go, we meet people. Each of them different.
Our paths cross, sometimes without a sound. And other times, as they cross,
they destroy our paths and leave a hole. We aren’t really given a map of where
to go in life, but we are given those feelings inside. Those deeply rooted
impressions that something is not quite right. I never got answers about those
feelings, until after the explosion—probably because I was naïve . . . but
mainly because I didn’t believe in myself. I doubted impressions that possibly
could have made a difference.
As I knelt in my closet that night after Emmett’s
death, I thought the answer to my prayer was that I had forgiven each of them—like
putting a check on a list of the things Heavenly Father was asking me to do. I
thought for sure, if He was asking right then . . . that I could accomplish
said check marks the moment I knew I had to let it go. Little did I know that
my pain and my anger and my need to forgive would literally start eating me
alive.
3 comments:
Ashlee, what a strong person you are. Thank you for your amazing example. I hope that a family reunion brings us all together some day!
You're such a blessing to so many people going through hard times. Such a beautiful women of grace with a true Christ like spirit! I am so sorry you lost your husband and children's father. But you are so blessed as you said he had walked you through every step of every day. As he did for me. Although my situation was no where near as heartbreaking as yours. My husband also met a woman at work and started acting really different I knew too something wasn't right. I had 3 girls and my youngest was 8 months old. It took me so long to get over the betrayal and the what did she have that I didn't I just couldn't understand...but God didn't leave my side and got me through every moment. It took me a lot longer to forgive because I hated her for almost destroying my family. I just dwelled on it and started making myself physically ill until one day I just prayed and prayed and I finally felt peace like never before. I am so greatful to have found your blog. Thank you for your wonderful encouraging, inspiring words! You have a beautiful family!
I don't know why... but forgiving was always SO HARD for me - during times when the person who hurt me did not apologize. If someone expressed sorrow for hurting me, somehow it made it so easy to forgive, but until recently I depended upon that to let go and move on with forgiveness. Maybe it was pride. Maybe it was just that I thought I NEEDED that apology SO BADLY - TO HEAL, that I didn't want to forgive for fear that if I did the one who hurt me would think I was OK and that they didn't really need to make amends... Mind games. Fears. Conditional forgiveness and conditional love. All tactics of Satan's to keep me down. But like you, I learned to stand. I learned that the personal, proactive act of forgiveness is so much MORE HEALING - than simply witnessing another repent or say "I'm sorry."
PS. I LOVE that you think and say such GOOD things about Emmit. That you have not allowed bad to cloud your mind of the good. That you have allowed those GOOD MEMORIES to live inside of you... YOU ARE A WONDERFUL EXAMPLE! :) Thank you...
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