Last summer, when I first came to stay in New York City, I was renting a room in the house of a certain woman, I’ll call her Lolita
. She was a widow, approaching her senior years, who had lost multiple loved ones in her lifetime. The result of her repeated loss was clear in her home, which had become a shrine to the past and to those she had lost. Every nook and cranny of her home, like a museum, was bedecked with objects and artifacts from her past. The rugs were caked thick with embedded dirt and dust, while all surfaces and objects d’art, often placed precariously on tall, narrow, teetering tables (or so it seemed to me), were cluttered and left untouched in the three-story house. At every turn, you ran the risk of bumping into, knocking over or breaking this woman’s heart all over again. It was unnerving to say the least, especially for someone like me, who specifically avoids owning any “knick-knacky” thing of great monetary value, since I enjoy my freedom of movement and I have a tendency to break things, either by my temper or by dancing or running around (that’s also how I get a lot of bruises).
Suffice it to say, I don’t thrive in cluttered, congested spaces and I especially don’t do well in cluttered spaces littered with precious, fragile objects. A dining room that rattles with vibrating glass and china when you walk through it is not a good dining room for me.
Surprisingly, in the 2 months I lived in Lolita’s house, I only broke one thing, and it wasn’t something you would normally think had much value: a trash can.
Whenever the bathroom toilet would flush, the stopper in the toilet tank had a habit of not falling back down to plug in the hole in the tank, which meant that the water which poured in to fill the toilet tank back up was running right through the tank into the toilet bowl and the tank was not getting filled. That meant that I often had to remove all of the perfume bottles and whatnot on top of the toilet tank lid, remove the lid and plug the stopper into the hole in the tank so that the water would stay in the tank. Well, one day this happened and I removed most of the perfume bottles from the toilet tank lid, but not all of them. Of course, when I lifted the tank lid with one or two bottles still on it, one of the bottles fell onto a ceramic trash can that was next to the toilet and it broke the ceramic trash can.
Lolita was so meticulous about her things; there was not a chance that she would miss the new triangle chip in her trash can, even if I glued it back. I told her what had happened and she was looking over the roughly 1-inch big triangular chip thinking that she could glue it back. As she was inspecting it, she exhaled a sentimental “ode to a trash can,” sighing helplessly: “Oh, so many memories…” Yes, with a trash can.
I apologized to Lolita, but she did not respond. Then I retired to my room and I probably cried. I don’t remember.
I take it very badly when I make a mistake or break something, especially if someone else suffers for it, so… Especially without her acknowledgment of my apology, I sunk into guilt and I took on a greater fear of Lolita (of hurting or upsetting her), of the room I was staying in, her things, and of her museum house.
What is right?
In this bad emotional state, I sat alone, feeling very weak… I sought my angels. One of my angels came and was sitting across from me. I told her of my guilt and what I had done and of Lolita’s response. The angel answered me saying:
When you make a mistake, or do something wrong, you must not subjugate yourself to the person or to the person’s anger or hurt. You must acknowledge what you did, be honest about what you did and apologize with sincerity. If the person then can’t or won’t accept it, that is their grief, not yours. You must let go of your guilt, even if the person is holding onto a grudge or continuing to blame you.
Despite these wise and just words, I was unable to let go of my guilt at that time. But I knew the angel spoke the truth.