I feel like shit and deserve a kicking, because one more person I had a chance to help instead of hurt has died needlessly.
You may feel like shit, but you do not deserve to be kicked. Or if you do, then so do I.
Steve, Nina's father committed suicide almost a year ago. He was an elder for 40 years, partook of the emblems, the whole 9 yards. Since I worked at night back then, I had lunch with him once or twice a week.
I watched as the body of elders in his hall tore him down brick by brick. I felt so damn frustrated watching this happen. I knew what was going to happen. I knew where this was headed. I got him to read CofC, and I talked again and again using every tool at my disposal to save him. But when it happened, I was the one who pushed him over the edge.
Nina's mother has Alzheimer's and is in a private pay nursing home. Bill, her father, was spending all of his money to take care of her. But he was old, frail, depressed, alcoholic and a drug addict and he was, in my opinion, losing the ability to take care of himself. We had been urging him for months to move in with us, as we had the room. Then came the day last year when he stood in my kitchen and said he would spend to the last penny and would never move in to our house. For the first, and last, time since his wife was confined, I stood up to him. I wasn't angry but I was firm and told him we wanted him to move in. He was family and family takes care of each other. I told him he was going to move in.
Bill left, bought a gun and the next day killed himself.
If I had just kept silent ...
I tell myself that he was suicidal, he had already made one attempt because of something the circuit overseer had said to him. I tell myself he was going to do it again. He told me he would. I tell myself I was only trying to take care of him in the best way I knew how.
But still I can't help but think ... if I had kept silent ...
So I know a little bit of how you might be feeling. Logic says one thing, but the heart feels another. It's a very heavy burden to take something this big and put it on your shoulders.
Steve, I think I know you well enough to be able to say you have the ability and strength to accept responsibility for any transgression you have committed in your life. Just make sure you don't take on something that doesn't belong to you. From where I sit, you did the best you could with the knowledge, belief system and life experience you had at that time. That's all any of us can you know, we can only do our best. The rest, we have to let go.
Be well,
Chris