Saturday, January 5, 2008

Oops! My Bad.

'Sorry' just doesn't cut it anymore. It's more a selfish word than anything; apologizing makes me feel better, especially if it is accepted graciously.

I was having a very bad day sometime last month. I got locked out of my apartment on a weekend, so it took forever to get maintenance to help, and another eternal 30 minutes to convince them to let me break in through the patio door--'It's not illegal to burgle my own place.' Within 4 more hours, I managed to lose my hubcap. The next couple hours after that, my guardian angel was probably busier than Mr. Bush--I almost hit countless cars and people. I was backing out of parking later that night to hang out with some friends, when I scared some young girls who thought I was carelessly gonna run them over. They started to get angry and began venting to each other and I could have shrugged and left. But, I rolled down my window and apologized. "Ohh, no it's ok!! Don't worry about it." Ahh! So much better. That's what I needed. A screwed up form of validation. I had a great time at the party.

It's a good concept in theory, owning up to your mistake(s). But, it's a little more than that. There has to be public acknowledgment. A quiet, internal understanding of your sins is not enough. There was a difficulty associated with the word, several decades ago. Admitting your fault used to be a stab to the ego; when my grad school advisor told me in front of company, "I'm so glad you proved me wrong! Good job." he totally refuted that idea, and had my firm respect.

Examples from experience, self-help books, Gurus, parents, have messed up my 'Sorry'. That word is for me, not for you. I am awesome, I am secure enough with myself to use it openly and mean it. Even if it is not accepted, a big burden is lifted. I said it, I meant it, take it or leave it. Ego unscathed, we throw out sorrys at funerals, forgotten birthdays, break-ups, divorces, party spills so freely. Do we need another word? Or should we raise the price on this one?

It started out so simple when I was 6. 'Sorry is a magic word.'. "Beta, say sorry to that nice auntie." "Aww, kaai nai, dikra...", warm hug and if I was lucky, Cadbury's Dairy Milk. Briefly, during adolescence, there was some weight to the tag: "Why should I call first? His fault, let him.". Then, 'The 7 Good Habits' happened. A little bit of vodka induced, "Who cares whose fault, who cares who's sorry, we're all gonna die anyway!!"

If you plead guilty, there's a lesser sentence. Confess, and all will be forgiven. Be the bigger person. Cronje and Clinton and public sympathy. Germany. Court-ordered apology. 'There is no excuse for my behavior' enters the Book of Cliches for 2003.

And the poor, poor victim with the onus of 'Forgiveness is a virtue.' has been pushed into the backseat because it's no longer about him! It's about the cute little culprit that decided to change his game. Three Hail Mary's and the Rosary must suffice even God.

27 comments:

shreybomb said...

Nice choice of words. Sorry has to be the most selfish word one uses, at least in today's world. Legitimizes self-satisfaction and self-glorification.

drparikh said...

Thanks for reading!
You're right, but it doesn't have to be like that. I wonder what we can do to fix it.

shreybomb said...

Its one of those inevitable necessities, status quo , more or less.

drparikh said...

True; but I think the genuineness can be salvaged somehow.

shreybomb said...

Of course, genuineness is and will be salvaged,but its not the way of the world today.

drparikh said...

It's just easier to say 'sorry' in this century than it was in the last. That's a good and a bad thing.

Binoy said...

True. At some point, I probably used it and meant it but now using the word "sorry" seems to have become second nature. I probably do still mean it but that really doesn't hinder me from using it.
The validation part, oh yeah that's set everything right.

As a side note, "Oops! My Bad". I still wait for the person to freakin complete the sentence...Your freaking bad asss...or what! :)

drparikh said...

are you serious?! i love america for 'my bad' and 'have a good one' :)

i'm glad we agree on the post though. pleasant change.

Binoy said...

"have a good one" still ends.
"my bad" and I am like yeah go on...?!?
I don't blame the Americans for that, that's just me but I cannot, for the life of me, fathom seeing people after having landed here just a month back going, "Oops!My Bad." .... Really!!

drparikh said...

bad is noun, not adjective. blame the sitcoms.

Binoy said...

agreed. But still can't seem to accept the use of the term as a noun. I told you it's just me.In fact I have tried using it and I can never stop at Bad. The period just doesn't seem to fit in there for me :)
It especially bugs me when I see ppl do it (instance I mentioned before) with such ease as if they've been doin it all their lives.

Not the point of the post though, I seem to have taken off on the side-note, sorry bout that.

drparikh said...

So...your bad?

;)

Binoy said...

correction, neither the period nor the question mark seems to fit in. :)

Binoy said...

I don't seem to understand your question either. :)

drparikh said...

Oh ok, then i guess...
MY BAD!!

:)

sorry im gonna try to use that every chance i get now!

Binoy said...

but you see, now that you've made your intentions clear I won't be affected. Haah!

:) I think I should go back to school.

drparikh said...

Oh yea, yu win.

Binoy said...

danke.

Rahul said...

drparikh, you write very well.

cheers!
-rahul

drparikh said...

Thanks, so needed a compliment today! :)

Anonymous said...

i loved your post..i specially was hit by the last para..but don't you think that if you really feel sorry for doing something, you want to be forgiven or atleast be understood by the err.. "victim"? you find yourself being a little restless..deep down you know that the person has every right not to forgive you...if she does forgive, you will feel gratitude throughout your life..otherwise you will end up feeling guilty for a long time depends on the intensity of mistake you made..but then should we keep on feeling guilty?

ideally, IMHO, the guilt should fade away with time and you should be left with a lesson learned.. and words fail very often..this is nothing new.. :-)

drparikh said...

I see what you're saying but if you have ever said to yourself, "I apologized na?! What more can I do??"
then that's partly what this post is about.

I don't know how to fix this, but in most cases, saying sorry is not enough anymore.

Anonymous said...

hmm...well that is the difference in people..i dont think you belong to this category though... :-)

there is not really much you can do after apologizing..you cannot bring back that moment, you cannot change the trauma you probably inflicted..but then at best we can be empathetic to the person whom we have hurt and allow "not to be forgiven".

for small mistakes that we so often make, we all need to move on..take the sorry that has been offered and move for we all are running short of time..

drparikh said...

"for small mistakes that we so often make, we all need to move on..take the sorry that has been offered and move for we all are running short of time.."

See? We all think that, we all say that. It is an expectation.

Anonymous said...

well no..i did not mean it as an expectation..i merely suggested a solution.. :-)

and I concur with you when you said that the burden of the mistake is conveniently transferred with a "Sorry"..

drparikh said...

ideally, that would be good; but we underestimate the other person so much.

verbal apologies have lost their gravity. i was so so mad at a good friend once. she came over the next day, and got me a glass of water when i was studying. she put my finished maggi bowl in the sink and left. she didn't say a word and yet, it was one of the best, most heartfelt 'sorrys' ive ever gotten!

Binoy said...

Hey drparikh,
I'm comin to Houston today, would really like to meet the author of this blog. Do let me know if you could take some time out, I'll be there till Wed evenin.

binoyis@gmail.com , a simple yes or a no would be enough I could plan around that.
Danke!