Letters from the Living
December 24, 2010
SINCE I began this website, I have received a number of eloquent, personal notes from readers. These moving letters described serious personal suffering. A middle-aged woman wrote of her marriage, one hellish experience after another, and her decision to avoid divorce. A man told me of a woman who had cruelly slighted him and belittled his expression of affection after their romance had ended. Fifty years old and divorced, expecting to live alone and never have another romance for the rest of his life, he was not bitter, just exhausted. A female reader wrote about her lifelong depression and poverty. She had begun to go to church by herself at the age of 10 because her parents were non-believers. A man wrote of serious illness.
I did not post any of these notes, even when readers gave me permission to, because they were too poignant and intimate. The best I could do was privately express consolation. Modern life is crushingly impersonal. Professionals will listen to you for a fee and provide a diagnosis. But there is often nowhere to rest your head. There is no place to cry for a few minutes.
I am praying for you this Christmas Eve. I have not forgotten your notes. Suffering is never wasted if we listen to what it has to say.
— Comments —
Fred Owens writes:
“I did not post any of these notes, even when readers gave me permission to, because they were too poignant and intimate.”
It is important and truly sympathetic to protect the privacy of those who are suffering. The impersonal quality of modern life is bolstered by the phony confessions heard on the Oprah Winfrey Show. Every movie star who writes a tell-all memoir detailing her drug addiction and recovery makes me want to holler — “I really don’t want to know,”
Blessings to you and your family and the privacy of your own good home.
Laura writes:
And to you.
Charles T. writes:
Laura wrote:
“Suffering is never wasted if we listen to what it has to say.”
Exactly.
It is through our own suffering that we are taught how to empathize with and to serve others who are suffering.
Blessed be the God and Father our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of mercies and God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our affliction, so that we may be able to comfort those who are in any affliction, with the comfort with which we ourselves are comforted by God. 2 Corinthians 1: 3-4.
Merry Christmas to all of you.
Laura writes:
The purpose of life is to suffer well. We master pain by relinquishing mastery of it.
Merry Christmas to you!