aka the difference between guilt and responsibility accountability
an effective apology needs to come from a place of responibility accountability not guilt
guilt is used to mantain the status quo and avoid change
responsibility and accountability encourage change
let yourself empathise with the other person
this is very scary and very hard to do, so how to start?
start by talking about what youâre feeling and thinking
this is also scary (but less) because you will confront the conflict of POV itself, and it might lead into a fight
but itâs a necessary step for catharsis and synthesis -- you canât skip straight to the synthesis without entering the conflict, without having contact with your own ideas or the othersâ
thatâs the goal: synthesis/catharsis. to reach the other side of conflict where both people are on the same page, a page that honours all their feelings.
you can only reach this by integrating the other persons feelings into your own -- thatâs what taking responsability entails. fully understanding the consequences of your actions, feeling them yourself,... (?)
honestly iâm not very sure about what responsibility is, just that it is the opposite of guilt
in guilt you victimise yourself by becoming the punisher and the punished, and therefore avoid change - Amy Schumer Offers You A Look Into Your Soul
so responsibility is what happens when you donât escape neither by guilt nor direct avoidance
not completely sure what that looks like. I think Endeavor in S06E18 of My Hero Academia does a very good example.
I think that just this change in frame, from guilt to responsibility/accountability, should be useful in doing things differently. Kind of like in theatre, where the same script can have big differences from small changes on how its read.
but if I had to write some steps, let me try to write them:
- talk about what you are feeling, about your POV in the situation
- talk about what you understand re: the POV of the other person, trying to empathise as much as possible
- say youâre sorry
- in general, if something feels scary, go in that direction. chances are it is an ugh-field and youâre avoiding it because of fear of conflict (empathy can definitely be an ugh-field)
common mistakes
- Using (1) as a way to justify yourself and give excuses
- if youâre talking about your POV maybe itâs normal if you come through âjustifiedâ. After all, you very likely are justified in some sense and what weâre after is the synthesis where both you and the other person are justified.
- However, weâre talking apologies here, and here your priority isnât justifying yourself, but understanding the other person.
- The point of (1) is to give the context of where youâre coming from.
- Just doing (2) and (3), or even just doing (3).
- If you donât give context to your apology, for both your POV and the others POV, it will probably feel like youâre trying to jump to the conclusion, to the catharsis, and it wonât feel earned.
- Doing only (1) and (3)
- This sounds like so obviously a bad idea that no one would do it, but weâve all done it at some other point or another. How is the other person going to lower their guard and forgive you if they donât feel like youâre even trying to understand them?
- Using responsibility as an excuse to not fully empathise in (2)
- Empathising can lead to feeling guilt, so you may cut yourself from it if youâre trying to avoid guilt in favour of being responsible.
- If you notice this happening, speak it out loud (like in (1)).
- On a more general note, if you notice guilt, trying to stop yourself from feeling it wonât work and will only make you less able to feel things in general. The conclusion of this isnât to stop yourself from feeling guilty and just being responsible, itâs just that guilt is not useful for our goals so it shouldnât be our solution. Recognising and expressing your guilt is part of being responsible.