
September 2004
By Anne Perry
Once again, I am not writing from home, but
from a plane between Glasgow and Chicago, where I am going
to give a lecture, something I enjoy very much, even if I
get a bit wound up beforehand. It’s all the usual things
that I imagine affect just about everyone. Will I be everywhere
I should be, and on time? Will I be well – and awake? Will
I have remembered to bring everything I should have – underwear,
cosmetics, clothes that match etc? Above all, will I make
sense? Of course if I don’t have all the right papers, get
onto the right plane, have sufficient money, credit cards
with room on them, then I won’t get there at all!
So far I’ve made it every time! The weather
I have no control over.
Last weekend I was at home, but the weekend
before I was in Edinburgh at the book part of the Festival,
the week before at a mystery convention in St. Hilda’s College
in Oxford, which I go to every year that I am able. It is
very small, usually no more than a hundred people, and so
popular we book for the next one a year in advance. It is
mostly a core of the same people, and we consider ourselves
old friends by now. It is extraordinarily well organized
around a theme. The papers are presented one at a time so
everyone can attend all events. There are no panels, all
papers addressing the given theme from some angle.

This year’s theme was ‘Crossing Boundaries’,
and produced some of the finest papers I have heard, ranging
from the hilariously funny to the serious, tragic and frightening.
One of the latter which gave me most deeply to think, and
still engages my mind, concerned male on male rape. Apparently
it is a crime committed far more often than I had supposed.
The presenter knew a great deal about the subject and gave
us many distressing facts and figures. It is not a crime
of desire and has nothing to do with homosexuality, but is
a crime of anger and violence. It is driven by a need to
humiliate, to exercise power over someone else to the ultimate
degree, to do something violently and terribly against someone
else’s will and reduce them to total helplessness. In fact
it is the physical manifestation of unrighteous dominion in
a particularly hideous form.
What caused me so much thought was a new
awareness of how much anger there is submerged yet raging
within so many people. Most would not dream of committing
a crime, and yet scratch the surface of any situation that
displeases them, and you find fury. ‘Life is unfair’. ‘The
world is a wretched place’. ‘Most people are out for what
they can get’. Anything that goes wrong is somebody else’s
fault. ‘I am the wrong age, the wrong sex, the wrong colour,
race, religion, social class – you name it – I never had a
fair chance!’
‘I got hurt, so somebody owes me!’ ‘I failed.
It must be somebody else’s fault, because it’s never mine!’
‘I don’t really like myself, so I don’t like anyone else’
– and above all ‘I don’t forgive and I NEVER forget, not if
it was unpleasant. I’ll get revenge one day – if not on the
right person, then on someone else – whoever’s standing in
the way at the time!’
That’s an extreme case, but I’ve seen shadows
of it to lesser degrees, and in some surprising places. Sometimes
it is turned outward to anger, shouting, blame, constant criticism,
violent language and finally physical assault. Other times
it is turned inward to fear, self criticism, retreat into
constant apology, the self-obsession that is always talking
about one’s own failure, false humility (as opposed to real
humility which is interested in others).
Now I begin to see why we regard anger as
a sin. Petty upset about something wrong, in order to have
the energy and drive to put it right is fine, in fact it’s
necessary, or no injustice, lack or wrong would ever be attended
to.
It’s the blame, the excuses, the temper,
the desire to hurt and to dominate others that is corrosive,
even to the death of all the light in the soul.

According to this most interesting woman
in Oxford, much of such rage springs from a feeling of helplessness,
of having no control over one’s own life, thoughts, future,
even at worst one’s own body. Hence those who have been abused
want to show that now they are the ones in control! Those
who feel their lives dominated by others, feel outraged, put
upon, worthless, stupid, ugly, outsiders, and become deeply
angry at life in general.
It begins to make much more sense. I know
that when I feel excluded, told I do not fit the ‘mold’ and
am not as I am supposed to be, not ‘Molly Mormon’, then I
have the instinct to lash out verbally. I want to prove that
I do matter, that everyone does, not just those of the accepted
type. To be excluded, belittled, put down, brings out the
worst in me. Maybe everyone else is pretty much the same?
Perhaps we all need a mixture of targets we can achieve, and
dreams to aim for, but above all a deep-rooted belief that
we are of value because our possibilities are endless, for
good and for ill. And change of direction can happen at ANY
time, up OR down!
There are lots of beats to march to, according
to the different steps we are able to take. It’s the direction
you are going that matters, not the grace or speed of your
stride.
Encouragement is good, but it must be done
with honesty. Lies cause terrible confusion and fears and
are so very hard to undo. Once you have been lied to, told
you are right when you were wrong, how do you learn to trust?
Who is going to tell you that you are right, and mean it?
Empty prizes are worse than none at all. They mean that you
are not considered worthy of the truth, not able to face reality,
not of sufficient value for bothering to work with.
And above all, comfortable lies don’t alter
the truth; they simply cover your eyes so you will not see
it. Other people still can! The precipice is still there.
It is of no comfort to me to be told it was not my fault I
fell off! I’m still broken at the bottom of the cliff, whoever’s
to blame. And I don’t want to be – I want to be as far forward
as I can be, without having trodden on or tripped anyone else
in order to get there. Better still if I have removed a few
stones on the path as I went.
We have been taught the principle of unrighteous
dominion. Obviously God knows in every imaginable situation
what would be the best thing for each of us to do. He could
not be mistaken, exercise poor judgement or be unaware of
some circumstances. And yet He NEVER forces, coerces, bribes
or demands of us that we go a certain way. He tries to teach
us what the result of each decision will be, but that is all.
Yet how often do we decide for somebody else
that we know better than they do what they should think, believe,
learn, read, watch, who they should associate with, what profession
they should follow, what philosophies they should explore
and what art they should discover. We ‘expect’ people into
doing what we think is right, or sometimes simply what we
want! We remove love, friendship, approval if they exercise
their right to be different, to be ‘wrong’.
Ever made a mistake? Me too – lots of them.
Did you learn from them? I did from most. Would I have learned
simply from being told? I wish! Was I sometimes right, in
spite of what everyone else thought? YES! Sometimes I was!
Going to America to live for five years was one of those dreams.
Building my present house out of what was little more than
a heap of stones and mangled walls, without foundation and
not much roof, was another. Trying to be a writer for a living
was one of the best.
I haven’t room to tell you about all the
ones that were wrong! Or the ones that were middling, but
saveable. But as long as I am prepared to pay the price,
be grateful for help when I need it – really grateful, not
just lip service, and help others when I can, that’s what
life is for – learning, so that you know for yourself, not
just believe because someone else told you. If being told
were enough, we didn’t need to have come to earth. Who could
‘tell’ us better than God?
That woman in Oxford has no idea what a train
of thought about anger she started, but I shall think of it
differently from now on, and try to recognize some of the
feelings that prompt it. I don’t know whether anyone can
help those who live with underlying rage. It might need far
more skill than I have. But I might be able to moderate some
of the condescension, the criticism, the exclusion that causes
that feeling of failure, of power- lessness, not belonging,
not being in control of anything and being frightened that
happiness itself is escaping into the dark where it will never
be found again. That’s pretty overwhelming. We all need
rescuing from the brink of that place!
There is still everything to win!
My own paper in Oxford (actually I didn’t
read anything, I just spoke after thinking hard) addressed
the theme from a very different angle. I drew attention to
the moral and ethical boundaries one can question in stories,
in order to make people think of things otherwise unacceptable
– or now perhaps politically ‘incorrect’ would be the appropriate
term. There is very little in explicit sex or violence now
that one cannot describe, if one wishes to. The things that
will cause ‘shock-horror’ these days are more likely to be
a suggestion that there is such a thing as responsibility.
It is not always the fault of your parents, your school, society
etc. Sometimes it is largely your own fault! Or no one’s
– just life.
Most of my problems are, at least in part,
my own fault, many of them entirely. Which is GREAT! That
means that I can fix them. I can’t change my parents (I don’t
want to). It’s a bit late to change my schooling. I might
work a bit on Society, but it would be a long, slow process
and no results are guaranteed. Myself I can do something
about! Slowly – but I’m fixable. So are you – so is everyone
– with courage, honesty and help. Some people will help,
some won’t, some can’t. God will – that’s a promise.
Change hurts, growing hurts – but nothing
like as much as not changing or growing!
Compensation was another thing I spoke of.
Life can include a lot of pain and loss at times. It is not
always someone else’s fault, and society does not owe us payment
because we experienced something nasty. Any more than it
charges us because we get to see the sunset, or the harvest
fields gold to the sea, or the trees glowing with ripe berries,
or the wild geese flying over, or the swans with the light
on their wings!

I don’t have to pay to hear the silence when
there’s nothing in the air but a shining peace. I have to
strain to hear the wind stir the grass or the whisper of waves
on the shore, and the sea is cobalt satin and Ballone Castle
is pale against the sky. I don’t pay for the wild flowers
in the hedgerow or the taste of the purple plums or the smell
of the earth and the cut crops and the last roses.
I’m not due compensation if now and then
there are bad things as well. There must be the bitter in
order for us to know and treasure the sweet.
And then there is the other big argument
about ends and means. Does the end justify the means? I’m
not sure the question makes any sense. When is ‘the end’?
Surely the means you use alters what the end can be? What
you do and how you do it changes who you are. If you use
the devil’s tools that is all he wants – what you think you
are doing with them is immaterial.
Would it were so simple. Every leader in
history has learned that there are bitter decisions to make.
Battles must be fought with weapons, and weapons can injure
– they are not weapons if they can’t! There are casualties.
It was the devil’s plan that there should be none – we would
all be brought back – but dwarfs of the spirit, not innocent
but ignorant, and there is a vast and terrible difference
between the two.
Ends and means? I don’t know. Pray hard
and judge carefully. Live so you can hear the promptings
of the Spirit. For sure: coercion is wrong, ingratitude
is wrong, kindness is right, lies are wrong, gentleness is
good, weakness, evasion and deceit are wrong, restraint is
good, cowardice is a canker of the soul, and in the end will
lose you honour, faith, even love. Self-righteousness is
destruction of the one who feels it, and is so ugly it can
damage those observing it and mislead them as to the beauty
of true righteousness, driving them away from it.
Your greatest friends are those who wish
for your success, desire for you to fill the measure of all
your possibilities for good, whether they succeed in that
field themselves or NOT. It takes great generosity of spirit
to be happy for another to receive what you have not, to gain
what you have not, to be what you are not!
But no one can exceed you in courage, honour
or kindness unless you are willing that you should do less,
pay less, become less. Forgive yesterday, other people’s,
and your OWN. Work on today and tomorrow.
It is my profound belief that God will help
any of us, IF we allow Him to. Too often we don’t. ‘I’ll
be good if’ – ‘I’ll forgive her after’ – ‘I’ll try when’ –
‘I can’t, it’s not my fault!’ ‘It hurts!’ ‘It’s embarrassing!’
And the great one – ‘it’s not fair!’
Of course it’s fair – just not yet! But
this is not the end. It may be harvest time in the northern
hemisphere right now – our fields are gold, our hedges bright,
the apples, pears and plums fattening and rich in colour,
but it is not God’s harvest yet. We may be in for a few surprises
when it is! We are going to reap what we have sown, generously
or sparingly, with honour or without it, with courage and
gratitude and the love of life, or with fear and anger and
resentment, frightened we might somehow give more than we
get. As if that were possible!
And while we are on the agricultural metaphor,
the crop needs a little rain to grow – and it needs WEEDING
now and then!
Don’t even ask me about reaping and threshing,
I don’t think I want to go that far! But it probably holds
true still.
Autumn is my favourite season, though I love
them all. We have had some cloudless days in the high seventies,
a slight breeze off the sea, the land burning gold, shining
where it is harvested to stubble, and smelling like heaven.
The pigeons are calling and the wild geese will go over soon.
The sunsets are almost too beautiful to bear.
It will fade too soon – but it will come
again next year! And winter can be spectacular as well.
Winter nights can show the splendour of heaven till the mind
staggers beneath the weight of it.
There are good days and bad ones. Some things
hurt. Let us rejoice in what we can, treasure it and be grateful.
Re-reading my past letters to you, which
are due to be published in book form in October, I am amazed
at how much I have to be grateful for, some of the things
I have learned, and some that I haven’t – yet!
There have been ‘Sentinels Along The Way’
– the title of a book of spiritual thoughts and experiences
gathered by my friend Doris S. Platt, also to be published
in October. Many of the ‘sentinels’ that have influenced
me for good have been the letters some of you have sent, making
me realize how much we are alike, that we travel the same
road, with the same steep and lonely parts, we trip over the
same stones – and with the grace of God we still reach the
same bright City on a Hill in the end.
Thank you.
P.S. Home again. Chicago was wonderful.
What marvelous people I met, full of light of spirit, intelligence
and the warmth of friendship! I have a whole world of things
to be grateful for.