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The Ex Files
May 31, 2000
"Bear with each other and forgive whatever grievances you may have against one another. Forgive as the Lord forgave you." Colossians 3:13 NIV
There's a scenario that repeats itself every now and then when
I'm eating out with friends. Someone orders a dish that comes with fries, they
struggle with the ketchup bottle, and I brag that I know the secret of extracting
this condiment from its stubborn container. I valiantly take the bottle and
(read closely now) hit the neck hard with the heel of my hand. Then I smile
wide as the red stuff flows freely on my friend's plate.
"Where'd you learn that?" someone inevitably asks, to which
I always respond, "I learned it from an old boyfriend. It's hands-down the best
thing I got out of the relationship." Then we all laugh and occasionally
launch into ex-boyfriend bashing.
Let's face it, anyone who's been single for a number of years
has experienced more than his or her fair share of pain and rejection at the
hands of those we cared about, whether they meant to hurt us or not.
My friends and I laugh often about The Fence Breaker, the guy
who drove into my friend Julie's fence when he went to pick her up for a date.
To make matters worse, he never made good on his promise to fix it. I constantly
remind another friend that she deserves someone so much better than her ex of
four years. He had more issues than the magazine section of Borders, yet he
dragged her to counseling for a little fixing up.
While these sometimes hurtful behaviors are so easy to see,
what's harder to glimpse is the good in our exes. And it's there, whether we
want to admit it or not. No matter how someone may have treated you, he or she
is still one of God's creations and his fingerprints are in there somewhere.
Convicted by my funny, yet not-so-Christlike words recently,
I started trying to see the good qualities in my exes, the things that drew
me to them in the first place. With God's help I've come to realize the guy
who undermined my self-esteem with his constant sarcastic comments also helped
birth my love for travel. And the old flame who broke my heart by dumping me
on my birthday at a Christian music festival, no less also made me feel
beautiful for the first time in my life. Seeing the good in these guys, savoring
the great memories of our time together, and thanking God for the positives
amidst the negatives has led me to a less jaded, more hopeful outlook. And one
that pleases God.
Don't get me wrong, I'm not making excuses for hurtful behavior
especially abuse, which is never, ever okay. And there are times we set ourselves
up for pain by walking into relationships we have no business entering. But
as pastor and author Lee Strobel once wrote, "Bitter, angry people don't hold
a grudge as much as the grudge holds them." Looking for the good in a past relationship
may seem like a Pollyanna-like exercise, but it yields amazing benefits: happier,
healthier singlehood.
So the next time I'm the ketchup hero at dinner with friends,
I'll simply say, "I learned that trick from an old boyfriend. He was really
handy like that." I may miss a good laugh, but we'll all gain a more positive
perspective about the opposite gender, relationships, and this strange world
of singleness.
Blessings!
Camerin Courtney
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