I'm the director of a graduate program in counseling, and I missed an appointment with a prospective grad student the other day. It was totally my fault. I was working from home on another project and totally forgot about his appointment. He drove in about 90 minutes to see me and I felt really bad about it, but then I went into the office and found out that he gave our secretary such a hard time that she felt she had to write down how he was "personally offended" by my not being there. She described him as very arrogant and entitled. I emailed him and apologized and asked if we could reschedule. He said no, that he knew all he needed to about me about our program, and then I saw the three paragraph email he wrote to our department chair, my boss. The first paragraph was all about how great he was, all his accomplishments. The second paragraph was all about how horrible I was for missing his appointment. And the third paragraph went back to how great he was and that he was taking his talents to Harvard or Columbia, schools that had already accepted him. Upon finding all this out, I didn't feel too bad anymore. Not only is our small regional program probably not a good fit for him, neither is counseling in general. Based on this incident showing so much narcism and impatience, we don't need him, and neither does the field, so I just wrote him an email wishing him well in his future academic endeavors and thought that might be the end of it.
But the story doesn't end there. Oh no, he kept going. Our department and counseling director both wrote him emails placating him and telling how great our program was and how sorry they were that he had such an unfortunate experience and offered to meet with him. He took them up on the offer and sent me back an email that said he had no desire to talk to me anymore, but was just pursuing the issue in order to "remedy the situation" and that he was also not perfect but believed everyone "deserved a chance at redemption."
I find this whole scene hysterical (I can't stop laughing about it) yet maddening (I can't stop thinking about it). I'm right, and he's wrong; he's right and I'm wrong; both are true in the context of misbehavior. It just depends on where you stand, sure, but when he takes it so far he becomes my teacher. In one way, he can't let it go; but in another way, neither can I. Who is responsible to let it go? The Buddhism I learned from Jundo and Taigu tells me to just sit with it all, so I have been. Here's what hit me the other day when I said my vows at the end:
Save the many beings, which includes this guy.
Transform all delusions, which means both this guy's and mine.
Perceive reality, which means this guy and I are one.
Attain the enlightened way, which means I realize all of the above.
Yeah, that's why I practice.
But the story doesn't end there. Oh no, he kept going. Our department and counseling director both wrote him emails placating him and telling how great our program was and how sorry they were that he had such an unfortunate experience and offered to meet with him. He took them up on the offer and sent me back an email that said he had no desire to talk to me anymore, but was just pursuing the issue in order to "remedy the situation" and that he was also not perfect but believed everyone "deserved a chance at redemption."
I find this whole scene hysterical (I can't stop laughing about it) yet maddening (I can't stop thinking about it). I'm right, and he's wrong; he's right and I'm wrong; both are true in the context of misbehavior. It just depends on where you stand, sure, but when he takes it so far he becomes my teacher. In one way, he can't let it go; but in another way, neither can I. Who is responsible to let it go? The Buddhism I learned from Jundo and Taigu tells me to just sit with it all, so I have been. Here's what hit me the other day when I said my vows at the end:
Save the many beings, which includes this guy.
Transform all delusions, which means both this guy's and mine.
Perceive reality, which means this guy and I are one.
Attain the enlightened way, which means I realize all of the above.
Yeah, that's why I practice.
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