A Beer is Fine But Forgiveness is Divine
by Orson BeanDennis Miller and I were gabbing on his talk show about the Gates-Crowley affair and a thought occurred to me: Professor Gates needs to forgive Officer Crowley and he also needs to forgive the Grand Dragon of the Ku Klux Klan.
Here’s what popped into my head on the Miller Show. At the age of five, my mother told me that if my father ever left her she would kill herself, and that if I wanted to prevent that from happening, it was my job to keep him around. This is a heavy responsibility to lay on a kid of five but I accepted it without question. I adored my mother. She was beautiful, smart, sexy and funny. She was also a self-destructive drunk who had room in her heart only for my father. He was a charming sadist with room in his heart for no-one: a hot-shot liberal who helped found the New England branch of the A.C.L.U. but in private often used the word jewbastard.

Their marriage was, to say the least, tumultuous. I had been sent by Central Casting to play the small but important role of the child. After each of their frequent and alcoholic altercations, my father would storm out of the house (actually, the rented, upper half of a house in a working class neighborhood in Cambridge, Massachusetts…Gates-Crowley country) and head off to spend a few days with one of his girlfriends. I’d be sent after him, once actually barefoot in the snow, a sobbing ten year old, to catch up and explain how much I loved and needed him and beg him to come back. “Go home,” he’d tell me. “I’ll be back in a while.”
He would be back after a while and things would settle down for a time until the next upheaval. Shortly after my sixteenth birthday, my father left home for good and, true to her word, my mother went to the kitchen, lay down on the linoleum floor, turned on the gas and packed it in. I put our furniture in storage, made living arrangements for myself and went on with my life. After ten years of analysis, two years of Reichian therapy, fire-walking, re-birthing and then a second ten years of analysis, I had forgiven my poor, sweet, alcoholic mother. But my father remained beyond my powers to forgive. The last shrink I attended put it this way. “The no-good bastard isn’t worth forgiving. Live with it.”
Meanwhile, I had become a Christian… my own form of odd-ball Christian (leave out the middleman and deal direct with the Maker for big savings). Each morning and night I get down on my knees and thank God for my life and ask Him to make me grateful all the time instead of just most of the time. One morning, a few weeks ago, I realized that I had forgiven my father. I don’t know how or when, I just knew that it had happened. Not because the son of a bitch was worth forgiving and certainly not because he had asked for it, but just because, if I was ever going to feel grateful all the time, in other words, if I was going to become truly happy, I had to forgive him. It wasn’t for him (although it affects him, wherever he is) it was for me. The heaviness in my heart which he represented and which I’d always carried around, was just gone. I felt lighter. I loved my wife more now. I loved my kids, my grandkids, my friends, the blue sky above and maybe even guys who cut me off on the freeway. (Well…) I hadn’t tried to forgive my father. It had been, it seems, the inevitable result of my prayers to feel grateful, my determination to be happy.
Back to Professor Gates. He has spent a career immersing himself in all the bad stuff that white people have done to Black people. His head is full of it. It seethes in him like a cauldron and it hurts. He will never feel relief until he forgives us white folks. Not just good ones like Officer Crowley, an Irish cop who has worked harder than probably any white guy alive to understand the Black condition, but ordinary ones like me. Oh yes, and really bad ones like the Grand Dragon of the Ku Klux Klan. Hard, you say? If it was easy, as my dear old grandfather used to remark, everybody would do it. But it’s the only way. You can forgive and be filled with happiness and peace of mind or you can hold on to justifiable anger and be rich, famous, tenured at Harvard and miserable.






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109 Comments
This is a fantastic inspirational piece.
Great, compassionate, wise post, Orson.
Unfortunately, the resentment industry personified by Al Sharpton and the more-refined Gates has a stranglehold on much of black culture.
Without concstantly invoking the anger, what else have they got?
Thank you for this piece. I have some work to do in my own life now.
A beautiful piece, Orson, of true wisdom and one worth reading several times. All forgiveness is first for God, then ourselves to set us free and then lastly for the other. Isn't it wonderful that God can handle judgment and we're free to move on with our lives?
Mr. Bean, you should name this essay Brad, for you really nailed it. You've distilled what it means to be a Christian, and why it's so hard to be a Christian. Thanks.
When I forgive someone it doesn't absolve them of their wrong doing. Only God (or Jesus) can do that. But when I forgive I am saying, "I'm leaving your judgment to God. I'm not going to waste any more time trying to get even with you. You may have had your own reasons and understand of why you needed to do whatever you did that was so hard for me to forgive."
These people who say, "I forgive this guy for (an example) killing all those people–so let him go" do NOT understand forgiveness. Forgiveness isn't power to override justice. Forgiveness is a balm to our own soul. It is recognizing that we don't know as much as we think we do–even about instances that happen in our own live.
And brilliant essay, Mr. Bean. Thank you for sharing a most personal part of your life. I enjoyed reading it.
Thank you for this essay, Mr. Bean. The connection between gratitude and forgiveness is brilliant.
"…my own form of odd-ball Christian (leave out the middleman and deal direct with the Maker for big savings). "
That's the only way to do it, IMHO!
Brilliant, Mr. Bean.
Excellent, thank you Mr. Bean.
I hated my father as a kid, too, and I don't think without reason, although he wasn't nearly the bastard your father was by the sound of it. I also forgave him. One day I just realized he's just a man, with his own problems, and doing a bad job by me was not his intention. I just decided, like you, to let it go, and it was as liberating for me as it sounds like it was for you.
Thanks for such a great article. I was blessed with a loving family and do not have the associated heartache you have had, but I realize what forgiveness can do for all of us. I will pass this on to everyone I can think of.
Thank you for the wonderful post, Mr. Bean. As you talked about your father, it made me think about my grandfather, a man I only knew as a bitter, hateful old man who was verbally abusive to pretty much everyone around him, including grandchildren who had yet to reach the age of 10. And, as I thought about it, I realized I had forgiven him in much the same manner as you did your father…
To be continued
Wow.
Thank you Orson for sharing your story and words of wisdom here today. Just a wonderful piece of writing. Straight from the heart.
Beautiful.
Mr. Bean, you are absolutely right about Professor Gates. I truly think that, as long as people, no matter what color they are, continue to cling to the events of the past, very little will change between the races.
This is real life, and one of millions of stories of severe hardship to personal triumphs against all odds. The one word Orson never brought up is "victim." Oh how things have changed. Today a story like this would bring sympathetic ears from Dr. Phil and the rest of the namby pamby brain butchers, involving years of counseling and blame. Today, being a victim is a fulltime job, and in fact, it is celebrated for some lame reason. I believe that struggle brings character, and while it sucks going through it, the result is self confidence and inner peace. Priceless!
Very inspirational, but I am not there yet to forgive my father for being a selfish asshole. Maybe one day I will become a little more enlightened but right now, as they said in Red Dawn, "The hate keeps me warm".
"a hot-shot liberal who helped found the New England branch of the A.C.L.U. but in private often used the word jewbastard."
That is so typical of the liberals..They're all so hypocritical..I can only imagine what they say/think about obama behind his back.
Very insightful piece Mr Bean, you're very fortunate to have come out of that childhood normal.
As for Gates..He finds comfort in his victim hood.
Excellent article. Every time I hear you speak, or read something written by you, you moveup the scale on my "People I want to have a beer with." list. You and of course Dennis Miller.
Mr. Bean, I very much enjoy everything you write. Thank you for this piece. I grew up in dysfunctional home also. When I became a father, I think I was too much the disciplinarian and short on affection. I was uncomfortable about showing it. My forgiveness of the folks has come with my observation of my son being an absolutely wonderful father with my grandson. I still feel guilty about myself being the hard parent, but my son has shown me how to be an excellent dad so I really have set free my bitterness about my childhood.
At Obama's press conference, right after saying "not having been there and not seeing all the facts"–he should have said "I will not comment at this time."
But, no ACORN community agitator can resist an opportunity to fan the flames of racial hatred for political gain–so Obama quickly spouted off "the Cambridge police acted stupidly."
Only one beer drinker should have apologized at that bash: Obama.
Racial grievance is an industry. As long as there is someone to blame other than themselves, lazy people who want to take the easy road and be "victims" will take advantage. The Obamas are well-acquainted with grievance politics, as are most in "the Muslim world" that Obama panders to.____The left must be defeated soundly, their apparati dismantled, and organizations like ACORN left to fend for themselves. Children MUST be taught self-responsibility, self-reliance and civic-mindedness. Grievance-mongers have to be put out of business.
It reminds me of the Liberals and BDS (Bush Derangement Syndrome)………Liberals can't move on because it's all Bush's fault……
They lose their job…..it's Bush's fault.
They chip a tooth……it's Bush's fault.
Their toilet backs up……it's Bush's fault.
Too bad that some Blacks are suffering from WDS (Whitey Derangement Syndrome)…….and it shows.
I always look forward to your perspective on things, Orson. Thank you
Thank you Mr. Bean for a very enlightening and touching piece of writing!
Good stuff! Keep up the good work!
Thank you so much for writing this and you were not only speaking politically but to the hearts of others about forgiveness. I know I'm not the only one who is going through things where forgiveness is hard but needed whether its forgiving ourselves or others. God Bless!
Thank you for taking the time to write this, Mr. Bean. You have given me a new understanding; something I've been searching for. Now I have a lot of work ahead of me, but, for the first time in a long time, I feel like I have some direction.
Excellent post. You've articulated the difference between 'forgiving' and 'excusing'. The latter needs no forgiveness, as the behavior is (somehow) justified. This is unrealistic, and also unhealthy, as you point out. Forgiveness != forgetfullness. Rather, true forgiveness doesn't blink at the horror, dirtiness, and meanness of the action…conversely, it explicitly recognizes it , and then in spite the sordidness, removes all resentment and desire for revenge, payback or humiliation of the perpetrator.
Great article Mr. Bean. It reminds us that the old verities of kindness, generosity and, most of all, mercy, remain the most important attributes that a human being can possess. Professor Gates and his confreres have been notably lacking in these qualities over the past quarter century.
Just about the most moving and thought provoking thing I have read in a long time. I don't know if that is a complement to you or a commentary upon how shallow my character has become. In either case, I can only say "Thank you" and "Bless you".
When I began reading this piece I didn't see where it was going. Now, as I sit here with tears streaming down my face, I can say that you have written something that has moved me deeply. My mother always taught me to be kind to everyone. She'd say, "You don't know what that person is going through." Kindness and forgiveness go hand-in-hand. Thank you for sharing something so personal and meaningful. You've definitely given me something to think about today and for a good while.
Gates is too well-dressed to be a real black guy who gets picked on by cops. Using Barbara Boxer's logic, of course.
Thank you Mr. Bean! You're absolutely right. The country has spent a long time apologizing – nothing else can improve until some forgiveness takes place. That's just the way it works.
And can I just say I loved you on Dr. Quinn?
Good article. Good luck on changing any minds, however.
Children love their parents so unconditionally; it's heart-breaking when adults manipulate that love. Your post is very inspirational.
I still won't be forgiving the 9-11 hijackers anytime soon.
Orson, good one.
Someday the white guilt WILL come to an end
I want to be around when white people quit putting up with racists like obama and gates and jackson and wright and sharpton
Excellent post, thanks.
I think of Jesus asking, "Do you want to be healed?" For people like Gates, the answer is no.
To be healed would be to come face to face with their true selves. As long as they live in their victimhood they never need take responsibility for their disappointments and failures.
Of course that means they don't take responsibility for their success, either… but they gladly pawn that in exchange for the deep consuming misery of "My life is not my own."
Mr. Bean,
Thank you. That was beautifully thought out and written. Your words express true wisdom.
Thank you Mr. Bean for such a wonderful article! We sometime (including myself) forget that HATE is like a CANCER. It eats away at us and we never truly realize it until God or someone else points it out. The only way to get rid of it is to let go of the hate. I was in my mid-30's before I finally had a good relationship with my parents (I was the black sheep of the family) and now there is just about nothing I wouldn't do for them. Is our relationship perfect – no but we are working on it.
Thank you once again for sharing something so personal and important with us!
Thumbs up. Forgiveness solves a lot of inner turmoil. Like a previous commenter said, it doesn't absolve the wrong-doer of their acts, it simply frees the "victim" from the negative baggage attached to the trauma. We're all only human, and humans make mistakes.
I have always thought that if I cannot forgive others, how can I stand before God at the end of my days and ask for his forgiveness. That does not mean I am all that fast at forgiving others at times as I am after all a mere human but I do think it is easier to forgive than not to. And it is certainly far too hard to hate someone rather than just ignore them. The racial grievance industry is one I fear we will never be rid of but it is one that we can always stand up to.
Mr. Bean, You may have forgiven your father for a very good reason. Your heart and your soul came together and realized that God will take care of that "no-good bastard ".
This speaks to the essence of authentic Christianity. It's too bad more people don't look long enough to see it. It's also our own doing. Thanks Mr. Bean.
Orson, great story and in your forgiveness you are truly a free soul and you see clearer. Forgiveness is the most powerful force in the universe. Christ proved this hanging on that cross in that torment he asked his father to forgive them. It is a standard that is tough to follow, but we can do it and you have done it. Your father will have to deal with his own baggage where ever he is. You on the other hand have thrown your baggage out for good.
"And it is certainly far too hard to hate someone rather than just ignore them."
Great line and so very true!
Very nice Orson, very nice indeed!
I'll add you Mr. Bean to my prayers also. Let's get the big phone "up stairs" ringing off the hook.
Professor Gates is a professional racist. Just as Rev. Wright does it from the pulpit, and Jackson and Sharpton do it in the streets, he's paid ()quite handsomely it appears) to do it in the classroom.
Very punny.
That was absolutely beautiful Mr. Bean.
"…Professor Gates. He has spent a career immersing himself in all the bad stuff that white people have done to Black people. … He will never feel relief until he forgives us white folks. Not just good ones like Officer Crowley, an Irish cop who has worked harder than probably any white guy alive to understand the Black condition, but ordinary ones like me. Oh yes, and really bad ones like the Grand Dragon of the Ku Klux Klan. Hard, you say? If it was easy, as my dear old grandfather used to remark, everybody would do it. But it’s the only way. You can forgive and be filled with happiness and peace of mind or you can hold on to justifiable anger and be rich, famous, tenured at Harvard and miserable."
I think there is a lot of truth to this sentiment. Maybe I'd put it differently, or maybe I'm saying something different here, which is: No matter what has happened to you, or been done to you, your are still the one that is responsible for your future and for your happiness.
Both of these sentiments are all well and good, but, personally, I do not feel comfortable "preaching" those notions. Should I?
Wow! Great insight!
Prof. Gates can't forgive America's past- because if he did, he'd realize his job is irrelevant.
I think that's over stating it a tad.
are you suggesting that its NOT Bush's fault that we're in Iraq?
Absolutely wonderful post. It really rang home for me, as I have lived through similar circumstances. My own mother has never been able to put the history of her own childhood behind her, and consequently, has spent most of her life reliving some perceived or actual injustice, savoring it, chewing on it, and rehashing it. Suffice to say, it hasn't been fun. I finally realized after many frustrating years, that I can't help her. God can, but will he? It's out of my hands. I have forgiven her, but at the same time, refuse to let her misery make my life miserable, because I don't want to continue this cycle with my own children. I owe them a life that is the best I can give them, and an unconditional love.
Thank you for such a moving and inspirational post. Really beautiful, and may you and your family be blessed with all the best as you continue your journey.
God bless you Mr. Bean. Always an "oddball" favorite of mine for years, you've been. Your "oddball" vein of Christianity might not be as odd as all that. This essay has the power to illuminate the lives of many. It was kind of you to write it. Thank you.
Well conceived, Orson!
The problem.. Years of
being told one is a 'very
bad person' and useless
person yields' a very bad
and useless person!
Well said Mr. Bean.
In the Beattitudes, Matthew 5:23-24 Jesus said "Therefore, if you are offering your gift at the altar and there remember that your brother has something against you, leave your gift there in front of the altar. First go and be reconciled to your brother; then come and offer your gift."
It's a lot easier to think "That guy's a jerk. He wronged me and should come apologize to (ask forgiveness of) me." But the onus is not on the person who has committed a wrong against you, it's on you. If you remember someone has "something against you" FIRST go reconcile with that person. That's a tall order and I'd say in the Gates/Crowley/Obama beer summit, Crowley is the only one who got it right.
Beautiful, revealing, fearless piece. Thanks for your honesty.
I just read The Shack which is a book devoted to what forgiveness means…which is exactly how you describe it!! By nature, I'm very forgiving with other people…takes too much energy to retain the anger…it's forgiving myself that I have an issue with. But I'm learning. I just don't ever want to forget my offenses to others, nor forget theirs to me.
Great post Orson, love reading your stuff!
Dominic Illingworth
Host of the DOMINATION radio show
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Nobody said a word about Iraq. But, since you brought it up, it is his responsibility that we are there. Not his fault, but his responsibility.
Good luck getting black culture and white liberals to forgive history and move on. For their power rests almost entirely in the ability to wave their grieveance in our faces, lecture America and scold people of today, who had nothing to do with history, for past injustice.
With Obama (a black man) in the White House, I was hoping we would enter a new, post-racial America. Guess not. It is the left that will eventually come to the position of the conservatives defending individual liberty, because defenders of individual liberty are the people that care not about skin color, they do not define people by trivia, but instead, merit, actions, deeds and character.
In a post racial America, humans will not be defined by trivia. It will be a world where a gay or black can be a Republican and not get blackballed for it. End racism now, I implore "white liberals" to stop with racial preferences.
Gates needs to ask forgiveness for all the bad stuff he's done and caused to white people. Especially since he's basically a white man trapped in a kinda of black man's body.
In other words…blacks need to get over the fact that they are black…because they really are black.
And God is the ONLY answer to your problems.
When I forgive someone it doesn't absolve them of their wrong doing. Only God (or Jesus) can do that. But when I forgive I am saying, "I'm leaving your judgment to God. I'm not going to waste any more time trying to get even with you. You may have had your own reasons and understanding of why you needed to do whatever you did that was so hard for me to forgive."
These people who say, "I forgive this guy for (an example) killing all those people–so let him go" do NOT understand forgiveness. Forgiveness isn't power to override justice. Forgiveness is a balm to our own soul. It is recognizing that we don't know as much as we think we do–even about instances that happen in our own life.
And brilliant essay, Mr. Bean. Thank you for sharing a most personal part of your life. I enjoyed reading it.
Mr. Bean, thank you for the article. It broke my heart a little but the message sure came through. God Bless you!
Wow. Of all the commentary on this issue, yours is probably the most important I've read yet. Thank you for sharing that Mr. Bean. We all need reminders to, as my grandmother used to pound into my thick skull, "be thankful for what you have, not angry for what you don't."
It might speed up matters if Gates were reminded that every member of the Old South''s KKK was also a member of the Democrat Party. The end of Reconstruction had effectively ended Republican presence in the South. The New Deal owed all its achievements to the southern Democrat racist Solid South. I suggest Gates present his forgiveness in person to the only surviving KKK member most of are aware of, Democrat Senator Robert Byrd (W. Va.)
Wow. Of all the commentary I've read on this, yours is the most important. Thank you for sharing that Mr. Bean. We all need frequent reminders to, as my grandmother used to pound into my thick skull, "be thankful for what you have, not angry for what you don't."
Wow. Of all the commentary I've read on this, yours is the most important. Thank you for sharing that Mr. Bean. We all need frequent reminders to, as my grandmother used to pound into my thick skull, "be thankful for what you have, not angry for what you don't."
No, but the original post says that people blame everything on Bush. The main thing that Bush is blamed for is the War on Terror and everything that falls under neath that title, including Iraq, including the huge growth of the federal budget, including the 4000+ troops we lost there, including Aubugrab, etc. etc. etc.
Remember, forgiveness is not forbearing justice. The 9-11 hijackers are all dead and God's justice is upon them, as it awaits all of us. Forgiveness is a balm for your own soul, not a free pass for others.
Jesus forgave even his cruel murderers. You will find peace by doing likewise. Be an example to others who need to learn the art of forgiveness. When everyone learns it, there will be no more 9-11s. It starts with you.
Mr. Bean, I heard you talking about this with Dennis Miller the other day. It was very touching and I appreciate you sharing something so personal.
Mr. Bean, thank you !! What a great piece of writing and insight. I had never put forgiveness into this context, it makes me want to re-evaluate so many notions I have clung onto throughout my life. You are a wise soul and I am looking forward to more of your writings.
Sometimes it's expressed as speaking blessings.
Speaking blessings means keeping your thoughts on what is good.
Or you could speak curses, which keeps your thoughts on what is bad, on your hurts and misfortune.
(This also applies very much to your spouse… no one is perfect, but when you chat with your friends do you talk about what he did right, or about what he did wrong?)
You are so right. I have been told many times in my life and have told others that forgiveness is for yourself. There is one thing I have noticed with Gods commandments is that they benefit everyone involved. He tells us to serve one another and in doing so you are blessed as well as those being served are blessed by your actions. Forgiveness works the same way, you recieve a balm to your soul and sometimes your forgiveness helps the one you are forgiving. Not always because sometimes the other person doesn't know and you are the only one benifited by it. But hanging onto hurt, anger and resentment only hurts you not the person you are angry with. I guess you could say God know what he is doing, and we should trust in Him.
Thank you for the inspiring and touching story. __"my father left home for good and, true to her word, my mother went to the kitchen, lay down on the linoleum floor, turned on the gas and packed it in. I put our furniture in storage, made living arrangements for myself and went on with my life." The courage and strength you found within yourself at 16 after losing both your parents is stunning and very moving. How on earth does someone tossed in the tempest of the making of that climax have the wherewithal to not only go on, but to do it so well? What a testament to the possibilities of the human spirit!
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Do you honestly believe that? Bush was the left's all-purpose scapegoat before we were even in Iraq!
Wow. So Gates should forgive people of the horrible, world-shattering crime of…
…the color of their skin.
And this from an allegedly conservative site.
This kind of racist bilge is what moved me from liberal to conservative before I hit middle school; seeing it come to the fore in the mainstream Right is just gonna fuel my final journey from libertarian-conservative to dropping the last vestiges of the second half of that compound descriptor.
Well writ, sir.
I love listening to you on the Dennis Miller Show.
I like this illustration of the power of forgiveness and the pain that unforgiveness brings:
~
If a seagull craps on your nose, you can fuss and whine, and stand in your hurt and unforgiveness until the dirty bird comes back to remove the offense,
getting smelly and sick yourself while you wait.
Or, you can wipe it off, and feel better.
Your anger and bitterness causes the seagull no distress,
and lots of the people that cause you pain are as indifferent as that bird.
~~~
The ones that aren't are harder to forgive.
It isnt easy, doing right often isnt
but forgiveness and unforgiveness is our choice.
Pain is inevitable, misery is optional.
I've been a fan of Orson Bean's since I was a little kid. Reading this incredible essay reminds me of WHY.
Bravo, Mr. Bean! Home-run hit with this piece. I think you're going to inspire a lot of readers with this one.
An excellent example of true wisdom.
Thank you.
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