For me, hurt seemed to produce, not a desire to pay someone back, but an overwhelming, desperate sense of needing to convince them to understand what they’re doing. Most of the time I struggle and have to actually go out of my way to make myself feel enough anger to not run back for a false reconciliation. I find myself almost obsessively longing to fix things, to somehow make them understand what it’s like for me, for them to reach the point where they genuinely want to fix things
I added the bold. These words are why I don’t think that Dark Light is experiencing what Ad Gloriam is describing (which I am not too clear on, but which may be the feeling a parent has when they want to get rid of a vice and instill the opposing virtue in a child).
I can’t imagine that St Pope John Paul II would advocate something that is not healthy, but what Dark Night describes does not seem quite right to me, possibly due to the words she used. And I could have the wrong impression about what she is saying, but feeling obsessive and struggling to refrain from a reconciliation she knows is false doesn’t sound right.
But that always seems like the wrong direction - to go from longing for them to repent to not being particularly concerned with it.
So I think there is a middle course here that can be taken, neither obsession nor indifference. I think
detachment from the outcome might explain what I mean?
So God is currently allowing this situation to continue. Either an increase in prayers (for increased grace) or patience (until God deems it the right time to act, which He might never do) is needed. Neither involves indifference.
Think of it as the Superbowl game. A lot of people are waiting patiently (albeit vociferously) for the outcome, but that in no way indicates indifference, does it? They simply know when the appointed time for the end of the conflict to occur will be, and trust that it will arrive.
The fans really want a certain outcome, but if they said and meant they were obsessed, people would think they’d gone overboard, right? So there is an anticipatory acceptance of either outcome, which could be called detachment, I think.
In some situations, we are in charge and must guide someone to an understanding of their actions. Parents, obviously, but also superiors and teachers.
In other situations, we are not in charge, and so do not have the authority to do anything. We may, however, have a relationship which would allow some good to flow from fraternal correction, which we would then be obliged to give.
It seems to me that sometimes we are in a situation in which the relationship does not allow for fraternal correction, and the other person is too far from understanding to be able to be corrected.
In this case, which seems to be what Dark Night is describing, what can we do? Short of physical force, nothing! And at that point, it seems to me, we must resort, not to indifference, but to prayer and patience. Just turn the person over to God for Him to handle.