Fitting the Amends
When we have not followed this rule, amends are needed. The amends also need to fit the situation.
One day, I found myself getting overly dramatic about an amends for a minor slight. I was writing a long, intense letter when a program friend reminded me that the amend needs to fit the situation. My tendency toward drama was just another form of control—I was trying to use emotional intensity to force forgiveness or resolution.
The spiritual discipline is to calibrate my response to the actual harm. When I cut someone off in traffic, the appropriate amend is not chasing them down; it’s driving with courtesy and caution from then on. This simplicity is challenging because it doesn't give me the emotional high of a dramatic gesture. It costs me my craving for intensity. But fitting the amend means I am focused on principle, not performance. It is a humble, quiet way of walking through the world.
I will review my interactions today and if I accidentally cause a minor inconvenience or offense, I will make an appropriate small amend immediately—a simple apology, a corrected action—and then let it go, without escalating the drama.