Are you bummed by the humungous number of insincere, self-serving, clueless, defensive “sorry if”s you’ve heard of late? Join us, won’t you, on a journey of thoughtful apologies! We have for your delectation a knitting magazine, a rapper, a rapist, and a humorist. Let’s begin!

#1: Here’s a well-crafted one from Laine Magazine! Who knew there was “a high-quality Nordic knit & lifestyle magazine“? Obviously there are more things in heaven and earth than are dreamed of in our fiber philosophy.

This appeared on both FB and Instagram.

Why is it a good apology? It uses the word “sorry.” It takes responsibility. It acknowledges the effect of what it did wrong. It promises action, and in the right way (reaching out more to designers of color, and noting that people of color should not be expected to do the work of educating white people). Alas, the comments on the FB post are unfortunate but unsurprising; not everyone will appreciate an apology or get why it’s important. Yet we’re obligated to apologize for our screw-ups. No one else is obligated to accept them. The only thing that would have made this apology better was a recap of what led to the apology — what’s the backstory here? Otherwise, it’s very good.

#2. Chance the Rapper’s apology for working with R. Kelly. In the wake of Lifetime’s series, Surviving R. Kelly, Chance tells interviewer Jamilah Lemieux, “Making a song with R. Kelly was a mistake. I didn’t value the accusers’ stories because they were black women,” he said. “I made a mistake.” To Snarly, a white woman, this comment was sufficient; he seemed to be honestly critical of his past decisions. Snarly, however, is not the demo. It’s more important to listen to the voices of Black women. And in great numbers, Black women did not accept this. Chance then said that his quote was taken out of context, which is almost always a cop-out. (And why it is a square in Bad Apology Bingo.)

 

However, in context, his quote WAS clearer!  

The quote: “We’re programed to really be hypersensitive to black male oppression. It’s just prevalent in all media. And when you see n****s getting beat up by the police, it’s men…Slavery, for a lot of people, they envision men in chains, but black women are, you know, exponentially a higher oppressed and violated group of people. Like, just in comparison to the whole world, you know? Maybe I didn’t care because I didn’t value the accusers’ stories because they were black women.”

This is a fine apology. Uses the word “apologize” rather than “regret,” takes responsibility, offers an explanation that is not an excuse (he’s CLEARLY being self-critical) — he’s pointing out a historical, longterm problem that he has been part of: Failing to believe Black women, and/or failing to support them, because the voices and experiences of Black men have been given more credence, volume, and primacy. SorryWatch gathers that Chance is often viewed as a problematic figure. But we are an apology blog, and this is a good apology.

#3. A rapist apologizes to his victim. In a piece for The Atlantic, Deborah Copaken (who is, full disclosure, a friend of SorryWatch) writes about confronting her college rapist, 30 years later, in the wake of the Brett Kavanaugh confirmation mishegas. Read the story here. The upshot: Copaken wrote the man a letter. He called her a half-hour later and said, “Oh, Deb. Oh my god. I’m so sorry. I had no idea. I’m filled with shame.”

We spoke for a long time, maybe 20 minutes. He had no recollection of raping me, just of the party where we’d met. He’d blacked out that night from excessive drinking and soon thereafter entered Alcoholics Anonymous. But that, he said, was no excuse. The fact that he’d done this to me and that I’d been living with the resulting trauma for 30 years was horrifying to him. He was so sorry, he said. He just kept repeating those words, “I’m so sorry,” over and over.

Suddenly, 30 years of pain and grief fell out of me. I cried. And I cried. And I kept crying for the next several hours, as I prepared for Yom Kippur, the Jewish holiday of forgiveness. And then, suddenly, I was cleansed. Reborn. The trauma was gone. All because of a belated apology.

Snarly was also sexually assaulted in college (three years after Deb, at the same school), by a then-sophomore. When Snarly reported the incident to a college administrator, the administrator said, “Well, it’s your word against his.” She advised not reporting him to the Administrative Board. So Snarly didn’t. The administrator ruled that the sophomore was no longer allowed to come into Snarly’s residential suite; Snarly’s roommates, who were also friends with the sophomore, were annoyed at Snarly. Didn’t she understand that he was damaged, that he was only expressing affection in his messed-up way, that he had been a childhood victim of sexual assault? The sophomore filled her voicemail with taunting messages and stood with his toes on her doorjamb as she entered and exited, gently crooning, “Marjorie haaaaates meeeeee! I’m not allowed to come iiiiiiiin!” The next year, Snarly petitioned to move to a different house (an uncommon request) and it was granted. She never spoke to the sophomore again. He reportedly committed suicide several years after graduation. The administrator, on the other hand, is now a full professor at another university. As #metoo turned into a crescendo, Snarly wrote an email to her, saying, “I hope if a student ever comes to you today with a report of being sexually assaulted, you’ll do better.” Snarly never heard back. All of this is a longwinded way to say that Snarly understands how powerful an apology like the one Deb got can be; Snarly yearned, ached, for such an apology. A good apology can be a huge help in facilitating forgiveness, and the mental and even physical health benefits of forgiveness are huge. ACCORDING TO SCIENCE. Again, though, you should not feel guilty if you can’t forgive. Be proud that you’re still here.

#4: A completely fictional apology from Louis CK! Many of us (Snarly included) have written off this gross wanker. Others — including comic Sarah Silverman — have not. To each their own! We repeat: No one is owed redemption! And people who do horrid things over and over (thinking of Harvey Weinstein here) are unlikely to deliver a great apology. The same monstrous ego and amorality that let them do the bad things in the first place generally prevent them from having the compassion to see things from their victim’s point of view. For profoundly vile people, an apology is only an attempt to get out of trouble. Personally, given his earlier apology (which some folks thought was good, but let’s just say SorryWatch disagreed), Snarly finds it hard to imagine Louis CK apologizing well enough for her to grant him absolution. But writer Nell Scovell managed to write a pretend stand-up set for Louis that MIGHT, if it were real, make Snarly think about forgiving him. It’s even funny! That quite an accomplishment, though not altogether surprising from the author of Just The Funny Parts, a very sharp and often bitter account of Scovell’s 30-odd years in the trenches of male writing rooms.

We have two more good apologies in our pocket. But this post is already long, so we’ll save them for a rainy day when we need a little humans-don’t-always-suck sunshine.

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