Does your farm team have the ability to apologize and accept mistakes?

Froese elaine
Certified Farm Family Coach
Elaine Froese, CSP, CAFA, CHICoach and her team of coaches are here to help you find harmony thro...

I was saddened to hear a young farmer confide in me that in all his years, he has never once heard an apology from the farm manager, his father.

Many farm families are saddled with an invisible load on their backs. Every day they carry the baggage of hurt caused by a habitual pattern of family members who just can’t seem to let go of past offenses.

It is time for farm families to learn how to make “quick repairs” as John Gottman calls it, and we are not talking about duct tape here. Forgiveness is one of the critical issues farm families need to take a hard look at. Why do they avoid it?

Accepting the fact that you are hurt is one thing, but the tough part about forgiveness is that it is the offended (you) that has to seek the forgiveness of the offender (another family member).

“Forgiveness is difficult because the person who is hurt does the forgiving and not the person being forgiven,” according to Anger is a Choice authors Dr. Tim LaHaye and Bob Phillips.

I was angry with my friend:
I told my wrath, my wrath did end.
I was angry with my foe:
I told it not, my wrath did grow.

—William Blake, A Poison Tree

We don’t forgive and forget. We remember, but we have a choice of what we do with the memories. LaHaye says, “I can let my memories lie and move on in my life, or I can let my memories overpower me.

Forgiveness is letting go. It is the relaxation of your death grip on the pain you feel.”

Pain and the baggage of hurt from unforgiveness may be keeping your farm team stuck. You might want to consider the art of surrender. Archibald Hart says, “Forgiveness is surrendering my right to hurt you back if you hurt me.”

You choose to forgive; it is an act of the will
If your farm succession plan is not going well, it might be due to a lack of forgiveness. Tom Hubler of Hubler for Business Families says he feels that lack of forgiveness is the second-biggest obstacle to succession planning.

Number one may be stubbornness and pride.

To be able to forgive, we have to look at the issue of hurt directly. The reasons for lack of reconciliation are many:

1. Death: The offender has died, but the hurt lingers.

2. Denial: Refusal and rejection of the offender who says, “I didn’t do anything wrong to hurt you.”

3. Desperate fear: You lack the skills, courage or motivation to ask for an apology. You avoid drama. “Are you kidding? I can’t ask for an apology or forgiveness. That is impossible.”

4. Deciding not to let go of the hurt: The unforgiveness is on your part as you say, “I will never let go of what that person did to me.”

5. Missing: The offender has moved and cannot be located; you can’t have a conversation. Today with social media like LinkedIn, Facebook and other media, it is easier to track people down.

Choose to move to a better place: reconciliation and forgiveness
Decide to “extend the olive branch” and make the first move. Seeking healing by asking for forgiveness is an act of will, a choice.

Emotions may flow, but that is OK. Tears are not a sign of weakness; they are healing. If things get emotional, accept that. Your feelings are a normal part of the process.

Don’t wait until you feel like it to offer an apology. Do you only go out to feed the cows when you feel like it? Deal with the manure in your life that is keeping you down.

Alexander Chase said, “To understand is to forgive, even oneself.”

All farmers, male and female, could benefit from great self-awareness. We all make choices. A woman at a farm crisis meeting once said, “Mom always told me that I had a choice in how to respond to what happened to me in my life. I could get bitter or get better.”

You might want to ask a third party – a minister, counselor or facilitator – to help you do a forgiveness ritual. This session can become a marker of “starting over” or “cleaning up the mess” to create a new chapter for your farm team.

Advertisement

You identify the key issues keeping the family business stuck. You talk about what I call the bull in the middle of the room, the “undiscussabulls.”

Focus on forgiveness, making repair and crafting a new code of conduct that aligns with your family business values and cherished beliefs.

Healing is the goal that will move your family and business forward
Forgiveness is one of those “soft issues” farm families get frustrated with when they are “too frosted to forgive.” Don’t wait or procrastinate.

The time to act is now. There is a multimillion-dollar farm waiting to grow, and rich legacy of relationships that needs to be re-established.

Remember, it is your farm, your family and your choice. Make the choice today to mend the offenses and fences on your farm.  PD

Elaine Froese, CAFA, CHICoach helps facilitate courageous conversations for farm families who are ready to embrace a new chapter. Visit her web site or email to share your success with forgiveness. See also The Forgiveness Project web site for more ideas and stories.