dani
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Apropos nothing at all, good/well-intentioned people need to be given the latitude to be wrong. To find out that they were wrong, and to learn from being wrong. The pile-on’s that happen when a good person makes a mistake aren’t helpful beyond when someone apologizes, when they’ve acknowledged it.
09:47 PM - May 24, 2023
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Susan Simon
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This is both true and very impt. I used to regularly model saying “I was wrong” to my students when teaching bc I knew they rarely had adults admit out loud. Some of the best essays I’ve read on this are by Rabbi Danya Ruttenberg “On Repentance and Repair” There’s more to do than say sorry + move on
In response to dani.
07:05 AM - May 25, 2023
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