My wife and kids and I came home from a family event the other day and in the process of bringing stuff into the house I accidentally broke one of my wife's fancy serving plates. It's one a good friend that we'll probably never see again gave to her so it had some significance. I feel terrible about it, but I didn't do a very good job of expressing how sorry I was. OTOH, as I've raised my children, my wife and I have tried teach our children manners and to say they're sorry, as most parents do. As any parent knows, however, they really aren't sorry, they're just saying it because they have to.
So, thinking of this, it got me wondering, which is better, or more important, to say your sorry but not mean it, or to actually be sorry, even if you don't express it well or at all? I don't really know the answer to this. Let's face it, we often say we're sorry when we really don't actually feel sorry. I can see the value to society of saying your're sorry when you aren't to maintain good relationships an social order, but how harmful is the insincerity?
So, thinking of this, it got me wondering, which is better, or more important, to say your sorry but not mean it, or to actually be sorry, even if you don't express it well or at all? I don't really know the answer to this. Let's face it, we often say we're sorry when we really don't actually feel sorry. I can see the value to society of saying your're sorry when you aren't to maintain good relationships an social order, but how harmful is the insincerity?