Confessions (and Redemptive Revelations) of an Angry-Letter Writer

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Confessions (and Redemptive Revelations) of an Angry-Letter Writer by Courtney Coates I am an expert on writing angry letters. I began honing this skill while teaching English to college students in Tianjin, China, as a recent college graduate myself. I'd never been so stressed out before, what with the foreign language (which I didn't speak) flooding my ears, the constant cultural mishaps, the never-ending search for American cheese. One day I found myself at wit's end, plunging yet again my campus apartment's toilet which never fully flushed. I sat down at the computer and transferred my rage to the screen. I had an extensive list of woes—the rudeness of campus security, the inefficiency of the school library, the uncomfortable furnishings. These were issues entirely explicable by culture, but I was blinded by a touch of culture shock. Besides, it was therapeutic writing them all down. I reveled in the rush of power, knowing I resided in a country where it is taboo to complain, where college students don't even choose their own majors because the government does it for them. The letter was never intended to be sent, but I guess the rush power went to my head. I printed the document and handed it politely to our school's foreign affairs liaison, knowing he would take great pains to translate it word-for-word for his superiors. The next day four Chinese university officials knocked on my door. They sat uncomfortably in my living room and listened as I stood and proudly spoke English, a translator on my right. With bowed-head apologies, they promised the arrival of a new toilet that very day. I was floored. Who knew justice could be so swift—and so intoxicating? My angry-letter-writing career had begun. When a perilous shuttle bus ride on my journey back to the States nearly cost me my flight, I typed an angry letter and won all my money back. When a furniture store nicked up my headboard, an angry letter prompted an apology, as well as a peace offering of $150 in gift cards. And when my husband—my poor, poor husband—made all the mistakes a new husband makes, you'd better believe he got himself some angry letters. My pen had become my sword; it meted out my justice on a regular basis. Perhaps word of my no-nonsense stance against tyrants had leaked out, because one day a sobbing woman approached me and poured out her own troubles. Mariko was my Japanese neighbor, the wife of a seminary student and mother of two toddlers. She had a toilet problem. Through tears and broken English, Mariko painted for me

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Confessions (and Redemptive Revelations) of an Angry-Letter Writer by Evangelicals for Social Action - Prism Magazine - Issuu