Categories
RELATIONSHIPS

What About Me?

By: Christine Fishel

Around this time of year, when I want to focus on thankfulness and giving, I find myself harboring feelings of resentment. “What about me?! I want to scream on some days and sob on others.

I am not an overly selfish person. I have my selfish moments (sometimes, days), but in general I tend to put others before myself. So what is it, I can’t help wondering, that makes these seasons—seasons designated for giving thanks and giving gifts—so difficult for me to conform to?

As I’ve been reflecting on this question, I’ve realized that as I give throughout the year, I tend to overgive. I often know what I am able to give that will stretch me without putting a strain on me and my family. I will have determined the budget or time or energy I have available to expend. If I am not organized enough in the moment to have it already figured out on paper, I instinctively know when I have gone over the line in my giving because a sour warning takes root in my stomach.

I know what I can handle, but almost never am I willing to stay within that boundary. I convince myself that God wants me to give until it hurts, that my suffering is called for. Certainly there are times when I know God has asked me for this level of giving. But as an every day habit, I know He doesn’t require—or desire—me to give until I hurt myself and those around me. Still, I do it. I do it until I become resentful and cry out, “What about me?!”

I am tired of my whining.

I have started to pick at my logic and have torn away an old scab that covered a lie I long ago learned and embraced. The lie is this: if I give enough, I will be loved enough.

Ah, again I find this hidden lie rooted within me. How many times does my Lord have to teach me the meaning of grace before I let His truth be learned and embraced? His truth is this:  I can never give enough. And, this other truth of His rests beside it, even more difficult to swallow: I am already loved enough.

Those two truths don’t rest beside each other easily within me. I want to earn love, I realize upon reflection. I want to know I deserve it. It is the way I was taught and it is the way that allows me to be in control. It is the way that means I should be loved; afterall, I have done the work to deserve it.

But that is not the truth of our God. In relationship with Him, there is no earning. There is no deserving. There is only His love, freely given. To take it in, I must do the thing more difficult than working my fingers to the point of chapped cracking, my mind to the point of exhausted numbness, my wallet to the point of continuous debt.

I must stop. Stop trying; stop working; stop earning. I must accept the gift. Accept it with the open hands and open heart of a child who has nothing to offer in return.

That is another truth difficult to swallow: I have nothing to offer in return. Nothing He needs. And so I must lay aside my pride, that pride which is protecting the fragile and tiny piece of confidence in me.

And what comes then, when all is laid bare? From my God, what comes is love. And what comes from others around me? I see now that it needs to not matter nearly as much as I let it. The others are like me, imperfect, fragile, broken.  We cannot fill each other up.

This holiday season, I need to change my cry from “What about me?!” to “What about me is it, Lord?” What is it You see that You love so much? I need to be transparent enough with Him to tell Him what He already knows: I need some extra TLC this season. And I need to let Him give it to me.

4 replies on “What About Me?”

Chris, I appreciate your blog this week and I identify with it. The Thanksgiving & Christmas holidays are really hard for me. I try very hard to give to others and then feel really sad when I feel that others don’t return the care back to me. I need to be reminded of why we are giving and of all the blessings I have for which to be thankful. The hardest part for me is to lower my expectations so that I am not disappointed. Thank you for your honesty!

Karen, thank you for your comments. It can be a tough season. I think we all set expectations on others that lead to our disappointment. Maybe we should put our expectations only on God–He has made us lots of promises and He’s the only one capable of keeping them. I am praying for you and your sweet daughter to have many blessed days this season!

Thank you for putting words to the very same thoughts that I’ve been having. “I am already loved enough”. How hard that is to accept. I have no control, I cannot earn it, it is freely given without any effort on my part. My pride has kept me from accepting this truth. Thank you for teaching me what surrender looks like – accepting His love right in the middle of my mess.

Chris, I can give you 2 reasons why God loves you but there are many more I’m sure. Your transparency and vulnerability in these beautiful blogs is such a blessing to those who cannot be transparent and vulnerable. See the comments before this one. You help others put words and actions to the feelings they have trouble identifying in their lives. I’m sure this has changed many lives for the better. And again, your help in our last 2 classes. Your calm and gentle spirit made a huge difference in the success of both of those. We can’t thank you enough. If I knew you better, I’m sure I could list many more. Enjoy God’s love for you. You are such a blessing!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *