Dear readers,
How are you? Is life treating you well?
I have a question for you, and I want you to answer honestly. Just in your own mind. Take a minute to think about it.
Who do you trust?
Some of my friends read these posts. If I don't immediately spring to mind, no harm no foul. I struggle to trust people. We all have issues with our boundaries and we pick and choose who we let inside our walls. If you didn't pick me, that's understandable and accepted with love as a fact. We cannot bear our souls to everyone, so we pick the few we deem correct. Not everyone will see everyone else's soul.
Keep thinking about that question.
I saw a quote the other day that really struck me. It came after this story:
"I was sitting in a restaurant and on the other side of the aisle, in a booth, was this family. A little boy had his children's cup of powerade, and he wasn't being very careful. He dropped it, and spilled it all over the table, some of it dripped onto the floor. The little boy looked so scared, almost like he would cry, as he looked up at his dad.
His dad scooted him out of the booth, grabbed a handful of napkins, and said:
"It's okay, you weren't being careful. Watch for that next time, okay? Or you'll make more messes like this. Now let me show you how to clean it up."
I was almost floored from my own seat. Part of me had expected the father to be upset, and frustrated that in a public restaurant, his child had been messing around and made that mess. But instead he explained that that was how life works, that was the consequence of his not being careful, and helped him clean it up."
This story had a comment on it, that read, "This hit home. I was yelled at a lot as a kid, and as I am about to become a father, I realized something. When my kid messes up, at any age, I never want them to think "Oh shoot, my dad is going to kill me." I want their first thought to be, "Oh shoo,
I've got to tell my dad.""
This got me thinking. Am I that kind of person? If someone messes up, do they fear my judgement or my wrath? I never want anyone to think that I will think less of them, be unkind or angry with them, just because they messed up. When I am grown, when I become a mother, if my son crashes my car, I want them to think, "I've got to call mom." Heck, if my daughter ends up pregnant at 16, I want her to think, "Mom will know what to do. Mom will help me figure this out." Consequences often times take care of themselves, but relationships of any and all kinds should not be maintained with fear.
I have messed up too. I've messed up big, I've messed up small. I mess up all the time. I am cross, I say things I shouldn't, I break things, I hurt people.
But as I evaluate my life, I realized, I should not be afraid of others' views of my mistakes. My mistakes are mine to make, and the consequences mine to handle as I choose.
I began to go through names of people I knew. If I messed up, and telling them was a prominent option, would I think, "They'll listen." or "They'll have advice." or was it, "What would they think?"
If it was the third one, I either cut them out of my life, or cut them out of certain areas.
I want to be the person that if someone messed up, big, bad, small, or insignificant, whatever. If someone messes up, they know I'm someone they could tell. Free of judgement. Even if they wouldn't tell me, maybe we aren't
that kind of friends, or just aren't very close, that's fine. But I want people to know and trust that I will accept them, mistakes and all, every burden they carry, with open arms.
If my friend rips my favorite sweater, "No big, I can sew. I'll figure it out."
If my brother breaks my lamp. "I really liked that lamp, I expect you to help me replace it, but accidents happen."
Maybe I'll need time, we all do after something out of our control affects us in a way we cannot always repair. Forgiveness isn't always a fast process, but my goal is to make it a consistent one.
I have a 20 minute rule. Not everyone knows about it, lots of people forget, or ignore it. I am allowed to be mad, sad, angry, furious, distraught, for 20 minutes. I get 20 minutes, to genuinely feel my feelings, then I move on. We look at the problem objectively and move forward trying to fix it with a rational head.
20 minutes is all it takes.
20 minutes, and my arms are open once again.
Now let's go back to that question.
Who do you trust?
Has the answer changed? Have you thought of people who you should trust? Of people that you thought you did trust, but are thinking maybe you shouldn't?
If you fear judgement, if you not fully believe you will be met with open arms, it is time to rethink how they are allowed to impact your life.
Keep your arms open. Be judgement free, be loving, and forgiving.
Be the person you needed when you felt like you had no one at all.
That is what will truly change the world for the better.
Ever sincerely,
Emily Kate