I want to be selfish. It’s easy to feel under appreciated
when you’re always there for your friends and you constantly go out of your way
to be supportive. Do you ever stop and think, “Why am I doing this? How is this
benefitting me? Is it even worth how much I give, give, give?”
For me, I have moments when I feel that I should get
something back. Does that make me more than just selfish? Is there any point in
my desire to be more egotistic? In reflection I find myself depressed at the
end of each day: worn by trying, exhausted by giving, saddened by lack of gratitude.
I think back to when I first sought out help for this issue
and remember being asked, “Do you think that saying no will make you less like
Christ?” Obviously my first reaction was to take a mental step back and
realized that I’d never thought of it that way before. When you’re giving it
all and taking nothing back you think that that’s all there is to it, right?
How dare I be saddened, shouldn’t I be happy because I’m giving? Isn’t that
what we’re taught to do? Don’t we reflect Christ most when we give? By desiring
selfishness do we sacrifice Grace and Humility?
In Matthew we find that Christ gave until there was nothing left: “Even as the Son of Man came not to
be served but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many” (Matthew
20:28). And again we find in John, “A new commandment I give to you, that you
love one another: just as I have loved you, you also are to love one another.
By this all people will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for
one another” (John 13:34-35).
Love, love, give, give, it is all there in black and white
(and sometimes even red depending on your translation). But why then is it so
exhausting? Why then do we feel trapped when we’ve felt we’ve given it all?
Love is hard, Love is beautiful, Love is patient and kind,
and Love can break us to pieces. As a reminder, let’s keep in mind that God
didn’t say it would be easy either: “give, and it will be given to you. Good
measure, pressed down, shaken together, running over, will be put into your
lap. For with the measure you use it will be measured back to you” (Luke 6:38).
“Give and it will be given”: even when it’s not immediate.
“Good measure, pressed down, shaken together, running over,
will be put into your lap”: don’t stop giving, keep up your pace with it,
you’ll be trampled on, you’ll be shaken up, you’ll even be run over, and we
have every guarantee of these very things.
“For with the measure you use it will be measured back to
you”: If you’ve given it all, know you can give more and know that one day
it’ll all come to fruition.
So there it is, here’s where we come back to what we started
with, selfishness. So… we are granted selfishness in reward for when we give?
No, I want to use this word to bring light to another idea. The negative
connotation that selfishness carries can distract us from the truth of what we
gain. By giving, we don’t gain selfishness. If you give it all, if you’ve truly
emptied your heart, in the end there is reassurance that your heart wont leave
here empty, but overflowing.
Our giving isn’t guaranteed an immediate reward and most
likely, we wont receive our return from those we are giving so much to. It’s SO
easy to be blinded by a lack of receiving that we can miss the little things
from other people that reenergize and rehydrate our wrung out, worn thin,
beaten down hearts. Don’t stop loving; don’t be afraid to squeeze what’s left
from your heart, because it’ll still keep beating. We’re never given more than
we can handle and a heart that’s empty shows the world how willing you are to
rise above. Dip in to your heart and someone will always be a step behind you
ready to fill yours back up.
There is no way to be free of the giving, we’re wired to do so and receive it in return. Don’t shy away from giving for the fear of losing yourself. Don’t be afraid to receive, lean in to the little gifts because they all add up in the end. Be Selfishly Self-less.
There is no way to be free of the giving, we’re wired to do so and receive it in return. Don’t shy away from giving for the fear of losing yourself. Don’t be afraid to receive, lean in to the little gifts because they all add up in the end. Be Selfishly Self-less.