Paul Summers Jr.
It has been said we can be in a crowd and still be alone. I can identify with that. Once I’m in my head, that’s where I am. I’m comforted by myself; my infatuation with myself, with being sensitive (not meant in a complimentary, compassionate way) to my surroundings. No one can argue with me; whatever my point of view is that I’m entertaining. Once in my head, no one can affect my will; no one can question my motives or point out how selfish I’m being.
Even this podcast, as long as I do it alone, is an example of how my brain works left to its own thinking. I would like to have guests. That way I can be good to me. My goal for any of this work I do is to access the tools others have set within my Be Good To You toolbox.
Loneliness. How does one joyfully combat the feeling of being all alone? Let’s start off with being of service. How do you get out of your head long enough to physically move to a place of feeling a part of, not apart from? Again, service is the antidote.
All feelings pass. What’s dangerous about this statement is that none of us know how long it will take for the feelings to pass. Add to that the anxiety produced by not knowing can keep us stuck in this place of feeling alone—of returning to the thoughts which mother us poorly. The mother of those thoughts is like the type of mother who would let their 40 year old live in their basement – jobless, penniless, dependent, addicted – a person deprived of living life.
Author Anne Lamott said, “The people we love the most in the world … they have to find their own answers; their own ways … you have to release them. It’s disrespectful not to. Help is often toxic. It’s the sunny side of control.” But a mother who cuts herself off from accepting the warning signals believes what she wants to believe. This is the damage our isolating thoughts can do to us. We’re all mothers.
So when I want to help, I don’t like giving advice. I prefer to give suggestions.
Suggestions are a healthy way of saying, “here is something I’ve tried which worked, so maybe you might want to try it.”
My suggestion is: Don’t ISOLATE, Go help someone.
Using the 40 year old person still living in the basement on the couch metaphor, think of how that adult living on the couch would be moved to a different mindset if they volunteered to help someone. Giving is a form of building. Giving is an energy which contributes to your essence. It does not feed on it.
Some people are in a blessed position to be generous with their money. But then there are some who can only offer their physical presence. Either way, we connect when we give. We share our hearts when we give. This is a two-way street. When we let others give to us, we are also giving.
Giving, however, can become harmful if it is done to the point in which the giver provides so much that they squash the self-esteem of the person receiving. I’ve included this because I’ve experienced it. I’m not telling about this experience to point a finger or give blame, it’s merely to provide anecdote. In my family of origin, I grew up with a little too much of the example below.
“Hey, let me get this for you. I’ll take care of it. No, I’ve got this for you. I will not allow you to repay me or do the same for me.”
It took me a long time being clean to recognize that my family was not allowing me to give back. If I took the inventory of any of my family members, I would determine how their behavior was stifling and controlling. The effect on me was harmful. I had to set a boundary. It was uncomfortable to change this dynamic. Not only was my personal reaction a learned one, but my family had never done things any other way. It came down to forcing myself to exhibit behaviors such as:
“No thank you. I’m not going to accept any of your generosity until you accept some of mine.”
This was met with insults and resistance at first. I heard excuses like, “Yeah but you have a kid to raise. You can’t afford this.” My dad once said, “As long as I’m alive you will never pay our bill at a restaurant.” WTF.
I had to be the one to make sure they recognized the debilitating nature of their acts of kindness. This was not easy. Although it was just as hard for them, it went a long way for all of us and our relationships. Giving is not a competition. Be cognizant not only of what you’re intuitively sensing, but also to what the other person might be going through.
If you’re new at giving, it’s okay to give any way you can. Remember it’s best to expect nothing in return, not even accolades. Try to walk away before you can even be thanked. Better yet, give anonymously. Try the action.
A person might say, “I’m going to donate 20,000 dollars to the Tents for Downtown Homeless Project (fictitious) because my purpose is to be a philanthropist.” But is there an ulterior motive? Is the person wanting to get something in return? Is having their name in print, on television, or on the list of sponsors to thank; on a brick in the courthouse square, or to get a hefty tax write off really an act of someone with a generous sense of purpose? Is that really giving? Sounds ego-driven to me. Sounds like a legal way of stealing from the tax pool as well.
Many government programs which are meant to uplift the underprivileged appear to more or less undermine those they are meant to aid. I have experienced firsthand moments of being given a handout when the handout contributed to my addiction. For example, I was given food stamps because I had no income. Well I had no income because I was spending the last of my savings on dope; because I was too strung out to look for work, let alone show up to earn money. I had no income because of my poor choices. I had no income because I was not held to any standard when I went to the government handout agency. Maybe I should’ve been drug tested so that I could’ve gotten actual help. It wasn’t very hard to persuade them to throw money at my disintegration.
Never underestimate the resourcefulness of an addict. Plenty of times I figured out how to get around the system just to keep my high going. Times that by hundreds of thousands of addicts, and you have justified the need for handout programs. The vicious circle spins wider and wider.
A person enabled is a person whose self-esteem is being compromised of his or her right to integrity.
If you want to have the purpose of helping curbside communities, buy them some trash bags or clothes or food or sleeping bags. Bring them and personally hand them out to those you wish to help. The closer you are to the problem, the better able you are to gauge the difference between giving and enabling. Government programs pay dividends to those (typically wealthy privileged) people who create and manage them—not so much to the person they are meant to help.
I believe in working for self-esteem. How would we feel about a person who says, “Hey system, let me leach off you because I want to keep my party going?”
During one volunteer project, I met a woman who proudly boasted about how she cooks healthy meals and brings them to homeless camps to feed the people living there.
“How do you feel about the cost to the city of Portland for having to clean up and dispose of 20 tons of trash along the five mile stretch of I-84 every few months?” I asked her.
“That’s not gonna keep me from feeding people.” She responded angrily.
I thanked her for helping me see the human side of the problem, then thanked God for people like her who take it on their own to go and do something personally. I don’t think people should starve to death either. Nor do I believe someone should collect five figures and government benefits for perpetuating programs which cater to the demeaning, demise, and death of a person experiencing the negative effects of bad decision making.
Does it sound like I’m living in two houses? That I’m in one house called I Don’t Care and in one called I Do Care?
I was on the streets. I came out of living like that because most people made it hard for me to live that way. The pain became too great.
What about SERVICE?
You don’t have to be in a program to be of service. As addicts, alcoholics, overeaters, and co-dependents, our disease distorts one crucial aspect which can be beneficial to us: a sense of purpose. Our sense of purpose can’t be an action or thing which, in the end, we will be a beneficiary of.
I notice I can be myself when I have a purpose. When I give of myself to that human place or thing, I’m doing it as me. My greeting face is off the table. It’s no longer show time, it’s grow time.
If you’re feeling alone. I’m here for you. I suggest you seek a place to serve. Look for that place, you will find it. Ask for help finding that place, and to you it will be shown. It is in taking the movement and the action. For me, this is when the God of my understanding takes the wheel. Sometimes it’s best to be uncomfortable so that you can be healthy.