Since then, I have
discovered that this young mind had stumbled onto something that runs
very deep in my personality: my mothering nature.
In high school, I
was the go-to listening ear among my friends. I could tell when they
needed me, so I would listen to their woes and then offer the little
bit of insight I had. Everyone told me I should consider becoming a
counselor, and my answer was always that I planned to graduate from
counseling at the end of high school.
As an adult, my
friendships took on qualities far more complex and less dramatic than
those developed in high school. In response, my mothering nature
matured. As I began to listen to the adult-sized woes of people I
loved, my tender heart broke – and it broke frequently. I would
offer what advice I could and listen when advice was superfluous. But
all the while, not too far below my calmly compassionate surface,
there was – and is – a bubbling turmoil of empathy.
At this point, I
must make it clear that I am not writing this to laud my own
achievements in the compassion department. I am aware of this aspect
of my quirky personality, and while it may be on some lists of
virtues, it causes me far more pain than is reasonable. My intention
is not to form an inflated view of myself in which I appear to be the
next Mother Teresa. As I have stated previously, the point of this
blog is to explore methods to remove this weighty world from my
flimsy shoulders.
I have been
described as empathetic to a fault. I have somehow found a way to
channel this instinctual nurturing emotion into something
excruciating and unhealthy: anxiety. My emotional state progresses
rather quickly from calm to turmoil. When I discover that someone I
love is experiencing some kind of difficulty – ranging from a minor
headache to a ruptured family – I am filled with sympathy and my
heart aches in empathy. I then rapidly search through my mental file
folders for possible cures or anesthetics. When one is found, I
immediately suggest it to the injured party. Sometimes, my suggestion
is gratefully accepted and the headache goes away within thirty or
forty minutes. Other times, I can find no solution, and the unsolved
problem plagues me indefinitely. Still other times, something far
worse happens: my advice goes unheeded.
While my mothering
nature was given to me by my Creator, the quirks related to it come
straight from my very own mother. One of these quirks is that I do
not respond well when my advice is not accepted. I have little
patience for people who will complain about a problem and then take
no steps to resolve it. So I do what mothers do best – I nag. This
nagging is not well-received by a mother's own children, so it is
definitely not well-received by people wholly unrelated to me, and I
have almost lost friends this way.
When I finally
realized that this diabolical need to nurture was causing some
problems, I was at a loss for solutions. At my very core, I am a mom,
even though I don't have any children of my own. This is how God made
me. I am a nurturer; I cannot stop caring this deeply, and have no
wish to try. I have since realized that it is not the caring that
gets me into trouble, but how I act on it. There are so many
different mistakes I make because I care so deeply that there is no
way to fit them in this already absurdly-long post. (The next few
posts will discuss each of these mistakes at length.)
For now, I will
close with this consolation: “Is there anyone among you who, if his
son asks for bread, will give him a stone? Or if he asks for a fish,
will give him a snake? If you then, although you are evil, know how
to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father
in heaven give good gifts to those who ask him!” (Mt 7:9-11, NET)
No matter how deeply you love, God's love is deeper. No matter how
confident you are in your ability to solve this problem, God is far
more able. And no matter how anxious you are, God is in control.
It has been brought to my attention that a portion of this entry may reflect poorly on my mom. When I mention nagging, and not responding well when my advice is unheeded, I consider them to be standard-issue mothering qualities. I do not mean to cast a negative light on these qualities, and definitely do not intend to cast a shadow on my mother's mothering. If you identify with either of these qualities, it is up to you and your Creator whether they come from sin. For me, they are wrong, for the reasons listed above, and God convicted me of them. If you happen to be a mother, perhaps these are not negative qualities at all. That is not for me to decide. I apologize for the unfortunate turn of phrase.
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