You know how sometimes you have those really deep conversations with friends about life?
Well, it doesn’t actually happen to me that often, but it did this last Sunday.
A friend of mine and my sister’s was telling us about her uncertainty about what she’s supposed to do going forward. Chase dreams? Pick the steady job she has a better shot of getting? Even if she doesn’t feel that passionate about it.
I’ve had the same questions. So has my sister. All of us could relate to the feeling that we’re not fulfilling our purpose. I’ve had it often.
I think most people in their 20s have that feeling, but from what I’ve heard, people in their 30s and 40s do also.
We all hold ourselves to this standard in our minds of what really matters, and what our lives should accomplish.
It’s admirable to want to do something good for the world, but I wonder if a lot of the time, it’s more of a wish not to be forgotten.
I used to obsess over this, but through prayer and self reflection, really mainly in the last year, I came to realize a few things about why I think about it so much.
While there is some genuine wish to please God, and help people, in there, I found a lot of this desire of mine was from frusteration.
See, I wasn’t happy with my life, so I blamed the lack of accomplishing anything big. As if accomplishing something big would magically make me feel happy and fulfilled.
Yet if we look at the classic hidden lives and mental health crash outs of famous people and philanthropists, it doesn’t seem like that formal fully works.
There is the rare do-gooder who is very happy and fulfilled, but most often, it’s because their goal was more specific than just doing something big and important.
I finally noticed, reading the stories of famous do gooders like Mother Teresa, or David Wilkerson, or Corrie Ten Boom, or even others like Frederick Douglas, Abraham Lincoln, George Washington, any and all kinds of people. From Gandhi to Churchill, often the story really starts small.
None of these people really set out to do huge good things. Most of them just saw people around them who had a need, and they tried to help it. And that grew into something bigger.
Others of us, it never happens that way. Some people live out their lives helping only one person at a time. And in the eyes of the world, that’s a small thing.
Yet, one has to wonder, what really is the difference between changing one person’s life forever, and changing a thousand people’s lives? Except number.
Yet, if that one person you helped goes on to help millions of others, then you did help more.
It’s one reason teachers like teaching. We love to reach the individual and bring out their potential, and then see them use it to help way more people than we ever could.
It’s hard to quantify change. You could save one person’s life, and they could go on to save hundreds. Like the movie “It’s a Wonderful Life” portrays so well.
As all this began sinking in, I noticed that I discount a lot of the things I’ve done to help people.
In my short life, I’ve always tried to reach out to people who were lonely, or in trouble.
Often, I never really knew whether it helped or not.
Once in highschool on a mission trip, a girl confided in me about some horrible things she’d undergone at home. I didn’t know how to help except to listen. Later after the trip, she asked to stay at my house overnight one time, and my family and I agreed.
She left my church not long after that, I don’t know what happened to her. I hope her life got better. I wished I could do more.
Another girl opened up to my sisters and I about her home life as well, and other things she struggled with. We listened, we didn’t judge, and we gave her the best advice we could but tried not to sound preachy.
Unfortunately, another leader reported what happens to CPS, without waiting to verify all the details, and things got worse instead of better. The family left the church, unsurprisingly. We lost touch with her, but we did run into her again a year or so ago, and she seemed to be doing better. We know at least she didn’t blame us for what happened, but life gets in the way sometimes.
When I was in college, I befriended a girl at my dance class for a short time, who had major issues. She was high every class, usually. Once I went to a party with her and some guys from the class. I didn’t like the party, and I left early, but she asked me to take her home and I did. I’m pretty sure she’d have been SA-ed that night if I hadn’t, she was already drunk and buzzed when I arrived, and she had no sense of self protection based on what I knew of her life.
I remember the guys from class, who maybe wouldn’t have been that bad, but there were other people there who I didn’t know about, later said I was a good person because I was willing to take her home. I figured a small inconvenience to me was better than leaving her in that situation. I didn’t really realize how few people do things like that, at least, how few people those guys must have known.
They were kind of creeps anyway. But they all left me alone after that. Maybe they knew where I stood, maybe they were ashamed. I’m not sure. Mostly, men don’t bother me who have poor intentions. They can read me better than that. (A few exceptions here and there).
I learned that what I considered basic decency came off as usual to people who weren’t raised the way I was. It doesn’t always take a lot to make an impression.
I’m glad as a Christian at least they didn’t think I was a hypocrite. I believe I scared them a little just by not engaging in party behavior.
But the girl in question kind of just used me and then once I wasn’t willing to just be used, she cut contact. I didn’t resent it though, because I knew she had deep problems and likely, she just had no clue how to maintain a healthy friendship. It wasn’t personal.
Other times, I’ve been burned and it did bother me. Mostly when people in church act that way.
This ties back into my talk with my friend, as she’s had similar experiences with people at church.
I wished I could pass on my experience to her in a way that would help her understand that it’s these choices, one after another, that add up.
I often find it frustrating that I never know the result of the things I do to help people. But I do remind myself, that the result is really only gratifying to me, it doesn’t really matter that much when it comes to deciding the right thing. Other than, we should learn from how effective something is.
I’ve tried to improve the lives of all the kids I’ve babysat for over years as my side job. I never really got to see results there either. I often bemoaned to God that it was so infuriating to care about these kids, often more than their own parents did, but be able to do nothing about it.
Still, I don’t really know for sure that I never made a difference. I still remember things my favorite teachers and babysitters did when I was a kid myself. Their kindness made an impression even when I didn’t always have a lot of conversations with them.
While talking to my friend about wanting to find purpose, I decided to try a new tactic other than just practical advice.
I began to ask her and my sister what they most valued in life. And what would they want God to say to them tomorrow if He could say anything?
[I found that an interesting question for myself also.]
They answered with things like sincerity, honesty, humility, intimacy with people.
I pointed out something interesting to them. That the goals they told me they had actually didn’t fully align with those values. They were separate from them.
I mean, you could have those things with those goals, but it wouldn’t be required.
I myself could see in my own values that actually some of mine reflect wanting bigger goals more, but others don’t.
One my biggest values is Justice, and it drives me crazy when people don’t uphold that standard. That leads me to pick fights that other people think is a waste of time. Which also drive me up the wall.
At times, yes, it’s okay to let stuff go, and I’m working on that, yet I think others let things go way too often when it would hurt other people besides just them to do so.
In fact, one thing that convinced my mom to kick my dad out was us showing her how much his actions were affecting us, not just her. She could block it out for herself, but hearing how desperate we were was a wake up call. All of us were so much better off once he was gone.
Honestly now my dad has improved his life a lot, but it never would have happened while he had us to blame for things instead of having to fix them himself. I still wouldn’t choose to live with him again, but I’m not hostile to him.
In the end, doing the hard thing improved all our lives.
It’s choices like that that really shape us. Not some obscure big goal we have.
The problem with big goals is that they are often out of reach during our current situation. It’s convenient because we can’t really be expected to do anything about them. They make us feel like good people because we wish for them, but we don’t have to do anything actually good.
I know so many people who say they would like to make the world better, but hide in their house every day and don’t like making friends or risking interacting with people.
People who would say they care about the homeless, but walk by people asking for money.
I’m not guiltless of doing this, but I try to give when I can, even if it’s a few dollars. It’s not because I think of myself as some saint, but because I was taught that little things are how we prepare for big things.
I told my friend that one thing God told me about being stuck in small jobs and places, was that “He who is faithful with little will be faithful with much.”
Also that “to him who has more will be given, but to him who has not, even what he has shall be taken away.”
We’re all stewards, I told her. What you have now isn’t what you want, but it’s the opportunities and place you have now. If you make the most of it, then God will give you more eventually when you’re ready. So if you feel like He’s telling you to wait now, that might be why.
Also, sometimes the opportunities that really lead to big things aren’t what we think.
My current job was a very non glamorous, ordinary small job. I can’t go into detail, but it’s put me in a very unique position to do something a lot bigger than I expected to do at it. It won’t be glamorous really, and I probably won’t get credit for it, but it will matter.
And it’s not a nice sitioant that I’m in, but it is a strageti one.
I never would have imaig this placeholder job would open up someitn liekt hit it me. I don’t really want it, but now that it’s happened, I see that God might have lined it up for me specinailanl, as just ofn instins Iv’ had since I took the job, whit no togth of it ending this way, somehow led to me being protected and prepared for what happened.d
[I may explain it more in another post when it’s less problematic to.]
What I didn’t tell my friend was that in my opinion, she’s not ready for the things she wants. She has good intentions, but I could see where she does still need to grow. I didn’t think I should say that, since life is already telling her that, and people don’t always needs us to be that brutally honest.
But hey, even if she got what she wanted now anyway, I’d stand by my advice.
The hard truth is big stuff is pretty stressful. Now that I’m dealing with a big thing, I’m only waiting for it to be over because it’s really a lot.
Yet, I see that I might be the only one willing to do it.
That’s honestly, I think, what real opportunity looks like.
It won’t be the flashy thing everyone wanted to get, probably. At least, not for most of us.
Most of us, the biggest thing we’ll achieve, will come in the form of a crisis that we’re handed, and we can choose to deal with the right or wrong way. It won’t look like an important goal when it happens, but at the other end, we may find it opened something up.
I hope that’s what happens with me. Still, even if it doesn’t, I know I need to do what’s right.
Funny, all my coworkers complain about the job, and I was the one who complained the least, but none of them that I know of tried to do anything about it.
I notice the same pattern in life. People who complain about wanting purpose, rarely are the ones trying to find it (some exceptions exist).
Viktor Frankl, the famous Auschwitz survivor who wrote “Man’s Search for Meaning” noted in the book that he found that men don’t need to know a grand purpose for their life nearly as much as they need to know the purpose of what they’re currently doing.
And if they don’t feel a purpose in it, they should move to find something else, or try to change their perspective, if they can’t change their situation.
I thought about this.
I think it’s really the same as Peter telling the church to do everything they do as to God. Or that famous quote about being a great street sweeper.
Or even as the movie “Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day” put it. “It ain’t what you do, it’s the way that you do it, that’s what gets results.”
Purpose is something you have to see in what you do already.
See, nothing really is meaningless, unless you don’t do it for a reason.
Acting like you’re brain damaged, and doing things on compulsion, that’s living without a purpose.
One thing I try to do, is no matter what I’m doing, I do it intentionally.
If I’m relaxing, I do it on purpose. If I’m working, I do it on purpose. If I’m writing, I do it on purpose.
When I confront someone, I do it intentionally, I don’t just rush into a fight usually. I used to, learned the hard way it didn’t work.
Well, I can’t say it always work out even now, but that’s more on them for not wanting to try than on me, I’m always willing to find a solution.
The rough part is realizing other people would much rather let a problem fester than fix it, if fixing it would require stepping outside their behavior patterns.
C’est la vie.
There are two kinds of people in the world. Those who try to adapt themselves to a challenge, and those who find the biggest challenge is adapting themselves instead of trying to adapt others to fix their preferences.
Without exception the worst parents, teachers, and leaders I’ve known were in the second category.
The best ones were able to roll with the punches and find new solutions to issues.
And I’ve some to see it’s the same in every other area of life.
Finding your purpose, doing a good job, it’s all something you have to adapt to and do with intention.
I don’t mean you should chase after some vague goal to find your purpose. That’s not actually doing anything with what you have now. That’s the problem.
We all have tools. Heck, if you’re reading this, you at least have technology. There’s a lot you can do with what you’re holding in your hand. If you only use it to doom scroll, that’s on you.
I say this as someone who’s never had money, connections, fame, or a huge amount of charisma. I can’t claim to be popular with everyone or have the secret to winning anyone over. I can’t claim to be rich or influential to many people.
I can claim to have self respect and a sense of purpose in what I do.
I guess it’s up to my friends, students, and you if you think that’s more worth listening to than the big success stories.
I at least know my way works, for me, and for others too. That’s something.
That’s why I tell my Sunday School class, look at the people around you if you want to start serving God even as kids. It’s your siblings, your parents, your classmates, your friends who you can influence the most right now.
All of us might save someone’s life without even knowing it.
Here’s a couple things about myself I’ve learned from the many challenges I’ve dealt with:
- Where others take cover, I take action.
- When others stand aside, I stand up.
- Where others back off, I go for back up.
- When I see a problem, I find a solution.
- If I can help, I will.
- If it’s up to me to change, I would rather change than stay comfortable.
- When there’s nothing I can do, I try to find someone who can do something.
I mean some of these are similar to each other, but I think each thing sums up what is not the common attitude, and why that makes all the difference.
We all think we’re unique, but the real test of uniqueness is not in being quirky or creative or having taletns.
It’s what you do with that once the fire’s lit, and the die is cast, and your back’s up to the wall.
It’s when you’ll risk something to do something right.
That’s what makes you different.
Honestly, the world may not reward you for that.
Because, being rewarded by the world is not unique, it’s what everyone wants. Pursuing that won’t make you different.
Ignoring that makes you different.
Either we can conclude then, like the villain in Zootopia 2 “I don’t want to be different.”
Or we can be Judy Hopps and say that it matters more to care than to be safe or accepted.
[Can’t believe I just used a movie I don’t even like as an example. But I guess that proves I’m open minded.]
I will let you all in on a secret though.
God gives the people who will make that sacrifice the biggest tasks. Even if they seem small to us, they are the biggest ones to Him.
One has to remember that martyrdom is one of God’s highest honors, according the Bible, because it’s a rare person who can accept it.
Often, God also gives out the more flashy tasks to those people too.
I can’t pretend to predict God’s ways for any one individual, and I’m certainly not saying people shouldn’t try to achieve big goals.
I’m saying big builds off of small. So if you feel lost, start with what’s in front of you.
Like I told my friend, in church, we’re raised with those overnight success stories. God healed someone instantly, set them free of addiction in one minute, gave them money through a miraculous event, gave them a big charity in a few months.
The Bible has a bunch of miracles like that too.
So what’s wrong with us if we dont’ get that.
What gets overlooked in church often is that the Bible is also full of miracles that took up to 40, 50, or 80 years to happen. Sometimes longer.
Also that often big miracles only followed a series of small obedience steps. Even for Jesus.
And that the biggest miracles of all according to God, are saving people’s souls, which anyone can help with, even if they don’t see signs and wonders.
It’s harder to move a heart than to move a mountain.
And for every big Christian success story,there are probably hundreds more of people enduring things for a long time and doing things to fix it with God’s guidance, rather than getting the quick fix.
We just don’t like focusing on those stories, because it’s not easy.
That’s the point though. That’s normal life.
I for one prefer to think of it this way. I’d rather feel purposeful than empty.
That’s what I got for you today, folks.
See you next time, and stay honest– Natasha.