"We sometimes forget that our dimmest spark might be a blinding light, oblivious to the fact our almost nothing could mean almost everything to another."

Here we are again.

It's helping time.

As we go about our lives, it's very easy to think that we don't make a difference. We can do things that we think have no effect on anybody but ourselves, and not realise what we might mean to others. Some of us never find out what influence we have on others, especially those outside the circles we'd expect the words to come from.

Even in my darkest moments, I never lost my humour. I've been very fortunate to be able to make witty remarks about all manner of things, as though somebody was feeding me lines. I've also been fortunate to be able to construct my thoughts in writing without too much effort, once I let go of my need to be more-than-perfect with everything I said. Now, rather than this just being me talking great about myself, I wish to make it clear that this does have a point.

For a great part of my life, when I was suffering on the inside, I would do my best to hide it. The brave facade, the great act, the all-for-show. I did all that. I've been part of a few different communities on the internet through my younger years, either related to role-playing or movie-making (of sorts), and the one thing that humbled me were the times I'd presented myself in such a way, that others saw me as their yardstick - that because I'd successfully hidden my troubles, they saw only the fruits of my pains, and what I did as something to aspire to.

It hits you hard. There I was, down on myself, yet there were some that wanted to be more like me at a time when I didn't want to be anything like me. It didn't make sense to me, but it was the first little tip that every one of us has something to offer, even if we don't realise it. Just as the person that believes themselves the greatest is often wrong, the one that discounts their own merits is just as wrong.

Any talent aside though, there is something else you can do better than anybody else. Be you.

It was during a particularly self-deprecating period of my life that I realised my poor self-esteem wasn't just affecting me, but others too. When you don't value yourself, you might be reactionary in your relationships, confessing attraction on one day, and changing pursuit on another. It's the search for external validation of ourselves that's so ever-present, believing that friendship or a relationship might give us that boost we sorely desire, and reinforce the notion that we are worth something.

This is a harmful course, but not for the reasons you think.

It's never a great idea to put the stock of your happiness into people. They are unreliable, and will let you down. Think about yourself. How often do you have inexplicably bad moods? You at least KNOW when your mood changes - you don't know that about other people. There are other things that you can draw on when you feel weaker, but sometimes you might need to just let somebody know that you're having difficulty coping. If a friend asks if you're okay, sometimes you need to just be honest and say that no, you are not.

What my point was though, is that if you do not value yourself when others do, your indecisiveness could be seen to them as your saying that you don't think they're special. It may be that you think it's fine, because they're not missing out on anything if you leave them alone, but it doesn't come across quite that way.

This is something I still struggle with at times. I'm lucky in that I've made good friends though, and at different points in my life, they tell me how good of a person they think I am, yet there are still too many days where I think I don't measure up to what I should be.

If you don't have people that will tell you how great your nature is (and at the time I didn't), don't fret. You can still persist. The clearest, most unambiguous step is to give your time and attention to people freely, treating them as actual people, and not as a way station that comes before better things.

In case you might be wondering, the quotes I'm currently using are my own - various facebook statuses, tweets, or other random quotes I've come up with. I'm also doing this because I know how dark the world can be, but also how bright. I myself am far from perfect, but I think my heart is in the right place. That's how it starts.

"The others can wait. Put yourself in your shoes"

Hi. Hello. Welcome.

This is the first post for my blog, Enduring Spark. The intention here is to somehow help people, whether that's through advice or humour or discussion of topics near and dear. There's nothing particularly notable about my life that makes me the best person to help others, but if there's a chance that what I've learned through my life so far can be passed on to others, and be beneficial, then I would be remiss to not share it.

I don't know when it happened, but somehow I've become a well-rounded individual. This is both exciting and distressing! It's not that I've somehow reached a golden age of being either, as I'm sure that I'm far from having everything worked out. Right now I am fitter, more confident, and more able than I have been for most of the past few years.

To summarise (and I might get to the actual crux of these short points at some point in the future), I'm regularly shy, I am very empathetic, and have gone through some dark soul-crushing periods in my life.

If you're going through a rough period now, first you should know that things will get better. I was fortunate enough to always believe that I would eventually get past those trials that tested me, even though I couldn't see a way out. Seeing as how many tend to assume I'm pessimistic (and may actually be at times), this was no simple trick. I knew that somewhere at the end of the tunnel, there was a bright light, and it WASN'T an oncoming train! I expected it to take 5-10 years to get there, but I just believed things would work out in the future.

One thing that helps, was to think of something to strive toward. If you honestly believe that one day you will be a space cowboy with billions of dollars, then that's fine. Mine, I pictured a home - my own-to-be, which had a garden and a barbecue area. I'm not there yet, but it was something that helped me gain focus. I went about my way with the notion that it was something I could work towards, and I could work out the steps to get me there. If yours is still the space cowboy with billions of dollars, remember who helped you get there!

Now, I'm a nice person. I don't mean that's what I am now (though I am), but that I've always been pretty nice. I've also been blessed to have a wonderful imagination. Those things have helped. It's strange trying to list things I feel are good about myself, because I've tended towards negativity when I talk about myself. It's not advised.

Sometimes it's not even that you don't know how to do things that are in your way. It's that it seems futile - not because it is too hard, but because you don't think it matters. That's been a recurring theme with me- for a long time, I thought of myself as a nothing. A blight on the world. I still have my days, in fact.

That said though, I was wrong. For a time, it was only when I drank a lot that I started to believe that I wasn't as terrible as I thought I was. Then it was my dreams. Finally, it started to manifest in my everyday life. It wasn't magic though, but work. You can't deny the benefits of an external influence telling you how amazingly worthwhile a person they think you are. Sadly, we don't all have a person that does that in our lives, at least not that we hear.

If the future-you could come back, they would tell you "You're going to get there. Things are going to be wonderful, and you won't believe how great they are. Thank you."

Do you know why your future-self is thanking you? It was your strength to change, to press on despite the obstacles and doubts, that got them there. If could imagine what they feel, it would be gratitude, and a sense of being self-assured. You can share their senses, knowing that you will make it, and feel the satisfaction ahead of time. It doesn't mean you're there yet, but it's a taste of where you will be.

Your future-self can do the opposite, too. They could put themselves back in your shoes (also theirs, of course) and feel empathy for everything you're going through, and share the burdens you feel because by then, they can take it better than you can. If you're in a pit of sorrow at the moment, spare your worldly views, spare your charity and compassion for just an inch of time, and pour it into feeling empathy for someone very important. Yourself.

About this blog

Enduring Spark is my helping blog

Followers

Powered by Blogger.