As I sit on my bed and feel my thighs touching together and a soft roll
of my stomach folding over my pajama shorts, I can’t help but moan and think “why
is there so much of me?” It’s funny because not 10 minutes earlier, I was
scrolling through Facebook thinking to myself, “Oh wow, look at her, look at
that family, look at their life. I’ll never be good enough, thin enough, strong
enough, smart enough. I'll never be _______ enough.” You can probably fill in that blank with plenty of other
words too.
So how can someone go from feeling like they are too much to feeling
like they are not enough in a literal span of 10 minutes? I don’t know. But I
do it all the time, and I know I’m not alone in that.
It’s like the world’s worst rendition of Goldilocks & the Three
Bears; you know, too big, too small, juuuuuuust right. It’s like the world’s
most frightening tight rope balancing act. You have to be enough, but not too
much.
So what does it mean to be enough? The dictionary defines “enough” as: [adequate;
sufficient for the purpose; to be ample, or fully]. Makes sense, right? So what
comes to my mind when I think of my own personal definition of enough? “Worthy”.
If I am good enough, smart enough, brave enough, pretty enough, funny enough,
small enough…then I will be worthy. Of love and belonging and friendship and
hope. However the flaw in this thought is that I have to earn these things. And
if we are being honest, no person on this earth can earn these things. Which is
where the gift of God’s grace comes in…but that’s a topic for a different day!
So on one hand, here I am craving and desiring that people will see me
as “enough” (which, remember, is synonymous with “fully”). And yet on the other
hand, one of my biggest fears is to be seen as “too much”. Too loud, too big,
too needy, taking up too much time or space or energy. I’ve always thought that
being called “needy” would be one of the biggest insults in life. I’ve thought
of needy as being selfish or ungrateful. However, I’m learning that there is a
difference between having needs and being needy. And the truth is, we are all
people in need.
Daniell Koepke said,
“Your needs don’t make you too much. They don’t make you selfish or weak or greedy. They make you human. We all have needs. And those hungers aren’t something we should feel ashamed of. They’re normal, we didn’t get enough of them as children hungers. Affections we’ve been deprived of by the people who are supposed to care for us. Connections we need to feel whole and spaces we needed to feel safe. Cravings we’ve been taught we didn’t deserve. Appetites we’ve learned to suppress and fill with guilt. Again and again we’ve neglected our needs because we’ve been taught that they were too much—that we were too much…Making your needs known isn’t about being demanding or selfish. It’s about using your voice and speaking your truth. It’s about giving yourself permission to take up space…”
So that’s what I’m learning right now. I’m learning how to accept grace
into my life and to live in light of that grace, knowing that that is the only
way I will ever truly be enough. And I’m learning to give myself permission to take
up space; permission to be “fully”.
But man, am I a slow learner! ;)
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