Wednesday, March 6, 2019

Strength to Let Go





"Some people believe holding on and hanging in there are signs of 
great strength.  However, there are times when it takes much more 
strength to know when to let go and then do it."
Ann Landers

Women tend to have a built in nature to be kind. They can be resilient and endure misfortune as skills to protect both family and children.  Although this sounds courageous, it can lead to the destruction of self-worth, destroy confidence, and silence the soul.

It is a loving gesture to offer our insights, but we have the tendency to slop over the boundary of rescue,  performing the tasks ourselves.  This is called enabling.  We are allowing the victim to be excused from the challenge as we take on the lesson.    When a victim does not participate in corrective action, he or she remains a victim and no matter how much we offer, nothing changes.  

Rescuing at all cost depletes our physical, emotional and spiritual strength. While we are all called to help others, we must be certain the victim is learning with us. If the learner chooses not to move forward, then we need the strength to respect his or her decision and let go. Let go, and let God.

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