12/11/2018
I am realizing I only need to listen to my clients in order to have things to share here. I have asked this client's permission to share what we talked about in session this morning: she had a commitment over the weekend that required her to show up at the conclusion of a two-day event to break down and pack up an entire space and lots of materials that she had set up a couple days before. The problem was, she had gotten pretty sick in the interim, and she was feeling awful. Her family was urging her to let others handle it- there were many people who could takeover- and to stay home. But she felt an obligation (as well as disappointment about missing the closing ceremony), a duty, and she was really afraid of disappointing anyone or being a burden. While she was agonizing about the decision, another person involved in the planning called her to ask about something completely unrelated and heard in her voice how really sick she was. Her friend encouraged her stay home and take care of herself, and reassured her that there were indeed many others who could chip in and get the job done (”That's what community does," she said.) My client realized, "I couldn't give myself permission, but when I got it from someone else, I allowed myself to accept that I really shouldn't go, that I needed more rest."
She understood that this was a reminder for her of a shift she has been working hard to make, toward basing her decisions and actions on what is best for her rather than what she thinks is expected of her. She has spent her entire life making sure that she is not a burden, not a disappointment, that she is always there for others -- many times at her own expense. The phone call was divine intervention, she believes, because she would have pushed herself to go fulfill her obligation without it.
Next time, she says, she won't need the external permission to put her health and welfare ahead of her "duties," especially when help is available!!
Whether you are sick or not, please give yourself permission to NOT try be all things to all people, to say "no," to sit this one out. It's okay to let others help, to let them handle it -- they will still love you (and if they don't, it's time to reevaluate the relationship)!