Thursday 23 January 2014

SAVING THE FRIENDSHIP OR THE FRIEND?

I remember reading somewhere: “you can pick your friend but you can't pick your friend’s nose”. Here’s what I understood from that quote – it’s never so easy to judge our friends. This brings me to the title of this post; it’s not easy to critique our friends because that may lead us to that corner where you have to make the difficult/hurtful decision of picking a friend over the friendship with that friend because a real friend cares more about the friend than the friendship with the friend.

Although I’m not a champion great friendships, I think it's important to note that the real beauty of truly great friendships is not the friendship in itself but rather the courage to choose that friend over the friendship. 

For instance, I've been faced multiple times with the choice of having difficult conversations with certain good friends. Conversations that would either save my friend from driving off a cliff (if they see value in what I’d say) or potentially derail and change the nature of our friendship forever (if they don't see value in what I say).
This is where we all take the easy route - avoid the confrontation, say a prayer for our pals, risk nothing and save the friendship. When the right thing to do would be to risk the friendship for the sake of the friend because unless we love our friends more than we love the friendships with these friends, we're only loving ourselves.

Loving our friends so much that we can spill the bitter truth to them gut honestly is so difficult and dangerous because it's costly, uncomfortable and sometimes costs us friendships.

Have you ever lost a friendship because of you didn’t want to lose the friend? If your answer to that question is no, you should have at least come close. If not, chances are that you care more about your friendships than your friends.

Let’s examine ourselves, what have you generally placed more value on through your actions, the friendship or the friend?


Help a friend bloom.

Wednesday 22 January 2014

SURRENDERING ALL

"I surrender all..... to thee my blessed saviour". So, this hymn has been on my mind/lips for some days now and I can't help but write out the lyrics so I can actually realise what I've been singing.

Staring at the words of that song, I realise that surrendering my life to God really freaks me out. Probably for the same reason it freaks you out. It freaks me out because like you, I don’t know what God’s going to do with my life if I surrender it to him. 
You know what scared me the most about God while growing up? Being sent to live in some remote place for the rest of my life. Now that I think of it, I grew up in Africa – Nigeria for that matter, where else could be more remote than the white man’s grave? 

All my years I lived in Africa and for most of those years I had the same fear some of you had. I was afraid that if I surrendered my life to God, He would send me to some remote place where they don’t have light or cable TV and I just couldn’t take that chance.
I couldn’t take the chance that God would choose to do something with my life that didn’t fit with my hopes and dreams and so I did what so many of us do with our lives - I held on as tightly as I could to my life and everything that mattered to me because life felt safer and easier that way.  
                                          
You know what I think every single christian has in common? We're all holding something from God because we're afraid of what He might do if we let go. I honestly can't tell you how scary it is to "surrender" to God, so I just hold on.

Some of us are holding on to relationships. There’s no way we're surrendering our dating lives to God because we're pretty sure the moment we do, He'll ask us to be single for the rest of our lives. For some of us, it’s our finances, our career, a certain behavior, a secret sin, an addiction… the list goes on

I don’t know what you're specifically holding on to, but we all are holding something and tempted/deceived to believe life is safer and smarter that way. What if we got it all backwards? What if I told you that surrendering the most important things in your life to God is actually the smartest decision and safest thing you can do with those things?

How do I know this? I know because no one has ever surrendered his life to God and lived to regret it. No one! Not one person in the history of the world has ever given what mattered most to God and lived to regret it. Just ask Abraham, David, Moses, Esther, every and any person in the bible who surrendered to God,  Me. 


It's true, so true. If you obey Jesus and surrender your life to him, you will overly bloom.

Tuesday 21 January 2014

"DETOXING "TOXIC" FRIENDS"

Periodically, I read posts about cutting “toxic” friends. I envision us all making lists of toxic friends and difficult people we need to avoid for our own mental wellbeing and I’m pretty sure we’ve all made it to some of those lists or at least, I know I have to be on a few “toxic friends and difficult people” lists because many days, I make my own mistakes, step on toes on purpose or without even knowing it because let’s face it: we can be really difficult sometimes.

Like, I really don’t fancy talking on the phone so I do almost anything via e-mails or SMSs and those messages are (more often than not) excessively long and include way more details, asides, and parentheticals than is conducive to conveying my meaning (like this one sentence, lol). Now, some find that annoying and sometimes passive-aggressive.
I’m also constantly optimistic that things will blow over without me needing to feel the discomfort of actual confrontation. I avoid conflict for so long that when I finally do say something, it’s like I’ve sprung the whole shebang on the unsuspecting person.

Another difficult thing about me is that I like having just one or two close friends, but I’m so socially inept that I end up clinging limpet-like to poor people who are just trying to be friendly. And because who knows when I’m going to move out of state again, I feel a need to make friends fast.  This sense of urgency just exacerbates this barnacling tendency.

Contrarily though, I’m suspicious of anyone who likes me too much. In the university, it was really bad. If someone expressed an interest in me—especially a romantic interest, but sometimes even just a close-friendship interest—I cut and run. I did my best to be invisible to that person hoping they would forget I existed. I’ve gotten better in the last four years, but that may be in part because it’s easier to be invisible when there’s no school or work to go to, or new people to meet. So I don’t have to work as hard to disappear as I did when I was an undergraduate.

And if someone does succeed in becoming my close friend, they get the reward of dealing with my fierce and inexplicable mood swings. I’ve tried to find a physical, emotional, or climatic cause for my days-long mood swings hoping to find a cure for them, but to no avail. I just sometimes, without warning, become a total jerk. I can see it happening, but I feel powerless to stop it.

And then there’s my flippant attitude about gifts. I know at least a couple of people have been hurt when they’ve given me a gift and then I stylishly or bluntly turn it down for whatever reason! I really can be a jerk, too bad.

Anyway, that’s me. I still think that everyone’s toxic sometimes. Seeing the ways in which I’m toxic gives me a fair amount of empathy for other people who might be considered toxic. There are still people I avoid; people who are particularly creepy, paranoid, consistently belligerent or holding grudges.

Unfortunately, there are some persons we always try to avoid - being around them is like being exposed to nuclear waste. Unlike with some other people, we try to control how much we’re affected by whatever vibes they’re radiating. We think, maybe they’re just having a bad day, maybe they’re feeling as awkward as we are and are overcompensating, maybe there’s something really big going on for them that they aren’t talking about but that is coming through anyway. If all else fails, we think of them as poor babies; that’s almost sure to inspire gentle feelings in us.


I’ve yet to meet anyone who’s difficult all the time. They might always be difficult for me, but there’s always someone who loves them and whom they love. Or maybe I just feel this way because it’s pragmatic. Most social interactions carry a much higher price than they do a pay-out for me, and although I need to find some way to not be a hermit, being on people’s toxic lists does help decrease the number of people with whom I need to interact - it saves me from making my own toxic list and speeds up my bloom.