I recently read an excerpt from the poem Seriously Tempted by T.L.Cooper. (http://writewithtlc.tlcooper.com)
Christina Katz, The Prosperous Writer, (http://christinakatz.com) defined caring as being “concerned or solicitous towards, to make provisions for or to look out for, and to have an affection or concern for.”
Would I describe myself as caring? Or am I habitually care-taking?
She defined habitual care-taking as “an addiction to niceness, people-pleasing and an overwhelming desire to control the impressions of others in order to be perceived as good.”
I too often find myself trying too hard to please others and have them think me a good person.
In the last few years, though, I have come to know myself better. I see the person God created and. . . I like me!
I don’t care so much what others think of me. I no longer want to be a people pleaser. I want, instead, to be a God pleaser.
When I first read this poem, I thought how much I am like that: easily becoming what someone else expects me to be.
Reading it again, I begin to pray:
Holy God,
Let me be
“your heart’s desire
What you want of me”*
And I want to be
“merely a shell of me
An empty vessel filled by you.”*
*from the poem Seriously Tempted T.L.Cooper (http://writewithtlc.tlcooper.com)
2 comments:
a lovely poem. Thanks for the brightening of my day!
I'm so glad you enjoyed the poem. It really caused me to think.
Post a Comment