You can't give what you don't have.
It's a simple concept... but over and over again I have tried to offer help, whether emotional or practical, out of a place of want, of deficit, when I was just scraping the bottom to meet my own needs. I ended up feeling used, put-upon, taken for granted, and yes, resentful.
It's like the teeter-totter at the playground when the big kid gets on the other end. No matter how the smaller kid jumps up and down on his or her end, he or she is suspended, legs dangling, unable to get down and not having any fun at all. When life is out of balance - when we pay more attention to the needs and demands of others (when they carry more weight) than our own needs, then there is the potential for a lot of resentment.
The lifestyle I've been practicing for the last three years or so is based on taking care of three central things in a specific order:
(1) relationship with God,
(2) relationship with the self, and
(3) relationship with others,
and then maintaining and strengthening those three relationships in that same order. The principle is that one must first have a full cup before one has the capacity to fill another's. Sounds simple enough. But the old lifestyle I had - which still lures me back into its clutches occasionally - was just the opposite. Give til it hurts, and then give some more. My motivation was that I wanted people to be grateful enough to do what I wanted them to do. Change, be more attentive, stop drinking, whatever. And the result of that was that people first of all didn't change, but they expected me to keep giving, keep putting myself out, and then they wondered why I was so cranky. Hmmm.
When I learned that I was powerless over other people, that I was actually trying to be God in their lives - and without His permission! - things started to change. I started focusing on what mattered most: my relationship with Him and then with myself. Once I felt more at ease in my own skin, and was able to let go of my need to control the outcome of others' lives, I was able to have more healthy and fulfilling relationships with other people.
I still have times when I go down that dark path and end up at the top of the teeter-totter, bouncing up and down and wasting my energies trying to look after someone who isn't budging and who might even use my people-pleasing nature against me. At times like that I need to remind myself that I am responsible for my own actions, and that the other person is responsible for his or her actions. Then I can more easily let go, and let God do His stuff.
That's a bit more "in balance".
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