Hi Everyone,
One of my own personal struggles is depression, and after many years of God's direction, prayer, and self-analysis, I came to discern that a big part of my depression was the life-changing realizationthat I was A Little Beta Fish living in a Big Alpha Pond.
For most of my life, the people closest to me all had immensely strong work ethics and life goals. It was not enough to just have a full-time job -- they also ran their own full-time businesses on the side, as well as having families. None of them are materialistic or showy people at all -- I remember the days when one was driving a car with the bumper held on with nothing but zip ties, because at the time, that's what she could afford.
But as I grew up and away from the environment in which I'd been raised, I couldn't figure out why I always felt like a chicken with its head cut off that was running inside a hamster wheel. I almost always felt hopeless, exhausted, and like I was going to collapse any minute. My inner circle always pushed me to be like them -- even though I always worked, they believed that good stewardship of God-given talents meant working towards the highest position possible or owning the company.
After many years of trying to live up to those standards, I finally had to start telling them, "God didn't make me that way." I am not an alpha. I definitely believe in giving one's all, but I just don't have the ambition or capacity to do all the things those around me were doing, nor can I pay the prices they found themselves paying (i.e., missing their kids' childhoods.) Rather, I enjoy doing my best for a strong, responsible, morally respectable leader, and that's just how I felt God made me to be.
I started to figure this out the year I went from working 2 jobs and going to grad school full-time to eventually working just ONE full-time job. I felt so much better! It was the first time in my life I'd ever concentrated on just one thing, as I had always worked one or more jobs along with school. I told my parents, "I feel like I've just retired!!!" even when I got down to "just" 42 or so hours a week.
And I've been trying to work on what and how much God wants me to take on without burning myself out ever since.
How about you? This example uses alpha and beta personality traits as an illustration, but this thread is really about finding out who we are in Christ, even if it means we're different from everyone around us, and how we go about being whom God has called us to be.
What has your journey been like?
* Do you consider yourself as blending in well/fitting in with your family, friends, and church? Why or why not?
* If you see yourself as being different from the people around you, how has it affected your life? Are you able to be yourself in peace, or is it a constant uphill battle? Do you feel you're always looking for a place to "fit in"?
* What advice would you give to others who are trying to survive around people who are constantly pushing them to be something they know they are not?
Swim on, everyone.
Swim on.
Our Fisherman is still leading us, even if His guidance leads us upstream -- or towards a different pond.
One of my own personal struggles is depression, and after many years of God's direction, prayer, and self-analysis, I came to discern that a big part of my depression was the life-changing realizationthat I was A Little Beta Fish living in a Big Alpha Pond.
For most of my life, the people closest to me all had immensely strong work ethics and life goals. It was not enough to just have a full-time job -- they also ran their own full-time businesses on the side, as well as having families. None of them are materialistic or showy people at all -- I remember the days when one was driving a car with the bumper held on with nothing but zip ties, because at the time, that's what she could afford.
But as I grew up and away from the environment in which I'd been raised, I couldn't figure out why I always felt like a chicken with its head cut off that was running inside a hamster wheel. I almost always felt hopeless, exhausted, and like I was going to collapse any minute. My inner circle always pushed me to be like them -- even though I always worked, they believed that good stewardship of God-given talents meant working towards the highest position possible or owning the company.
After many years of trying to live up to those standards, I finally had to start telling them, "God didn't make me that way." I am not an alpha. I definitely believe in giving one's all, but I just don't have the ambition or capacity to do all the things those around me were doing, nor can I pay the prices they found themselves paying (i.e., missing their kids' childhoods.) Rather, I enjoy doing my best for a strong, responsible, morally respectable leader, and that's just how I felt God made me to be.
I started to figure this out the year I went from working 2 jobs and going to grad school full-time to eventually working just ONE full-time job. I felt so much better! It was the first time in my life I'd ever concentrated on just one thing, as I had always worked one or more jobs along with school. I told my parents, "I feel like I've just retired!!!" even when I got down to "just" 42 or so hours a week.
And I've been trying to work on what and how much God wants me to take on without burning myself out ever since.
How about you? This example uses alpha and beta personality traits as an illustration, but this thread is really about finding out who we are in Christ, even if it means we're different from everyone around us, and how we go about being whom God has called us to be.
What has your journey been like?
* Do you consider yourself as blending in well/fitting in with your family, friends, and church? Why or why not?
* If you see yourself as being different from the people around you, how has it affected your life? Are you able to be yourself in peace, or is it a constant uphill battle? Do you feel you're always looking for a place to "fit in"?
* What advice would you give to others who are trying to survive around people who are constantly pushing them to be something they know they are not?
Swim on, everyone.
Swim on.
Our Fisherman is still leading us, even if His guidance leads us upstream -- or towards a different pond.
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