The qualities of love proposed by Erich Fromm in The Art of Loving, are
giving, care, responsibility, respect, and knowledge. I am exploring
these themes during Advent to see what they mean when applied to loving
ourselves. I believe that we need to love ourselves before we can truly
love others. In Advent 1, I explored caring for yourself. In
Advent 2, I explored knowing yourself. Today
I want to explore respecting yourself.
The first things that comes to mind when I think about respect, is the great
song by the great Aretha Franklin:
R-E-S-P-E-C-TFind out what it means to me
R-E-S-P-E-C-T
Take care, TCB
Oh (sock it to me, sock it to me
Sock it to me, sock it to me)
A little respect (sock it to me, sock it to me
Sock it to me, sock it to me)
Whoa, babe (just a little bit)
We
all want to be respected by the people in our lives - those we encounter and especially
the people that we love and who love us.
I have certainly had the experience of not being respected by people in
my life, usually not people who I am close to.
I have also not always shown respect to everyone I have encountered in
my life. That has led to many regrets that
are the ghost that visit me at 4:00 in the morning. I am sure that most people,
if not everyone, has had that experience.
That
being said, what does it mean to respect yourself? After all, that is the topic I am exploring
this morning. I believe that the basis
for respecting myself and yourself is to know yourself. Each person has aspects that he or she does
not want to acknowledge or doesn’t even know is part of themselves. Carl Jung called these aspects of ourselves
as, the Shadow. They can be most easily
recognized in dreams as a dark, shadowy person who is behaving in ways that are
not acceptable or even nice when assessed by our conscious selves. They can also be recognized when we have an
overreaction to someone, we take an instant dislike to. We see aspects of ourselves in them that we
have denied.
If we are to respect ourselves – all of who we are we must
acknowledge the whole package. We all have
our strengths and weaknesses but we are called to become those strengths that
we embrace and celebrate do not come without those parts of ourselves that we
do not embrace. To love who you are, who
God created you to be is to acknowledge all of who you are. It does not mean you have to live out those
aspects of yourself which you find it difficult to accept but you need to first
be aware of them and to accept yourself as you are. If you do that you may be able to understand
yourself and decide how you want to live with all of who you are. That will enable you to come to know what it
means to respect yourself. As Aretha
says, you will be able to show yourself respect
- just a little bit; Whoa, babe (just a little bit)
and then even more.
May you be blessed to know and respect yourself on your journey this Advent.
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