One of the biggest causes
of many resentments is the matter of being made more responsible than we feel
we ought to be; when someone expects us to do something, or play a role, we
feel we are not responsible for. We sense the injustice and want to know why we
are being made accountable for something that we see is not our responsibility.
But the trouble with life is we are often made responsible for the things we
see are not our responsibility at all. It’s a matter of incongruence.
But, such incongruence is
a fact of life. We would learn to accept such incongruence if we wish to ward
away the possibility for resentment, in this case.
We don’t want to stay in
resentment for too long, because, quite frankly, if we do that we become
‘hurt’. And such a thing as having become hurt renders us unproductive for the
Kingdom. We become more interested in nurturing the resentment than we are in
nurturing healthier life responses. We get bogged down and lose our way.
We don’t want to go this
way; toward resentment that enrols fully-fledged hurt.
Seeing Resentment for What It Is
Responsibility can make us
feel privileged or resentful, depending on what it is and whether it’s our
choice or not to assume the responsibility.
Resentment is a darkened
place where the soul lives inept and purposefully detached from growth. It
would be better to ‘grin through’ the injustice of an inappropriately allocated
responsibility and simply discharge the duty to the best of our abilities.
Resentment only stifles the owner, but it often has an negative impact on those
around us—those we love—as well.
Resentment is a folly of
delusion that magnifies the sense of injustice and truly renders us devoid of
effective response for life. Where we would typically enter in with vigour and
enthusiasm we instead take our second thoughts and we propose a different
action; something darker; an action that is captive within the mind. We stew on
a negative matter.
Getting Past the Resentment
Whilst it might be
understandable to develop a resentment about having a responsibility foisted
upon us that we feel isn’t ours, it does us little benefit in harbouring the
resentment to the point of developing and keeping a full-blown hurt at berth.
When we see that
resentments take us nowhere good we have the opportunity to do something
different.
We may notice how
resentments mount, and then quickly work on the circumstance.
As we begin to feel
resentment emerge, we can make a choice to ‘grin through’ the request or demand
another has placed on us. We are careful to ensure our heart is aligned with
our action in grinning through. It is little good grinning through something if
we don’t truly feel happy enough within.
***
When people expect too
much of us, instead of being resentful, we could see the situation as part of a
calling of God—that we may be able to satisfy them. Taking on tasks cheerfully
is simply about making life work. Is it worth getting resentful when to do the
task is simpler, quicker, and glorifying to God?
© 2013 S. J. Wickham.
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