How well do you receive compliments that others give you? For example, when someone compliments your dress, do you say “Thank you” or just smile and walk away? Taking compliments on our material things like clothing and shoes can be easy. But what about when someone compliments you on something physical, like your eyes, your smile, or your beauty…how well do you receive those compliments?
For me, when others compliment my new dress or shoes or a scarf, I’m very quick to say “Thank you.” But when it comes to the other stuff, the compliments are harder to take. Not because I don’t believe they’re authentic or genuine in their compliment, because I know they are. It has more to do with me not feeling confident enough in myself to think someone would notice or even compliment me on a physical attribute of myself.
That’s exactly what this resolution is about…celebrating your uniqueness and esteeming and encouraging the distinctions you admire in others.
While it may be a lot easier to encourage and lift up those around us with words, we have to start with ourselves first for it all to have meaning. In Galatians 5:14 it’s a command by God that we should love our neighbors as we love ourselves. If we look in the mirror every morning in disgust at ourselves, how can we tell others how beautiful they are?
One reason we can and do it consistently is we put more value in others and the beauty and the gifts they have than on our own. While it’s easier to do, it’s also wrong. God created each one of us in His image and with gifts and talents that no one else has. We may have traits and personalities that mirror our parents, but God made each of us unique.
There is no one in the entire world that is exactly like me. I’m one-of-a-kind. I’m unique. And it makes me feel special to know that when God thought of me, He gave me the gifts I have, the talents I have and qualities that make me unique; He also hand-crafted me in His image.
In this chapter of the book, the author says to “take time to uncover and reconnect with these things that truly describe you: your gifts, talents, passions, eccentricities, dislikes, weaknesses, interests and uniqueness—in their rawest, most unspoiled form.”
In order to do that—to find our passions and talents and weaknesses in “their rawest and most unspoiled form”—we have to take a good, hard look at the real us. Not the version of ourselves that attends church each week with a fake smile and happiness so that no one can see we’re hurting deeply inside or we’re wounded from a comment said recently or even years before. We have to take that hurting person deep inside of us and remind her of the authentic and true person she is…the one God created her to be.
When I think about what makes me unique, I have to sit and really think about it. Not because I don’t see myself as unique, but because it takes time to strip away the different layers I’ve put on to hide the real me. We sometimes think that if others see the real us, they won’t really like what they see and they’ll go find other friends. So we put on a different characteristic layer that we see someone else has and make it our own. Then, we find another characteristic layer from another person and add it on. Before we know it, we don’t even recognize our own true self because we’ve hidden her away in a deep, dark closet.
The first step in this journey to finding the authentic you, according to the book, is to enlist the help of a few close friends. I took this first step challenge and enlisted some of my friends. I was very particular in who I asked for this part because I wanted to ask those that had not only known me for a long time, but have seen in me in the rawest of forms. Sometimes friends that have known us for short amounts of time haven’t been around to truly see us through ugly situations. Everyone sees you when we’re happy, but how many of your friends have seen you through a tragedy, a loss, a break-up, or a really messy situation? How many of your friends have seen you when you’re in a bad mood, when you’re having a bad day or when you’ve lost your temper right in front of them? Those are the friends I wanted to ask…the ones that have seen me and been around me on my good days, my bad days and my really ugly and messy days…the days I hope they’ve forgotten about!!
This first step of enlisting friends meant asking them a question: “From your perspective, can you tell me what makes me unique?” I told them they could be brutally honest with me and to not hold anything back. In order to travel this journey, we have to ask the hard questions and be prepared for the answers we receive. I was really kind of surprised by some of the answers I received back. Here are some of the responses I received:
1. Considerate and mindful of everyone I’m around
2. Compassionate; has a good heart and genuine concern for people
3. Friendly to everyone; takes others under my wing for guidance; helping them along their journey to draw closer to God; loyal and trustworthy; mentor
4. Completely loyal and faithful to my church; fully supportive of my husband in his service to the church
5. Crafty, organized, good friend, smart
The responses that really surprised me and caught me a little off guard:
1. I live my faith
2. Gentle optimism, meaning a gentle strength that shows I have total faith in my Heavenly Father to work all things out for my benefit; that I may not always see the glass as half full, but that I see the glass in my Father’s hand
3. Genuine, which by definition means sincere, authentic, free from hypocrisy and true
And the one constructive response I received back:
1. Because of my personality and being a rule follower, sometimes I put the rules above people, but when given more information about the situation, I always come around
We never really know the person that others see in us until we ask. Sometimes we’re afraid to ask because we don’t want to hear the bad stuff; my constructive response from above…hard to read, but definitely true. But, the good thing about it is it doesn’t have to stay that way. While it may be hard to ask questions to find out how others truly see you, it’s what you do with the new information that will matter the most.
The second step in the journey is to take these responses that I received and pinpoint ways that I have either neglected these traits or celebrate them by becoming intentional in honoring my uniqueness going forward. I don’t have to be haughty or arrogant about it. I just need to continue to be myself. I can take the time to really focus and harness these unique qualities and use them for reaching others and telling them about my Heavenly Father. You know…the one that created me in His image!!!
I resolve to accept and celebrate my uniqueness and will esteem and encourage the distinctions I admire in others.