I've been struggling a lot this week with “not enough” syndrome. I don't feel like I'm doing enough in the world, that I'm not helping others according to my capacity, and furthermore, what work I am doing, I pooh pooh as insignificant.
As you know, my skill and talent is writing, but when I look around at me at all the work that needs to be done in the world, it feels like being a writer is useless. I'm not a policymaker or a politician or a doctor. I'm not doing anything concrete to end poverty, for instance, and I hate it.
I spoke with a friend about all this and he reminded me the gifts I've been given are gifts. I have them for a reason and it's important to use what I have. So no, I'm not a doctor or a politician or social worker, and that's OK. We all have a part to play to contribute to the whole.
Some people are squirrels and some are monkeys: both are OK. |
I think I need to tattoo that to my face. I get so caught up in the comparison game, often called “compare and despair” by my recovery friends. I compare myself to what other people are doing and always come up short. I am the squirrel looking at the monkeys saying, “Look at the big rocks they're carrying! Ugh. I wish I could carry big rocks.” I'm not honoring my contribution of small grains of sand and that's what's important – not how large my contribution is, but whether I'm contributing at all. It's so hard for me to say that because, as I said earlier, I suffer from “not enough syndrome.” I feel like I could be contributing more, and maybe that's true, but in the moment, my capacity is not all that large. My health isn't amazing, so no, I can't do as much as I could before, but maybe that's OK.
What I'm getting at here, what I'm trying to convince myself of really, is that the important thing is I'm doing something at all. Am I working to my capacity? If so, then I can let myself off the hook for not carrying the big rocks. Because again, a squirrel is just as important as a monkey in the construction of a bridge.
I dream of a world where we work according to our capacity. A world where we understand it's not important whether we're contributing a little bit or a large bit, what matters is that we're contributing at all.
Another world is not only possible, it's probable.
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