ACCEPTANCE
by Vincent P. Collins
Facing life
Sooner or later, everyone arrives at a point where life seems to have
become too big to cope with. Life is never really too much for us, but it
can seem to be. When this happens,we have to get back in focus. We have
lost our perspective, but it can be regained.
You may have come to think of the world as unspeakably vast, the earth,
twenty-five thousand miles around, and outer space, full of unknown
worlds. But, practically, the world is limited to your house, your
shop, and your town. Even if you fly to India or Paris or Hong-Kong,
your world is no bigger than the interior of the airplane, and no farther
away than the nearest airport.
You may have come to regard the world as teaming with millions and
millions of people. In reality, your world consists of a very small
number of people--those you live with, those you work with, and those
you're acquainted with.
And the awful, menacing future, that unending nightmare of shadowy days
and years! Can't even bear to think about it. Well, quit thinking about
it all. You live only a split second at a time; that's right this minute.
You can think of only one thing at a time, do only one thing at a time;
you actually live only one breath at a time. So stop living in a tomorrow
that may never come, and start living one day at a time--today. Plan for
tomorrow, but live only til bedtime tonight.
In short, that big bogey-man, called Life, can be cut down to his real size.
Life is only this place, this time, and these people right here and now.
This you can handle--at least today.
"But my life is just one problem after another!" Of course it is--that's
life. I don't know how it is with you, but it took me a long time to
realize that at least some of these problems were of my own making. For
instance, I thought that it was my duty to try to solve other people's
problems, arbitrate their disputes, and show them how to live their
lives. I was hurt when they rejected my unsolicited advice. I finally
learned that you cannot help people unless they really need help, are
willing to be helped, want you to help them, and ask you to help them.
Even then, you can only help them to help themselves.
An old Arab, whose tent was pitched next to a company of whirling
dervishes was asked, "Don't they bother you?"
"No!" he said.
"What do you do about them?"
"I let 'em whirl!"
I caused myself a lot of unnecessary grief by trying to be "unselfish," to
think of everybody else first, myself last, and to try to please
everybody. But you can't please everybody. You can knock yourself out
doing this and that and the other thing to please "your cousins and your
sisters and your aunts," and you find out that they are not really
affected one way or the other. "Please everybody, nobody's pleased;
please yourself, at least you're pleased!" Charity begins at home, and
enlightened self-interest is a basic endowment of human nature. You can
save yourself a lot of grief by admitting the futility of trying to please
everybody, or of trying to please somebody who just can't be pleased.
A surprising number of people believe that other people can hurt their
feelings. They won't believe you when you tell them that it just isn't
so--that no one can hurt you unless you let them! If irresponsible or
unreasonable criticism cause you un-happiness, that is at least partly your
own fault. We all say, " I don't care what people say," but the tragic
thing is that we do care, and pretending we don't makes things worse.
What to do?
Practice turning a deaf ear to the person who irritates us or upsets you;
make up your mind that you are not going to let yourself pay any attention
to what "he" or "she" says, and mean it. This you won't believe until
you try it. If you refuse at least to try it, some suspicious and cynical
soul (like me, for instance) might suspect that perhaps you've got so in
the habit of having your feelings hurt that you'd be bored otherwise.
So much for unnecessary suffering.
How about real trouble, trouble that comes regardless of what we do,
think, or say? That terrifying problem that has no apparent solution?
Let's stop for a minute and see what a problem really is.
A problem is a set of circumstances that threatens your well-being. And
what are "circumstances"? Circumstances are people and things. So
"solving our problems" really means getting people and things the way we
want them. Sometimes we can do it. More often we can't. What then?
There are several things we can do. We can look around to find somebody
or something to blame. Or we can put ashes in our hair, wear shabby shoes
with rundown heels, accentuate our wrinkles, and make the rounds of our
friends chanting, "Poor, poor me!" We can succeed in making our family
miserable. We can haunt doctors. We can waylay our pastor, beat our
breast, and blame God: "What have I done to deserve this?"
Acceptance
These various "home remedies" blaming everybody, self-pity and the rest
have but one result: they make everybody including ourselves more
miserable and add to our difficulties without solving them. Shall we
"curse God and die?" No.
Do what the politician does: "If you can't beat 'em join 'em!" If you
can't solve your problems, learn to live with them and in spite of them.
"Oh sure, sure; just like that! All very well to say 'learn to live with
them,'
but it's another thing to do it! Just how do you go about doing that?"
Very simple, my friend; so simple you wouldn't try it unless you were
desperate. If you are desperate enough, you'll try anything. So try
something that works, try acceptance.
Acceptance is the only real source of tranquillity, serenity, peace. It
is also known as "Surrender," "Bowing to the Inevitable," "Joining 'em."
It can be acquired if you have an urgent desire to help yourself and are
willing to ask God to help you.
Luckily for us, the perfect formula for acceptance, simple and practical
as a can opener, is ready at hand, waiting for us to use it as hundreds
of thousands before us have. Written by Pastor Friedrich Christoph (1782),
it is known far and wide as "The Serenity Prayer." Here it is:
"God grant me the Serenity to accept the things I cannot change;
Courage to change the things I can
and Wisdom to know the difference."
You simply ask God to give you the ability to take people, and things as
they are, if you cannot change them. We can very seldom change people,
though we can change ourselves. We ask God, further, to enable us to
convince ourselves that we would not have things otherwise, even if we
could. Only God is powerful enough to control all things, and He seems to
prefer to make some things come out right without changing them.
In practice: face up to the problem that is driving you wild, and say,
"Is there anything I can do about it right now, today?" If there is, do
it! Don't put it off another minute. If there is nothing you can do about
it today, accept it and forget it.
You don't get over a twenty-foot wall by banging your head against it--you
just get a headache. If you sit down in the shade of the wall and say,
"Maybe I'm better off on this side, after all," you may be sure that God
will make things turn out better for you and for everyone else. This
ability of His to make things work out for the best is known as Divine
Providence, or "The kindness of God."
The Kindness of God
Divine Providence is that quality of God's action by which He brings good
out of evil, or by which He permits us to do evil so that He may
eventually bring good out of it. The Kindness of God is the best answer to
the age-old complaint, "Why does God let them get away with it?"
We are all aware that people just don't act the way they should. Some are
mean, arrogant, selfish, vicious, ungrateful, and malicious all the
time. Even the very best (are you listening?) are mean, arrogant, etc.,
part of the time.
Why doesn't God do something about it: He could, all right; but,
strange to say, that would ruin everything. He created us with free will,
that is, the power of choosing to do good or to do evil. He realized very
well that some people would abuse free will, but He gave it to us anyway,
because without it we'd be robots. His plan is to reward us with Heaven,
but you don't reward a machine for doing well--it can't do otherwise. No
free will, no reward.
We may as well accept the fact that "it's a sinful world!" We don't have
to remind God of that; indeed, no one ever suffered more from it than He
Himself did when he was on earth. The big difference is that He accepted
the injustice and did not rebel against it. It was through that very
acceptance that He was to save us. Everything that was done to Him was
permitted by His Father for our salvation. For His part, He accepted it
as the will of His Father. "Father, if it be possible, let this chalice
pass from me; but not My will, but Thine be done.
Do you claim to be the victim of a greater injustice then He? Or more
important than He? You'd gladly escape your unbearable situation, but
cannot. He could have, but did not! "Is the disciple above the Master?"
The Providence of God turned the most horrible injustice of all time into
the greatest blessing of all time. Divine Providence is still turning evil
into good, if the victim of injustice accepts his lot, even as Christ
accepted His. When you bow to the inevitable and accept injustice, you
are not ignoring it or excusing it or explaining it away. You are simply
accepting the indirect or permissive Will of God.
God does not will evil or condone injustice; He merely permits it, even
while He works the marvel by which it results in good. So if we find
ourselves in an apparently hopeless situation, with every Avenue of escape
blocked, we must not rebel. Instead, we must realize that God has His
reasons, in His infinite goodness and wisdom, for permitting it. And so
we accept it saying "Thy Will be done!" Immediately the load drops from
our shoulders, and the assurance that all will be well brings peace to our
soul.
Look back over your life. Honestly, now, can't you see how the loving
Hand of God has brought a happy ending to many events that seemed to be
unmitigated tragedies at the time? "Why are ye fearful, O ye of little
faith?"
Suffering
Some humorist once said, "Just because we have the right to the pursuit
of happiness is no sign we'll ever catch up with it." Sometimes it almost
seems that God doesn't want us to be happy here on earth, that He demands
misery and suffering in this life as the price of happiness in the next.
The Puritans believed this, but don't you believe it! God wants us to be
happy right here on earth, and even points out the way. Sometimes,
however, we refuse to look where He is pointing.
The trouble is that most of us think happiness consists in the fulfillment
of our wants and desires, or at the very least in freedom from pain and
suffering. Actually, it consists in the Serenity that come from
conforming our own will to the Will of God. We achieve happiness by
forcing ourselves to accept what God wants for us.
It's obvious that such a course would make for happiness in the next life,
but it's hard to see how it would make us happy in this life. That's
because we're convinced that happiness lies in getting what we
want--satisfy our every desire, we would not be happy. Self
gratification, far from making us happy, makes us miserable, as we
learned long ago from the tale of King Midas and the Golden Touch. If you
have been making the universal mistake of trying to appease the drive of
your self-will, stop it! Stop catering to it, and start controlling it.
"
Easier said than done!"
No, it's not too difficult when you known how. God has provided us with
the perfect means to eliminate self-will and free ourselves from the
slavery of our insatiable desires. It is suffering the perfect tool to cut
us down to proper size.
Contentment
Baby screams because Mama won't let him play with the nice, big, shiny
butcher knife. Baby is very unhappy; he can't have what he wants, and
he doesn't want that silly old rattle. Baby has yet to learn that
contentment consists not in getting what he wants, but in enjoying what he
has.
If we grown-ups are contented only when we're getting what we want, we're
going to be discontented most of the time. That way, our happiness depends
on circumstances over which we have no control. No human being is so wise
and powerful that he can control circumstances.
Then we had better see what we can do about finding our own enjoyment.
Since we can't get everything we want, we must learn to enjoy what we
have. Well what have you? You're alive, and you have five senses in more
or less good working order. Even if you were deaf, dumb and blind, you
could at least take enjoyment from the sensation of breathing.
I am not deaf,dumb and blind. I can even look at a smoldering dump and
enjoy the realization that I can see it and I can smell it. I can listen
to a cat yowling outside my window at three a.m. and enjoy the realization
that there's nothing wrong with my hearing. I can walk: I can enjoy the
sensation of picking my feet up and putting them down. I can be
color-blinded and tone-deaf and still enjoy a little baby's gurgling.
As a matter of fact, we can find something enjoyable in any situation,
no matter how disagreeable, if we look for it. If we try hard enough, we
can even enjoy the drudgery of our work.
Don't make the mistake of postponing your enjoyment until vacation time,
or even till the weekend. Some people have to go to movies or night clubs
for amusement and laughs, when their own children can provide more
amusement than an army of MC's. Let's enjoy here and now.
Perhaps the most difficult thing to bear is loneliness and aloneness.
What to do when circumstances force us into a solitary existence? First,
if you are fortunate enough to have a variety of interests, physical or
mental, you must make a real effort to develop them. Failing that, you
can search out and help the less fortunate. If you are not up to that you
are thrown back on the conscious cultivation of your five senses and
intellectual powers. At the very least, you can tell God every morning
that you hold yourself available for use as His instrument, if only by
praying Him to bless everyone whom you meet.
If these alternatives don't work, there is only one thing left; Plain,
simple, rock bottom acceptance. Stop pitying yourself, stop rebelling,
throw in the sponge, and surrender to the obvious fact that since God
allows it and you can't escape it, it must be best for you and for
everyone. Pray for the faith to believe it and to accept it.
"Lord, Save Us..."
God is infinitely wise: He knows what is best for us. He loves us with
an infinite love; He wants what is best for us. He is infinitely
powerful; He can achieve it for us. We, on the other hand, are
ignorant, weak , and wayward. Yet in weakness lies our strength. Are
we licked, beat, flattened, hopeless? Fine! It is only when we admit
our utter helplessness that we can be sure of God's help.
No one but a monster could pass by a starving, naked infant freezing in a
snow bank without picking it up, sheltering, feeding and clothing it. So
it is with us. As long as we insist, "I can handle it!" God says, "Go
ahead!" But when we appeal to Him as a helpless infant, He picks us up in
His gentle hands, cradles us in His powerful arms, and our worries are
over.
A very wise old Scotsman used to put it this way: "As long as I insisted
on driving, I ran into trouble. After the last crackup I said to God;
'OK, You drive it!' Since then I have been riding in the back seat
enjoying the scenery. I place myself completely in His hands every morning
and say, 'Thank you, Lord!' every night. And that's it."
In praying, we must remember that "Father knows best." Suppose, for
instance, I think I am about to lose my job? Should I pray? What should
I pray for? God may have ordained that if I do not pray, He will let
nature take it's course and I will lose my job; if I do ask Him to save my
job, He will. However with greater faith I may pray, "Dear God, do what
is best for all concerned." In turn, He may permit me to lose my job,
only to get a better one. I have nothing to lose by leaving it up to Him.
After all, He can't possibly do a worse job of running my life than I
have myself!
We all are inclined to make the mistake of thinking that the few minutes
we spend actually talking to God are all that count. In reality, the
attitude of mind we maintain throughout the day is every bit as important.
If you place yourself in God's hands in the morning, and throughout the day
you hold yourself ready to accept His will as it is made known through the
circumstances of your daily life, your attitude of acceptance becomes a
constant prayer.
To cultivate this attitude, to remind yourself how to live with yourself,
start today to recite every day the serenity prayer.
The Serenity Prayer
God,
grant me the
SERENITY
to accept the things I cannot change;
COURAGE
to change the things I can;
and
WISDOM
to know the difference
Living one day at a time;
Enjoying one moment at a time;
Accepting hardships as a pathway to peace;
Taking, as He did, this sinful world
as it is, not as I would have it;
Trusting that He will make all things right
if I surrender to His Will;
That I may be reasonably happy in this life
and supremely happy with Him
forever in the next.
Amen.