“... for he who has pity on them will lead them,
and by springs of water will guide them.”
~Isaiah 49:10c, d (NRSV)
There’s so much depression and
forlornness — so much validated reason for sadness — in this life; it is so
patently visible. There really is little
wonder why. When we look about us just about everyone we know lacks the outlet of
instant and availed empathy that I’m sure God had originally in mind.
The Value of ‘Sounding Boards’
Just how wonderfully precious is
this concept: the sounding board?
The fact of this aforesaid
empathy-gap illustrates another important point. Not only is there a lack of
sounding boards to go around, there is the lack of will for most of us to
engage in becoming a sounding board;
probably because there’s little empathy coming to us, so why would we empathise
with others? We run blind from the
simple solution.
Then again, there are plenty of
examples around our lives of people who — despite horrific circumstances, and
dire a lack of forthcoming empathy from others — have managed to straddle a
lifestyle that cannot help but empathise.
So, we have two problems. The
first is, rarely do we have a tangible friend in all life circumstances who’s
prepared and ready to listen without judgment, to help us on our way. The
second, which directly helps the first, is we don’t identify the power in
empathising with others as a way of sorting our own depressive and pitiable
concerns — putting them into God’s context and perspective; the bigger, truer
picture.
Becoming a sounding board helps
solve problems personally and for others.
Empathy – the Trait of a Friend
If it wasn’t for the fact that we
cannot help ourselves a lot of the time, we would actually make our own best
friends — yes, on our own we’d be perfectly empathetic for ourselves.
Think about it. Nobody knows us
like we know ourselves; apart from God, that is. So who better to empathise
with us than ourselves? But again, we come back to the key problem; most often
we cannot fix ourselves; heaven knows, we’ve tried many, many times.
The trait of the perfect friend is
empathy.
They know the need, and they set
about addressing the need. It’s a no-fuss approach and it is entirely
other-person centred. There’s no self-thought in sight.
The servant in Isaiah — captured
in the snippet above at top — is the champion of God. He or she is the perfect
friend. Their mission is to help the people for which they’re called to serve.
It is their life purpose. They draw
surreal energy from giving their lives away.
This friend has the empathy of
practical resource. It’s not the words the friend says; rather it’s the
tangible safety that they provide. They’ll guide us around springs of water so
we won’t fall in. When we’re fragile they take appropriate pity on us and lead
us through the tremulous time.
They truly are Godsends.
And it’s to this that we’re all called. The more we’re able to empathise with others, the less the size
of our personal problems. But this is not denying that we, too, have our
problems. Blessed are we to be honest in
our dealing with them, for that’s where healing is at.
Still, where we make copious room
for others, we derive, as a by-product, more room for ourselves.
© 2012 S. J. Wickham.
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