My Checklist, Not Yours
Oh, I have so much practice taking the inventory of others! It’s usually because I have the time, due to ignoring my own.
In the rooms of AA, we hear truisms like “if you spot it, you got it”, and “when I point at you, I have three fingers pointing back at myself”. These saying may sound trite, but they illustrate the need to concentrate only on what I can change about myself. In taking a daily inventory, or in the moment of irritation, I am learning to quickly ask myself where I have acted in the same way or said something hurtful disguised as humor. How do I demonstrate the exact things that bother me about another person? Is it possible that these things bother me because they are unresolved issues in my own life?
I’ve got a lot to work on before I reach that mythical point of perfection where I get to worry about others. My checklist should keep me busy enough that I don’t need to see if anyone else is working on theirs. With the practice of connection with my Creator, I am humbled often enough to to be reminded of that.
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