Journal of Sacred Work

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The difference between compassion & pity is the difference between Love & condescension
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   In the summer of 1997, despair overtook me. As the result of an acquisition, I was fired from my position as Chief Operating Officer of a publicly-traded company. With proceeds from the sale of the company, I had the freedom to do anything I wanted. But, after years of working, I could think of nothing to do. 
   This, of course, made no sense. Neither did it make any sense to my friends that I would feel depressed. "You’ve got a wonderful family, your health, and plenty of money," one dear friend said to me. "What have you got to be depressed about?" As most caregivers would already understand, the seeds of depression had been planted…

   Perhaps, we all need to feel needed. Suddenly, I felt useless. I looked
around at my life. My wife, happily employed as a journalist, certainly
didn’t need me. Both our children were on their own.
   It was then that I entered the toxic whirlpool of self pity that draws one down to a painful isolation. All day long, every day, and in the middle of the night, the same self-pitying thoughts attacked me. I was no longer needed. I was useless. I was a jerk. At age fifty-three, no one would want to hire me. I was a failure. Even worse, I was irrelevant. My life was over.
   The ego-centered irrationality of most of these thoughts didn’t matter. What mattered was the way my mind kept repeating these self-pitying thoughts hundreds of times a day. The corrosive effect of this thought pattern eventually led me to seek help from a spiritual therapist who, in many ways, saved my life.
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   My therapist never disputed my feelings. Instead, she handed me the great gift of compassion. "How difficult this must be," she would say. "You are so strong and talented and here you are bereft. How hard."
   She told me what a kind, sensitive and artistic soul I was. She told me how strong and capable she thought I was. One part of me argued with her, the other part heard her and gradually began to accept her Love.
   I learned, from this lovely woman, the gift of self-compassion. She didn’t call it that. She simply demonstrated it to me. Yes, I had been hurt. Yes, I would heal. Yes, some part of the world needed my gifts. It was just a question of how and where.
   At the beginning, it was so difficult to accept her compassion. I didn’t feel worthy of it. Slowly, I learned to tell myself what she was telling me – that I was, in fact, a kind, sensitive and even artistic soul. I was a talented leader, a child of God.
   Gradually, my strength and determination began to return, not because someone told me to "Get tough," but because someone recognized the agony in my heart and had the courage to join me there. Soon after, I found new energy and, with persistence, a new joy as well as president of a large hospital system in Nashville, where I live to this day.
   The difference between compassion and pity is the difference between Love and condescension. In self pity, we actually look down on ourselves with disdain. In self compassion, we become our own caring friend. We recognize the hurt we are experiencing, treat it with kindness, and manage to find nobility and strength out of it.
   As someone once said, "Pity stops and stares, compassion stoops and cares."  When someone says, "Look at that poor soul," we know they are looking down in condescension. The same is true when someone says, "I thought I had it tough until I remembered some people have cancer and others are starving." Innocent-seeming on the surface, these statements are nothing more than ways some have of ranking themselves above others. Do we have to feel better off than someone else in order to feel okay?
   The greater truth is that all of us are both suffering and filled with the potential for joy. When we feel kicked around by the world, it’s natural to retreat to the closest thing we can find to our mother’s lap. Sadly, this may lead to the false comfort of drugs, alcohol, food, sex, or gambling.
   Self compassion, on the other hand, leads to the best kind of mental health. Self compassion is the gift of allowing Love’s energy to flow into us as well as through us. To accept that we are loved is to enable us to pass Love’s energy on to others.
   This is not a matter of duty. There is nothing about this that is connected to a "should." In fact, my telling you that you are loved may feel meaningless. What counts is that we all develop the capacity to receive the gift of Love that is always there, waiting patiently for us to open the door and let it in.
   Is the difference between self-compassion and self-love meaningful to you? How do you practice self-compassion?

-Erie Chapman

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4 responses to “Day 28 – Self Compassion vs. Self Pity”

  1. Tom Knowles-Bagwell Avatar
    Tom Knowles-Bagwell

    The distinction you are making between self-pity and self-compassion is such an important one, Erie. How often I have found the voice of self-pity dragging me down. And I share with you the experience of having a spiritual therapist offer that kind of genuine loving care. During the past six or eight months I have also been tempted to surrender to the voice of self-pity as I’ve been walking through my own career transition. I have to say that for me, self-compassion grows as I stay connected to others who are “on the journey.” They keep reminding me that any struggle or disappointment that I may be experiencing is a potential source of growth and transformation.

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  2. Karen York Avatar
    Karen York

    This distinction is part of an ongoing conversation I have with myself. Self-care (and I may start referring to it as self-compassion) is a conscious choice, when in the middle of the day, when I am tired and I make a mistake, not to call myself “an idiot” one more time, but to allow myself the grace and forgiveness I would extend to a colleague. I would like to share a poem here that I give to all new employees and serves as an anchoring point for me.
    Daily Acts of faith for a person of success:
    Forgive yourself for believing you have ever done anything wrong.
    Trust yourself because you are a uniquely divine expression of the Creator.
    Support yourself with kind thoughts, loving words, and self-empowering acts.
    Honor yourself by not criticizing, judging, or denying what you feel.
    Fortify yourself with lots of rest, healthy foods, quiet time, and don’t forget to play.
    Commit yourself and some part of each day, toward accomplishing one step toward a weekly, monthly, or yearly goal.
    Love yourself by realizing every step you take in faith brings you closer to the light.
    –Iyanla Vanzant

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  3. liz Wessel Avatar
    liz Wessel

    I appreciate your point, Tom, I too am strengthened by sharing with others and I find being open to my struggles is the path to growth.
    Thanks for sharing this affirming poem Karen and your insights on forgiveness.
    I believe self-compassion is being aware and accepting of myself, yes, forgiving myself and withholding judgment.
    I recognize that old thought patterns color my perceptions and sometimes prevent me from receiving Love’s gift from others. Thoughts invade such as, “This person must think I am fishing for a compliment and I am not worthy of such Love.” Yet, today’s powerful expression revealed in the experience of your truth awakens me; shakes me loose from my head to descend back into my body’s heart center. As I return to my knowing of what is real I open receptive to receive the grace of Love’s blessing with gratitude and thankfulness.

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  4. Rachel McCormack Avatar
    Rachel McCormack

    Thank you so much for that post. It has had a real profound effect on me today as I navigate the tricky waters between love and pity and learn the real differences.

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