October 1
Walking in the Rain by Holly Gerth
Here’s my response: “You don’t have to experience the same storm to know what it’s like to get wet.”
I’m certain you know what it’s like to feel soaked to the bone by discouragement, have fear thundering above you or watch a dream wash away. Don’t we all? It’s not our ability to duplicate details but to relate on a heart level that lets us have empathy and be able to encourage.
I once wrote a card for DaySpring that says:
I wish I had a big, yellow umbrella that would keep all the rain out of your life.
I would hold it over your head and the drops would splash, splash and you would never even feel it. But I don’t have a big yellow umbrella, so I’ll walk through the rain with you.
When it comes to living that out, here are three ways you can walk through the rain with someone no matter what storm they’re facing:
1) Simply listen. When I did grief support groups I heard people say over and over again, “It was so comforting when someone just let me talk and cried with me.” When we’re hurting, what we need most isn’t answers; it’s to know we’re not alone.
2) Be a safe place. When someone shares their struggles with us, we’re to treat them with care like precious treasures. After all, it seems that’s what God does. He says so: “Put my tears into Your bottle; Are they not in Your book?” {Psalm 56:8}.
These three C’s can help us remember how to do so: Never criticize or condemn, and always keep the conversation confidential.
3) Don’t try to fix it. When I got a masters degree in counseling we were told over and over to avoid giving advice. We empower people most when we trust them to figure out their own lives with God’s help. We are simply there to be an encouragement and sounding board.
Ironically, the need to prove we’re useful can push us to talk too much and try too hard. When we feel that pressure, we can take a deep breath and remember we don’t have to be anyone’s God, Jesus or Holy Spirit. It’s not within our power to resolve the problem, change the circumstance or make the pain go away. In other words, we can’t stop the rain or make the sun come out again.
That reality doesn’t mean we’re a failure. It simply means we’re not God.
So what is success when it comes to helping others in our lives? After hearing from thousands of hurting people I’ve come to believe it’s simply this: Having the courage to step into the rain–even if it’s not our storm.
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