https://www.fapjunk.com https://pornohit.net london escort london escorts buy instagram followers buy tiktok followers Ankara Escort Cialis Cialis 20 Mg
Friday, April 26, 2024
Home Leaders Community Are You Drained or Tired?

Are You Drained or Tired?

Do you ever worry that if you give to others too much, you won’t have anything left at the end of the day?

123Author Dr. John Townsend addresses this common concern and some misconceptions about love in his book Loving People, which I recommend.  Dr. Townsend writes that it is normal to feel tired when we love and serve other people.  However, it is a different thing entirely to feel “drained” in a way that we feel empty, drained, and “sucked dry.”

If we feel those things, or if we dread re-engaging the people in our relationships, it’s a sign of one of two things:

  1. We are taking too much responsibility for other people.

Instead of working on ourselves and what we can control, sometimes we try to fix what we cannot control ‒ other people and their choices.  We feel responsible for other peoples’ “lives, unhappiness, problems, or character immaturity (40).”  Many people can relate to having done this at some point.  I’ve done it.  We want to help a friend out of their depression or financial instability.  We want to convince someone that their boyfriend or girlfriend is a bad influence, or that they need to get counseling.  The list goes on.

Keep in mind, there’s absolutely nothing wrong with helping and serving other people.  We can and should!  The real danger, according to Dr. Townsend, is when we become more concerned about someone’s problems than they are about their own problems ‒ for instance, an anger or addiction issue.  If this is the case, Dr. Townsend claims that the problems usually won’t go away … no matter how hard we push or talk to the person.  And at the end of it all, we will almost certainly feel drained.

Dr. Townsend makes this helpful distinction: “you cannot love others too much; it is just not possible. But you can take too much ownership over another’s life (41).”

  1. We are in an “unconnected” state.

In other words, we don’t have enough love and empathy inside of us to be able to keep giving more to others. Often this comes from a lack of receiving enough love and affirmation throughout our lives.  Dr. Townsend writes:

People who have this issue often feel drained by the needs and concerns of others. They simply are trying to survive themselves, and they don’t have enough to continue on very well … they hit a threshold. They are able, once they have enough of an internal sense of being loved, to give … and their internal state of being loved continues. It is difficult for loved people to be drained by caring (40-41).

I find this true in my own experience as a leader.  As I connect with friends, loved ones and God, and ask them to pour into me and encourage me, I find myself “connected” to love and empathy.  I need this, and it also gives me capacity to continue to love others without feeling drained.

And when I find myself taking too much responsibility for other people and things I cannot control, I do feel drained.  It makes sense ‒ if something is beyond my control and limits as a human, I just wasn’t intended or designed for that.  So naturally, it should drain me.

I highly recommend Loving People, which covers so many helpful ideas like this one.  It really demonstrates that “loving others” and “receiving love” are things we can learn to do, and grow in.  Since these are some of the deepest needs for people in general, I find the book really motivating.  Hope it helps you!

Adrian Pei
Adrian Peihttp://www.adrianpei.com/category/blog/
Adrian's passion is to make leadership connections about topics that matter. His current job is to oversee leadership training and content development for an Asian American ministry organization. Adrian consults, writes, speaks, and designs content. He loves innovating, collaborating, and seeing a project through from start to finish. Adrian graduated with degrees from Stanford University and Fuller Seminary and lives with his family in sunny southern California.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

- Advertisment -

Most Popular

Eminem – Stronger Than I Was

We woke reasonably late following the feast and free flowing wine the night before. After gathering ourselves and our packs, we...

Dj Dark – Chill Vibes

We woke reasonably late following the feast and free flowing wine the night before. After gathering ourselves and our packs, we...

Leona Lewis – Bleeding Love (Dj Dark & Adrian Funk Remix)

We woke reasonably late following the feast and free flowing wine the night before. After gathering ourselves and our packs, we...

Silicon Valley Guru Affected by the Fulminant Slashed Investments

We woke reasonably late following the feast and free flowing wine the night before. After gathering ourselves and our packs, we...

Recent Comments

Ngallendou Dièye on Navigating the Wave of Need
subash on 3 Kinds of Leaders
Ngallendou Dièye on 3 Kinds of Leaders
Eric Richardson on 3 Kinds of Leaders
Malcolm Webber on 3 Kinds of Leaders
Ngallendou Dièye on Our Evangelical Cover-Up?
Mark Larson on Is Competition Wrong?
betty-wiseheartedwomen.blogspo on Is Evangelical Worship Headed for a Huge Crash?
Ngallendou Dièye on 3 Fears that Paralyze Potential
Mwesigye Batatwenda Peterson on Pain
Mwesigye Batatwenda Peterson on 5 Reasons We Struggle to Rest
Michelle Chiappelli Zvyagin on Is Evangelical Worship Headed for a Huge Crash?
Ngallendou Dièye on Why Jesus Let People Walk Away
Jim Sutherland on How to Help Someone Not Change
Ngallendou Dièye on How to Help Someone Not Change
Ngallendou Dièye on Alone in a Crowd
Nancy Watta on Leaders Act!
Dr George Varghese on The Weapon of a Clear Conscience
Ngallendou Dièye on 10 Ways To Lose Great Staff
Ngallendou Dièye on Christian Celebrity Culture
Ngallendou Dièye on What NOT to Say to Someone in Pain
Joel Loewen on How to be Patient
Ngallendou Dièye on A Bit of Advice on Giving Advice
Malcolm Webber on 7 Key Paradigm Shifts
Malcolm Webber on 7 Key Paradigm Shifts
Ngallendou Dièye on 7 Key Paradigm Shifts
Ngallendou Dièye on Leaders Act!
Elisha kakwerere on 10 Reasons Leaders Stop Growing
Ngallendou on The Idolatry of Missions
Kyla Alexander on The Idolatry of Missions
Edgard Abraham Alvarez Muñoz on Little Church, Big Mission
James Ruark on A Church Led By Scholars
Ngallendou on A Church Led By Scholars
Bill Blatz on A Church Led By Scholars
Bill Frisbie on Who Stole My Towel?
niklaseklov on Who Stole My Towel?
Malcolm Webber on We Need to Learn Empathy!
Hansraj Jain on Honoring Your Predecessor