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July 24, 2013

You Deserve the Best!

Image: Glogster
The previous post, Life Class with Oprah: Daddyless Daughters,  summarized my take on the show and the accompanying Twitter discussion. If you've ever participated in a "chat" via Twitter, you know that the tweets are numerous and come extremely fast. It is impossible to read them all, watch the television show you are tweeting about and get in a few tweets of your own. I keep up as best I can but I do miss quite a few. Once, I missed one from The Big O as I participated in a live taping via Twitter. Yes, I kicked myself the day I realized it. I'll tell you about that incident later.


The tweet that I wish to focus on today is directly related to the Daddyless Daughters issue.  At some point, the panelists were discussing the fact that women raised without their fathers tend to settle for someone who is not worthy of them because they are trying so hard to fill a void left by the absence of a father. One of the people I follow on twitter, MadameNoire, posted the following.

Good Question: How do I know what I deserve if I've never had it? #DaddylessDaughters #Lifeclass

My immediate reaction was simple.   

@leolag @MadameNoire @dPoeticFloacist Trust those gut feelings.If something makes you feel bad about yourself or uncomfortable, it's not 4 U

Image - Laurae Richards
So many children grow up without knowing what they deserve because they were never taught to value themselves. Perhaps they were not physically abused but the verbal insults were a normal part of their daily lives. Maybe the parent was physically present but emotionally absent, failing to show affection to the child, which is vital in forming positive self-esteem. Whatever the case, if you have never had the type of treatment you deserve, how will you know what to reject and what to savor?

The Creator, in His infinite wisdom, gave us this little thing called the "gut feeling". Thankfully, we all have it and it is not something that needs to be taught nor can it be stifled. Many of us ignore it, but it is still there. That gut feeling makes you aware that something is not quite right. You may not know exactly what the problem is at the moment that you are experiencing it but the important thing is that something is causing uneasiness.  As I tweeted, if something makes you feel bad about yourself or makes you feel uncomfortable, then it's not for you. Leave whatever that happens to be alone.  

Sometimes we are not sure about what we're feeling, so we seek advice from someone we trust. While the advice can be helpful, it can also be wrong. That gut feeling is never wrong. Think of it as an internal alarm. So, then, you are essentially asking someone else to evaluate your internal alarm system. They can try to interpret it for you but only you know how intense your gut feeling is and how often you feel it.

Be true to you. Learn to appreciate and heed those gut feelings. Remove yourself from whomever or whatever triggers the bad gut feeling and do not return to it. It sounds simple but there will be many times when it's quite difficult. Personal relationships and job situations are the most excruciating to deal with and rectify. If that gut feeling that you dread keeps cropping up, it is alerting you to danger of some sort. Even if the danger is only that your sanity is at stake each day that you have to deal with the verbally abusive boss, the co-worker who won't stop hitting on you, the boyfriend who wants to know where you are every moment, etc. Nothing about either one of those or so many other situations is funny, cute or acceptable.

If you don't like snakes and someone gave you one for your birthday, would you just smile and offer thanks for that unwanted gift? Probably not. You would probably scream, run and tell the giver to get that "gift" away from you. Apply a similar (but perhaps less dramatic) response to the person bringing you negativity, undue and non-constructive criticism, misplaced fault, fear, violence  or other unwanted drama... decline the gift as something you cannot appreciate or embrace. Therefore, the giver is left with the options of giving you a different (and hopefully better) gift or not giving you anything at all. Sometimes, the latter is actually best. No one needs the kind of aggravation mentioned here.

Respect. It comes down to that simple word. However, it is not something that should be demanded. Instead, respect is given voluntarily when the giver realizes that it has been earned by the intended receiver. Respect it not to be confused with fear. Fearing someone is vastly different than respecting him or her. If you respect yourself,  you treat yourself well and project an image that affirms that you are strong and confident, intelligent, fair and a proponent of doing what's right. Those are but a few of the characteristics of people who are well respected. Such people are less likely to fall victim to unscrupulous personalities. That is not to say that they will not be approached by them, but they tend to move on to a new target when that shield of respect becomes too much of a hassle to penetrate.

So, even if you don't know what you deserve because you have never had it, your gut tells you what you don't deserve.  Respect that. Listen to your instincts and act in your own best interest. Leave the offensive situation as soon as it is feasible to do so safely . Do not return for reasons that are enticing but not realistic or practical. As long as you are willing to accept things that are less than what you really deserve, that is what will be given to you. You deserve the best.



Image- GPB
Image - SheKnows
You deserve the best!



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