Showing posts with label gambar diri. Show all posts

Father Love Letter


Overcoming Shame and Fear of Failure

Jabez

Pada saat saudaranya puas dengan keterbatasannya, Jabez inginkan lebih untuk melayani Tuhan dengan segenap hatinya. Tapi Jabez punya masalah yaitu ketidakmampuan emosional maupun fisikal. "Jabez" itu artinya kesakitan. Kata "Jabez" itu artinya kosong atau hampa. Jabez harus bergumul dengan perasaan tidak diinginkan dan ditolak.

Merasa malu dan tidak dikasihi merupakan tantangan yang besar dalam hidupnya. Dia sadar akan ketidaklayakannya sehingga dia mengalami depresi. Namun Jabez berhasil mengatasi rasa malunya itu. Jabez merintis suatu kota bernama kota Jabez dan membangkitkan suatu generasi yang bisa memelihara firman Tuhan sampai jamannya Ezra.

Pada saat kita merasa terkutuk dan malu, maka kita akan menyerah untuk masa depan kita. Menghadapi masalah malu, tidak hanya sekali dalam hidup kita. Menghadapi trauma masa lalu, harus terus dilakukan kalau kita ingin melakukan perkara-perkara besar. Lihat saja dalam alkitab hamba-hamba Tuhan yang sukses:

1.Yusuf
Yusuf ditolak dan tidak diinginkan oleh saudara2nya dalam keluarga. Dituduh dan difitnah bahwa dia memperkosa dan dimasukkan dalam penjara. Bisa dibayangkan betapa dia merasa tertotak dan malu. Tapi dia berhasil menghancurinnya dan menjadi perdana menteri di Mesir.

2.Abraham
Dimana dia tidak percaya kepada Tuhan pertamanya tentang anaknya. Begitu lemahnya, bahkan berbohong sarah bukan istrinya waktu bertanya. Tapi sebaliknya Tuhan masih menginginkannya contoh menjadi Imam. Harusnya malu Abraham, bagaimana mungkin dipakai oleh Tuhan. Tapi Abraham berhasil melampaui rasa malu itu, dan menjadi bapak imam percaya.

3.Musa
Seorang pembunuh dan seorang pelarian. Datang dan turun dari gunungnyna Tuhan. Dan dikatakan hai oleh orang Israel jangan membunuh. Siapa kamu Musa kasih kami perintah itu? Harusnya kamu malu mengatakan itu, karena kamu seorang pembunuh? Jangan kasih tau kami apa yang harus kamiu lakukan. Namun Musa harus melampaui masa lalu itu untuk menjadi pahlawan dalam iman.

4.Daud
Daud orang yang disebut paling dekat dengan hati Tuhan. Bayangkan Daud menjadi penjinah dan membunuh. Dan Tuhan mengambil putra yang pertama. Daud harusnya malu, dia tidak layak jadi raja. Namun dia harus melampaui rasa malu itu untuk mengejar dan mencari Tuhan. Bahwa Daud harus mendapatkan putra kedua, agar bisa menguasai dan memerintah di Israel.

5.Simon Petrus
Menyangkal Kristus dihadapan Yesus 3x. Salah satu terjemahan, dikatakan bahkan dia mengutukin nama Tuhan. Namun Yesus tidak datang dengan kalimat, "kamu seorang pengecut, harusnya kamu gagal Simon!". Namun Yesus berkata, "Petrus, apakah kamu mengasihi Aku? Berikan makanan kepada domba2Ku dan gembalakan mereka." Dan 50 hari kemudian Simon Petrus membangun sebuah gereja.

Setiap orang harus berurusan dengan masa lalu mereka. Ahli ilmu jiwa mengatakan, rasa malu adalah hal yang paling parah bisa menghancurkan kehidupan manusia yang paling sulit dihadapin. Rasa malu membuat kita merasa tidak layak. Bahwa Tuhan tidak mengasihi saya. Saya tidak layak untuk Tuhan. Bahkan mungkin, anda mulai percaya dengan diri anda, saya adalah orang yang bodoh, saya orang yang gagal.

Rasa malu membuat anda selalu menyalahkan diri anda atas setiap apa yang terjadi. Kita begitu takut untuk kehilangan muka. Begitu takut tidak bisa berpenampilan baik dihadapan teman-teman kita dan keluarga kita. Kalau belum berhasil, kita merasa malu dihadapan keluarga.

Ada 3 tantangan rasa malu yang harus dihancurkan dalam hidup kita:

1. Rasa malu yang diwariskan
Karena kita dilahirkan dalam kehidapan umat manusia, yang jatuh dalam dosa. Diatas kayu salib Yesus telah mengambil rasa malu itu.

2. Rasa malu yang coba ditempelkan oleh orang kepada anda
Mungkin karena masalalumu, mungkin seperti Jabez.
Ketika Yesus datang, bisa saja dia datang sebagai Tuhan yang perkasa yang menghancurkan dunia ini. Tapi untuk menjadi seorang juruselamat dia harus dilahirkan daari seorang darah. Anda bisa bayangkan bagaimana Yesus dilahirkan oleh wanita perawan dan orang2 bisa menertawakan dia, dll. Bahkan saudaranya laki2 tidak percaya padanya. Dia ditolak oleh saudaranya, jemaatnya, bahkan dikota dimana dia berada. Bahkan perampok yang disalibkan itu menertawakan

3. Rasa malu yang sesungguhnya
Karena kesalahan yang anda lakukan. Kadang-kadang anda merasa begitu bersalah dan berdosa.


Be blessed,
Kotbah by Kong Hee

(Taken from Suwandi Tanha's Note on Facebook)


Being Real is a Real Problem

(By Gregory Spencer)
Source: Boundless

When I was a boy, I spent many afternoons with my legs straddling a wide white branch of a walnut tree. I fingered the dials and wheels of the plywood instrument panel I knew would one day take my brother and me to Mars.

During dreamy summer days, we might pose any number of profound questions to each other, but our favorite was, "If you had to choose, would you rather go blind or deaf?" The answer could not have been more obvious to me then. I would rather go deaf, sight being too precious to lose. For the sighted, seeing is usually the most defining sense.

How much more so in an image-saturated culture. Unfortunately, in our times, we have come to believe that seeing is all that is necessary for experiencing. This is what I call the Gospel of Sight: What the eye values is the most important truth; the image — our image — is what matters most.

Though I don't dislike the media (I love movies. I watch TV), I take what I have assumed to be G.K. Chesterton's observation to heart: "The thinking person always resists the most dominant thing in his culture because the most dominant thing is always too dominant." I see "the most dominant thing" as the way images have influenced the way we think and behave. In light of our longing for and our need to develop authenticity (a virtue I define as "the courage to love with a rigorous inside-out consistency"), two consequences seem especially important.

The Gospel of Sight teaches us that appearances are all-in-all. We are image-driven, image-obsessed, image-conscious to a fault. The obvious needs to be asserted: We have defined "being attractive" in visual terms. Most commercials tell us that all that matters is being as beautiful and young and thin and fit and ripped as possible. That and being rich.

How can we be deeply authentic if we think that "how we look" is top priority? Of course, caring about our appearance is not unimportant or "beneath us." God made us to notice beauty and appreciate style. We each have our own personal "way of being," our God-given uniqueness, much of which is related to our image. Everything has a kind of style: dresses, cars, sermons, governments. If we wish to communicate well, we must attend to what sounds pleasing to others and to what our body "says." But our culture has grossly overstated the role of the image. As exercise guru Jack LaLanne says: "I can't die. It would ruin my image."

We are outside-in focused, instead of inside-out. Parents have said for years that it's what's on the inside that counts, but their voices get drowned out by the thousands of voices we hear every day to the contrary. We need better skin, brighter teeth, more glowing hair. We hear that everything in our future rests on our attractiveness. A woman admiring herself in an ad for Avia shoes wants it both ways: "She knows true beauty comes from the inside — but she doesn't mind finding it in the mirror."

Inevitably, this outside-in orientation makes our sense of self dependent on external forces. We need to be noticed, to be praised for our image — and we conspire to get that attention. Over a century ago, Henry Ward Beecher got it right: "Clothes do not make the man, but once he is made, they greatly improve his appearance."

We suffer a perfectionism exacerbated by the manipulation of pixels. Every commercial photo of a face or body is altered, enhanced, made more visually stunning. Yet the more perfect the image, the greater the distance from our imperfect lives. This disparity discourages and corrupts us, especially women. I have watched my three daughters struggle with these issues. It's hard enough to live up to a good friend's beauty; but how does one compare to a digitalized "perfection" that even the supermodel doesn't possess?

And analysis is not enough. Though I know the supermodel's skin is not impeccably unblemished, that her original image might have a pimple or tired eyes, I still say, "Wow, she's beautiful." Perfectionistic words are also associated with the images: "For flawless looks, spotless skin," etc. We cannot measure up so we bury ourselves in the guilt of starvation diets and persistent self-deprecation.

We may be paying a higher price as well. Recently I asked one of my classes why so many of their generation were committing suicide. Their responses surprised me. They said that because so many resources were at their disposal, they had no good reason not to make the world better. And they should be able to make themselves better as well — perfect even — and they couldn't bear the weight.

The resonance in the classroom seemed profound to me. Yes, the world's problems overwhelm them. But the depressing tipping point is that they feel they should be dramatically other than they are. They have no excuse not to live up to the consistent messages that they ought to be perfect.

The Gospel of Sight presents "illusion" as preferable to the authentic. When my family is on vacation, someone often says, "Ooh, look at the scenery! That would make such a good picture." My typical response is, "Yes, but isn't it a good landscape? I mean, isn't it worthy without being a photograph?" It's not that I dislike photographs or images — really. It's just that they have changed the way we experience the world, and we ought to do our best to understand these ways.

The illusion becomes the standard. This last Christmas, my wife and younger daughters and I visited my eldest daughter who, at that time, was living in St. Petersburg, Russia. After getting robbed in the Metro and negotiating the somewhat uninviting city for eight days, I was delighted to spend the next five days in London before returning home to California. I said, "Ah, London is wonderful; it's like Disneyland." Ouch. Shouldn't I have said that Disneyland was like London? For shame! Somehow, the faux-reality of Disneyland has burrowed into my head as the higher standard of excellence.

This "standard of illusion" can be seen in every day life. If the norms for the speed of romance are adopted from film, we may think our own plodding efforts ought to be pumped up. And nature television has become the norm for nature. Real nature just doesn't measure up. It is not populated with enough "cute" or "fierce" beasts, nor do the wild things perform for us as they should.

Perhaps our declining participation in authentic experiences makes being authentic more difficult. We're uncomfortable in the wilderness of genuineness. We tend to be either too blunt or too evasive. At any rate, inexorably, the standard of illusion leads to my next point.

We prefer illusion. As a freshman in college, I had on my wall a newspaper photo of my girlfriend as she was receiving her crown as Homecoming princess. To this day, I am convinced that I broke up with her because she failed to live up to the photograph. You may think me shallow but I had constructed my fantasy and I was sticking with it. When we were together, she didn't look as idyllically beautiful, nor did she treat me as I imagined she should: with that radiant smile, those perfect eyes, that facial expression that let me know I was the center of her life. In person, she was, well, a person, and I preferred my image of her.

Journalist Kiku Adatto says this choice makes a curious kind of sense: "In a media-conscious environment, authenticity means becoming the master of your own artificiality." Why would a fake authenticity become preferable? Charles Williams' cautionary thriller Descent into Hell provides some insight. He tells the story of middle-aged Lawrence Wentworth who has a romantic crush on a much younger woman, Adela. In Williams' supernatural scheme, Wentworth's desire for Adela is so strong that, once Adela rejects him, he "creates" an illusion of Adela who caters to his every desire. Once, during a torrential rain, the real Adela shows up at his door and asks to be let in. Wentworth looks at the phantom Adela in his room and then out at the real one, wet and needy. Williams' says, "He recognized well enough that the real Adela might have given him considerable trouble to lift, but his whole damnation was that he would not choose the trouble to lift the real Adela."

I have been haunted by this line for years. What and who are the "real Adelas" in our lives that we refuse to lift? When do we dwell in our imagined ideal and ignore the plain truth in front of us — or inside of us? In order to live a rigorous inside-out consistency, we have to be willing to face, among other things, tragic realities. If we pretend that we don't have problems or that the world is "just fine," we will be more deeply shaken when tragedy comes our way.

Perhaps this explains some troubled marriages and divorces. Newlyweds can be shocked when they discover the darker sides of their spouse.

At my college, I sometimes hear students say (after the revelation of some terrible event on campus), "I can't believe that could happen at Westmont." I think, "Why? Do you not know that Westmont is inhabited by people?" Many of us prefer the illusion that followers of Jesus lead outwardly better lives, that they always have superior marriages, more fulfilling jobs, less tragedy. We would be better off telling the truth about our humanity, even the difficult, tragic truths. Jesus says that "the truth will set you free" (John 8:32).

As we grow increasingly comfortable with illusion, we may find that we are more concerned with creating ourselves than with knowing ourselves. We alter our outer selves incessantly: our hair color, facial features, body shapes — anything to keep looking young. And we also alter our inner selves. We affirm a version of "the Good Life" that keeps our souls in a gated community, safe from the need to deal with uncomfortable realities. We may also distance ourselves from friends who tell us disagreeable truths, especially truths about ourselves. And since we know how far we are from the image we present, we know others are distant also and so, ironically, we don't trust them.

Living in the age of the image is often thrilling and pleasing. But when its qualities dominate all others — when the Gospel of Sight reigns supreme — authenticity is threatened. The loud and flashy world shouts down this quiet virtue. A sincere effort will be required of us if we hope to be more genuine.



Behind the Mask

(by George Halitzka)

I had a best friend once. It was kindergarten and he lived next door and we played every day in the front yard, except for afternoons when he tried to get his own way by crowing, "I ain't gonna be your friend no more" because I wouldn't let him use my cool magnifying glass. Of course, I got wise to that: I knew he'd be back the next day knocking at my door. So I crossed my stubborn arms and let him stomp away.

Yes, Luke had his flaws, but he was a good pal; a made-to-order companion for a 5-year-old. Unfortunately, he moved across town after first grade.

I didn't see him again until junior high. By then, I'd turned into a brainy geek while he'd become a slacker too cool to be alive. He occasionally visited my lunch table with new buds, but only because he found me a convenient target for trash-talk.

I had another best friend in third grade. Jeremy walked a few blocks to my house every day after school; we pretended we were the heroes in a make-believe world and talked about how cool computers were.

Then one day something happened — I don't remember what — and we got in a fight in my backyard. With a distinct lack of weapons available, we threatened each other with pieces of rope. (Welts are a big deal in third grade, OK?) There was a prolonged standoff. Finally, we finally made a truce — Jeremy and I would lay down our ropes at the same time.

I put mine on the ground. But instead of complying with the terms, he picked both of them up and chased me across the driveway. So I played the only card I had left: I threw him off our property with threats of hollering for my mother.

After that, Jeremy didn't come over to play anymore.

All of us would love to find some real friends, an authentic community — a place to know and be known. Even as adults we're longing for folks to call us by name. But we discovered in grade school that life hurts, and grown-ups can do far worse than pick up your welting-rope.

Take a third-grader's word for it: If you trust people, you're a dummy-pants.

Knowing and Being Known

Knowing another person is a fearsome proposition. When I meet someone new, he's already been living for years on a screwed-up planet. What bruises has he picked up along the way? I've formed the beginning of relationships only to discover people were clingy addicts or incorrigible gossips ... and I had no idea at first. It's enough to make me afraid to shake hands after church.

Being known means revealing your own scars from 20-odd years of wading through life. You're opening yourself up to rejection on a deeper level than those junior high insults when people said your Mama dressed you funny. The eighth-grade clowns could only pick on your looks. If a person knows you, he has power to stomp your dreams.

So most of us crave intimacy at the same time we're running from it, and who can blame us? We've tried to be more open and gotten ignored in return. We figured church might to be a safe place to build relationships, then found out most "Life Groups" should be called "Pretending-I've-Got-My-Life-Together Groups." If you share your real prayer requests, you'll earn three super-spiritual lectures and a rumor that you're a prideful doubter.

Yet we instinctively realize there's something greater than surface conversations! There must be hope for penetrating the platitudes.

Personally, I've found three major keys to building community, whether it's with one friend or an entire group: forgiveness, integrity, and humility. If you're longing for depth, try them at church. Try them with your friends or family or fiancé. They can bring intimacy that you've never experienced before!

But getting there is a rocky road, because you'll have to adopt a new approach to life. Your profound openness is liable to get your heart run over before you encounter the community you're longing for.

Forgiveness

It was April Fool's Day 2002, and I hadn't pulled a decent pranks since college. So I decided it was time to go toilet papering. I stopped at Walgreen's for 20 rolls, then headed for church, where my friend Kevin was the tech director.

I already knew Kevin's "studio" would be the perfect place for my redecorating project. It was best described as a starship control room masquerading as a sanitary landfill. Filled with everything from high-end computers to mountains of scrap paper to dismantled sound gear, Kevin's hangout was the perfect environment for hanging Charmin.

When I arrived, the office was wide open — and empty. It was almost like Kevin was expecting me. I kept wishing I had a camera. The TP went in and out of filing cabinets, over and around audio equipment. It was one of the best indoor jobs I've ever seen.

Unfortunately, when Kevin got back to his office, he was not amused. He'd been stressed all week and couldn't believe he was facing this enormous mess. He wasn't sure about the guilty party, but was so mad he went to his boss, who suspected the youth pastor.

The next day, I got a terse e-mail: "George, are you the one who messed up my office? I need to know."

I was in trouble.

It had been really juvenile to do that at someone's workplace — Kevin had every right to be ticked. I apologized to him, because he was my bud, but I figured we were through. I'd embarrassed us both, caused him extra work, and screwed up his whole week.

But Kevin modeled a little bit of God's forgiveness for me when he demonstrated — not in words or a single moment, but in actions — that he accepted my apology. We could move on, continuing to thread the treacherous road of friendship-building.

Forgiveness may be the hardest part of community. Some of us have gotten hurt so many times the smallest slight makes us look for the door. Yet canceling a debt is the first key to taking your relationship beneath the surface.

Without grace, no friendship can last a month.

Integrity

An anonymous writer penned these words in an essay called "Please Hear What I'm Not Saying":

Don't be fooled by me. Don't be fooled by the mask I wear. For I wear a mask. I wear a thousand masks — masks that I am afraid to take off, and none of them are me. Pretending is an art that's second nature to me. But don't be fooled, for God's sake, don't be fooled! I give you the impression that I'm secure, that all is sunny and unruffled with me, within as well as without, that confidence is my name and coolness is my game, that the water is calm and I'm in command, and that I need no one. But don't believe me. Please.

When we think about integrity, we usually figure that means we don't lie or cheat. And hopefully, we'll dare to confront a friend when he's screwing up his life. But there's one more dimension to integrity that's far rarer: the courage to be yourself.

Pretending you're invulnerable is easy; we spend most of our lives convincing people we're more intelligent and attractive than we really are. But we're also dying to be known the whole time. Our masks prevent people from ever calling us by name.

I was a skilled mask artist in my younger days. I corresponded with a cute friend during college, and one day she wrote, "George, your letters are funny, but I don't see any part of you in them. They're like a string of one-liners."

She was right. I couldn't tell people what I was really feeling 300 miles away from Mom, or the doubts about my faith that were scaring me. I was sure people would think I was a freak and a lousy Christian.

Vulnerability is still hard for me. It's easy to sit on a pedestal as the Bible College Graduate in Ministry. It's hard to admit sins and how little I understand about life with God. Vulnerability is an invitation for rejection.

If you're the first one in your relationship to share a secret joy, you might be rewarded with blank stares and derision. Your integrity may be someone's excuse to turn you into their personal target. Yet until you take off the mask, you'll never get past the surface to build an authentic community.

The anonymous writer said it best: "Don't be fooled by the mask I wear. Don't believe me ... please."

Humility

Six or eight years ago I signed up for an accountability group, and got paired with two random guys from church. When I met one of them — I'll call him "Bill" — my first thought was, "I never believed I would so stoop so low."

Oh, Bill's a nice guy, but he's a maintenance man. Never went to college, a recovering alcoholic. He's 40-something with a long scraggly beard and a pot belly. Bill doesn't talk a lot until you get to know him, so — if you're judgmental like me — you figure it's because he's not bright enough to say much.

When I met him, I knew we had nothing in common. Why should we bother building a friendship?

Uh ... maybe because I was wrong.

Bill and I actually share a lot. We both love Jesus poorly, but long to do better. We struggle with lust about every day and are prone to depression. Bill and I love telling bad jokes — but his are usually about somebody walking into a bar, proving that I'm more spiritual. He's a phenomenal listener; Bill has endured my venting for almost our entire weekly meeting sometimes. He may seem "simple" on the surface, but then he unexpectedly spouts wisdom from the school of hard knocks.

One week something extraordinary happened. At the end of our meeting, we were having such an interesting conversation that he invited me to ride along while he picked up his daughter for volleyball practice. Now, I'm sure he was embarrassed to have a friend in his work van. I sat on a wooden bench covered in dirty shag carpet, the best seating he could offer. But as he drove, we talked ... about our shared faith; about ideas that, in my arrogance, I had thought were over Bill's head. I saw a new part of his world for the first time while we rattled and bumped along.

It was one of those defining moments in a friendship where you recognize, only in the aftermath, that you've been invited deeper into someone's world than you've ever been before. I knew then I was proud to be called Bill's friend. Of course, I almost missed the opportunity ... because I was far too good for him.

If you're too good for someone in your life, guess who deserves the blame for your lack of community?

Love and Loss

So if you want to know and be known, try practicing forgiveness, integrity, and humility. Your friendships are guaranteed to reach a deeper level.

But remember that without one more quality — love — community is still an empty word. Friendships can't hurt nearly so bad ... and they also won't mean a thing.

Grandpa was one of my heroes. He was always well-spoken and well-dressed; the respectable gentleman who wore a suit to church every Sunday. Practically everyone we met knew and loved the guy behind the counter at his corner store. Fred's Food and Variety was an old-fashioned place where the owner was usually present; where you could run a tab if you were behind that month; where you might even find an anonymous bag of groceries on your porch while you were between jobs.

When we went to his house, where the driveway seemed as long as a city block, he had bicycles standing by that we could ride up and down the blacktop. Sometimes he took me and my brother into the backyard to play football. Sure, he had to throw underhand because of his back, but that was OK — we were more likely to catch it anyway.

Well into retirement, Grandpa rented a booth at the flea market and designed custom-made trophies in his wood shop. I tried to keep up by opening a stationery store in my bedroom and publishing my monthly newspaper, The Halitzka Journal, in grade school. Without ever realizing it, he got me started as a freelancer.

Few people embodied forgiveness, integrity, and humility in my life like Fred Holfelder. I remember looking forward to the day when we could relate as adults; when Grandpa could be proud of me for making my way in the world. But unfortunately, when I was a sophomore in college, Grandpa had one more lesson for me about living in community, and it was the hardest one:

Loss.

Every relationship has an ending. That's why community is so rare — and so painful. We hire undertakers to handle our dead so we don't have to face mortality. If you dare to form intimate friendships, those people will move out of state someday. If you don't break up with your boyfriend, you'll marry him. Then years hence, when you love him far more than you do now, he'll die.

I remember standing up at Grandpa's funeral with my voice breaking and sharing memories. I loved him too much not to cry. Today, I still wish he was here to see how I've followed in his footsteps and maybe become a man he could be proud of. I hope he's looking down from heaven to enjoy the view.

Unfortunately, building a community, with one person or one hundred, is difficult. It calls us to bravely face loss; not running from grief but passing through the Valley of the Shadow. Knowing and being known will wound you so badly you'll never completely heal. Yet if friendships are to be worth having, and life worth living, you need to care anyway. A daring love called agape is the essence of authentic community.

Grandpa probably didn't know the Greek word for God's love; he never went to college. But from a lifetime of experience, he definitely knew what agape was about.

Source: boundless


Being a "Different" Person

Have you ever felt like you're the one strangest person among people around you?
Have you ever thought that, even tough everyone was unique, but you seemed had the most uniqueness among them?

It takes the guts to stand up and just being you when you're in a condition like that. I have tried once to act differently than the way I have used to be. But it didn't work, I felt like I was completely not me. I have some unique quirks... well actually I think everyone at least has one unique quirk. But in some cases, if you have an unusual quirk among people around you, they usually tend to give you suggestions, advices, anything they think is a good way to change you, to conform you with the "normal" habit according to their perspectives.

I'm not talking about a rebellion topic here, neither the wrong attitudes or sins. If they are the cases, then the only solution is to change them, which is started from renewing the heart. But I'm just talking about uniqueness... Something that was born within us naturally... something that supposed to has the right to be admitted, respected, and celebrated. Because it creates colourful relationships among us.

We do have a responsibility to adjust ourselves with the community where we're in, if it's necessary. But we don't have to lose our authenticity, we shouldn't let it vanishes. God has put some different quirks in each of us, including talents, for a purpose. He created each person to fulfill a particular purpose, so He needs to put some particular ingredients to make that happen. It's just that simple.

Of course, as you already know, not everyone can grasp this truth. So we just need to be wise in assorting between the advices that we need to follow and the other contrary ones. One thing to remember, as it says:
"You were born original, don't die a copy"


Unik 'n Spesifik

Another meaningful lesson from "Kungfu Panda" movie:

Benih pohon cherry teuteup bakal jadi pohon cherry, ga peduli seberapa besarnya kita berharap benih itu bakal tumbuh jadi pohon apel atau pohon jeruk.


Itu omongan Master Oogway ke Master Shifu, sebelon Master Oogway terangkat ama daun-daun pink... waktu Master Shifu mempertanyakan soal si Poo (Kungfu Panda).

Simple tapi dalem... Khususnya buat ortu kali yah... coz masih banyak ortu yang bukannya berusaha mengenali benih apa yang Tuhan titipin ke mereka, tapi malah memaksakan harapan mereka sendiri ke benih itu. Padahal yang ciptain benih itu kan Tuhan, Dia yang ngasih setiap anak kemampuan, talenta, dan keunikan-keunikan lain yang memungkinkan anak itu untuk menggenapi tujuanNya yang spesifik atas keberadaan anak itu di dunia. Dia yang punya rencana, dan setiap anak itu adalah milikNya. Bagian orang tua adalah mengenali keunikan anak mereka (mengenali benih) 'n membantu sebisa mungkin mengembangkan sampai ke potensi maksimalnya.

Di "Kungfu Panda" movie, ini ditunjukin ama pengakuan Master Shifu ke Poo, waktu dia bilang something like this, "Waktu kamu konsen ke kungfu, kamu gagal. Tapi mungkin ini juga salahku, aku ga bisa melatih kamu sama seperti aku melatih 5 pendekar yang lain. Sekarang aku tau bahwa cara untuk melatih kamu adalah melalui makanan..." sambil nunjukin semangkok bakpao yang menggiurkan ituh... (jadi inget bakpao Chik Yen... slurp... hueee... pengen bakpao kacang tanahnya Chik Yen... ok back to the topic =p)

Dan akhirnya kan beneran kebukti, setelah Master Shi Fu memperlakukan Poo dengan spesifik sesuai keunikannya, melatihnya ke arah destiny-nya (to become the dragon warrior), Poo akhirnya berhasil ngalahin Tai Lung.

Sebenernya ini juga ga terbatas cuman bisa diterapin antara ortu ama anaknya juga siy, tapi bisa juga antara guru ama murid, antara pimpinan ama bawahan yang dia pimpin... coz untuk mengerjakan something spesific secara maksimal itu butuh orang dengan spesifikasi khusus juga.

Misalnya, orang yang tipe rame 'n marketing abis, trus bukan tipe orang yang organized gituh, kalo disuruh duduk diem ngerjain administrasi atau keuangan pasti dia bisa stress 'n performa kerjanya ga bagus. Bukan karna dia emang parah atau ga pinter, tapi karna bidang kerjanya ga sesuai ama spesifikasi dia (potensi dan keunikan dia). Coba ditempatin di kerjaan yang cocok, pasti bisa maksimal, tinggal diasah 'n perbanyak pengalaman. Sebaliknya, kalo tipe orang yang organized, yang ga terlalu banyak ngomong, yang suka nulis, disuruh cuap-cuap jadi bagian marketing atau MC, bukannya ga bisa, bisa siy bisa, tapi pasti ga bisa maksimal kayak orang yang emang potensinya di situ. Tapi kalo dia jadi penulis atau apapun yang sesuai ama spesifikasinya, pasti bisa maksimal 'n sukses. Kalo hasil "penempatan" yang ga cocok itu cuman bikin frustasi kedua belah pihak, then maybe it's about time to do things in the right way ;-p

Ini juga bisa diterapin di persahabatan atau relationship juga. If we want to help and maximize other people, we shouldn't force them to fulfill our expectations. Mereka adalah benih-benih unik yang diciptain Tuhan. Garis-garis di batang pohon aja ga ada yang sama persis satu ama yang laen, karakter binatang aja ga ada yang sama persis, apalagi manusia yang onderdilnya jauh jauhhhhhh lebih complicated daripada taneman atau binatang. Kalo kita emang bener-bener mau memaksimalkan orang lain, hal pertama yang sangat masuk akal buat dilakuin adalah mengenali keunikannya, mengenali potensinya, bakatnya, passion-nya... Coz semua itu udah ditaruh Tuhan di masing-masing kita. Kalo itu udah dikenalin, bakal lebih gampang buat bantu mengasah 'n najeminnya. Yang ngebantu 'n yang dibantu sama-sama seneng kan? Ga ada yang frustasi karna pemaksaan =p Win win solution hehehe...

And... as we know this truth, there's no reason to be jealous of other's uniqueness. Cause you are unique in your own way, each of us have a different kind of uniqueness. Kita kudu sama-sama ask God 'n belajar mengenali diri sendiri juga, buat tau benih apa yang Tuhan taruh dalam diri kita. Coz ga semua orang bertumbuh di lingkungan yang mendukung perkembangan keunikannya. Masih ada orang-orang, keluarga, 'n lingkungan yang ga ngerti kenyataan tentang "benih" ini. And the most trusted One to guide us is Himself, our Creator, who had put the seed in us... ;-)


Self Image and Labelling

Isu tentang self image atau gambar diri memang adalah masalah mendasar yang dialami hampir setiap orang, walau yang saya tahu kebanyakan dialami kaum wanita. Banyak penilaian yang dilakukan oleh lingkungan terhadap wanita, baik dari segi fisik maupun karakter: cantik, jelek, feminin, tomboy, anggun, serampangan, gaul, nerd, rame, pendiam, dan masih banyak lagi... Kalau ada yang pernah merasakan akibat dari dinilai dan dihakimi secara subjektif oleh orang lain, you're not alone, I've been there... dan saya tahu banyak wanita juga yang mengalaminya.

Please never see yourself as a victim... cause the truth is, you are fearfully and wonderfully made by God. Kalau boleh saya bilang, justru sebenarnya mereka-lah yang menjadi korban dari kriteria-kriteria yang mereka tentukan sendiri, dan mereka menempatkan diri mereka menjadi hakim yang menilai orang lain, padahal as we all know, the only One who has the right to judge is Him, only Him. Saya juga tidak luput dari kesalahan ini, saya pernah ada di posisi menjadi orang yang dinilai dan dihakimi orang lain, tapi saya juga pernah ada di posisi yang menilai dan menghakimi orang lain. Keduanya sama-sama tidak benar hehehe... coz we are all human, struggle to be right and do the right things... Kita melakukan kesalahan yang terkadang melibatkan orang lain dalam akibatnya dan terkadang kita juga harus ikut menanggung akibat dari kesalahan orang lain... Yah begitulah dunia yang sementara ini hehehe... nggak heran kalau dibilang orang sabar disayang Tuhan hehehe...

Tadi pagi sempat terlintas di pikiran saya tentang hal ini dan saya jadi teringat Dia waktu dulu jadi manusia di bumi. Dia juga pernah diberi label oleh banyak orang, bahkan sampai sekarang juga masih. Dulu dia dianggap "rendah", seorang pelahap, karena Dia bergaul dengan pelacur dan sering makan bareng pemungut cukai dan orang-orang "berdosa" lainnya. Dia juga dianggap penghujat Allah karena Dia bilang bahwa Dia anakNya. Dia dinilai dan dihakimi berdasarkan kriteria penilaian yang diciptakan golongan-golongan manusia tertentu, yang intinya semua penilaian-penilaian itu sangat sangat subjektif.

Ada orang-orang yang meremehkan Dia, ada yang menyanjung Dia, ada yang mencemooh Dia, ada yang mempunyai harapan dan agenda-agenda pribadi terhadap Dia. Setiap orang melihat Dia dengan cara pandang yang berbeda-beda. But what makes me so amazed is, He stand still! Dia cuek dan lempeng aja... Dia tahu siapa DiriNya dan Dia tahu nilai diriNya yang sejati... Dia tidak tergoyahkan atau dipengaruhi sedikitpun oleh pandangan dan penilaian semua orang lain terhadapNya. Is that cool or what?

Memang benar kalau dibilang bahwa Dia pernah mengalami setiap hal yang kita alami. It's true indeed... Inti masalahnya sama, solusinya sama, walau bentuk luarnya sedikit berbeda. He's really connected with our life... Dia ada untuk menjadi teladan kita, kita bisa mengikuti jejakNya, dalam setiap hal yang kita hadapi... just remember His life on earth...

Memang sakit rasanya dinilai dan dihakimi orang lain, memang butuh waktu dan mungkin usaha keras untuk mempunyai gambar diri yang benar, untuk bisa memandang diri kita sendiri sama seperti Dia memandang kita. I'm on my journey too... and I know He is with me... so don't give up, coz He called us as His precious and He loves us unconditionally, in His sight, we are so beautiful coz we are created according to His image. But because He is soooo creative, He created each of us differently, add some sense of uniqueness in physical, character, and other attributes of ourselves... Receive them, they are blessings from God... and embrace them...

I'm on my journey too... wanna join me? Hehehe...

Explore yourself, nurture yourself, and glow beautifully from inside out!
You go gals!!!

Finding Yourself

Do you believe that you are unique?
Do you know that you are the only one?
Do you actually see yourself as a very bery special person?

Jujur dulu jawabanku "enggak"... coz like most of people, I just think that I'm just an ordinary person, just an average person, just a person... yang kadang masih ngerasa minder kalo liat orang laen bisa ngelakuin something yang aku ga bisa, kalo liat orang yang punya karakteristik tertentu yang aku ga punya, kalo liat orang laen diistimewakan 'n disukai banyak orang karna dia punya sesuatu yang aku ga punya... intinya semua itu karna aku ngebandingin diri ama orang lain... yang seharusnya juga pointless coz pada kenyataannya masing-masing dari kita memang Dia ciptain dengan kombinasi unik yang jelas-jelas berbeda antara satu dengan yang lain. Dan tujuanNya emang bukan supaya kita saling membandingkan, tapi supaya saling melengkapi...

Kadang untuk sebagian orang, ini adalah perjuangan yang membutuhkan waktu lama, khususnya buat orang-orang yang tidak pernah atau kurang menerima input positif tentang keunikan dan kelebihan mereka dari orang-orang terdekat mereka. Selama kita belum memperbarui pikiran kita dan memandang diri kita dari mataNya, sadar atau enggak kita akan tetap mempercayai bahwa kita hanya orang biasa aja, orang rata-rata, atau bahkan orang yang punya banyak sekali kekurangan... and they are all lies... kebohongan yang dijejalkan iblis dalam otak kita agar kita tidak bisa hidup dalam kebenaranNya, agar kita tidak bisa bersinar seperti sebagaimana kita seharusnya (hei, we are all His stars!).

The truth is... no one more than others and no one less than others... Setiap kita mempunyai ciri khas, karakteristik, potensi, bakat, talenta, dan "warna" masing-masing... Saat kita berada di fungsi yang tepat kita pasti tahu bahwa kita memang diciptakan untuk itu. Pernah baca buku "Purpose Driven Life"nya Rick Warren? Yap, that's the basic... Dia menciptakan kita untuk suatu tujuan, seluruh diri kita dibentuk supaya kita bisa berfungsi dengan maksimal untuk tujuan itu, termasuk segala keunikan dan perbedaan kita.

Seperti kaktus, dia sudah diciptakan dengan kondisi dimana dia emang bisa tumbuh dalam waktu lama tanpa air, dan daunnya bisa berubah bentuk menjadi duri (supaya bisa mengurangi penguapan air lewat daun) karena dia dimaksudkan untuk menjadi tumbuhan padang pasir atau daerah yang kering banget, dia dimaksudkan untuk tujuan yang berbeda dari kebanyakan tumbuhan lain yang membutuhkan air untuk kelangsungan hidup dan pertumbuhannya. Ini satu contoh yang rada ekstrim aja siy, kalo mo beneran buktiin setiap ciptaanNya itu unik browse aja sendiri satu-satu di wikipedia yah hihihi...

Ini juga berhubungan ama pekerjaan juga siy... I'll tell you my own story... Aku kelas 3 SMA dulu ambil jurusan IPS (aku ga suka fisika, kimia 'n biologi, terutama kimia, gara-gara pelajaran satu itu ada nilai merah di raport, sekali-kalinya seumur idup! Gimana ga bete ama kimia hehehe...), so aku prefer IPS aja, aku lebih suka hafalan daripada hitungan. Kuliah aku ambil jurusan ekonomi akuntansi, coz banyak lapangan kerja di bidang itu, lagian itu bidang yang lumayan umum 'n aman, plus... aku juga bisa, terbukti lulus cumlaude IPK 3,6 (bukannya nyombong, asli aku cuman ngafal 'n nyoba ngerti aja, padahal prinsip-prinsip utamanya ga gitu nempel hehehe, apalagi sekarang dah berapa taun ga megang, dah ilang bersama angin kali hihihi...). But... ada satu titik dimana aku mulai ragu 'n mulai ngerasa kalo aku ga sejalan ama bidang akuntansi. Aku mulai panik coz aku bener-bener ngerasa kalo aku ga enjoy seandainya aku kerja di bidang akuntansi, sedang aku sendiri gatau aku pengen kerja apaan... Tapi justru itulah kesempatan dimana aku bener-bener jadi nanya ke Dia, sebenernya apa rencanaNya atas aku, apa bidangku, dimana "tempat"ku,... 'n yang ada di benakku waktu itu cuman bidang media, walo aku sendiri belon terlalu jelas bidang spesifiknya apa.

Ko Lung yang pertama kali nyodorin ide gimana kalo aku ikut Basic Training di CBN, coz ada pelajaran bikin skenario juga 'n dia tau aku suka nulis. So, setelah beberapa bulan penuh doa, kebimbangan, peneguhan 'n masa-masa stress mempertimbangkan semuanya,... (ceritanya panjang niy, jadi satu buku diary hehehe...yea however, leave people that you love and leave everything that you've known to be a stranger in a far away place is not an easy choice to do) akhirnya aku mutusin buat pergi ke Lippo Cikarang. But somehow, there's a strange feeling yang bikin aku ngerasa kalo kayaknya aku bakal lama di sini, bukan cuman 3 bulan training seperti perkiraan banyak orang... So aku jalanin... kadang masih dengan kebingungan juga... Then aku coba magang di Dept. Produksi, which is juga ga bertahan lama (yang ini juga ceritanya panjang hehehe... yang mo tau tanya aja langsung yah hehehe...), sampe akhirnya tibalah aku di departemen IT, jadi WebContent di jawaban.com 'n gabung di forumnya... Finally I feel that this is where I belong!

Writing has been my passion 'n it's getting stronger here hehehe... Gimana ga, kerjaan nulis eh masih ngeblog juga hehehe... Ya, that's me, Dia udah nyiptain aku dengan keunikan dan passion tertentu untuk tujuan tertentu... Orang-orang yang bilang kerjaan ini "aku banget" udah banyak hehehe... Sampe saat ini aku bersyukur banget Dia pimpin aku, coz I know this is a process, saat dimana aku mulai menemukan "jalur"ku dan mulai berjalan di track yang seharusnya itu baru permulaan... Masih ada jalan di depan yang aku ga tau persis bakal kayak apa, but at least I'm in His spesific path. I've already know that God use me through my writings... dan itu bikin aku jadi tau gimana caranya aku bisa ngembangin diri, nambah pengetahuan, dll... Jadi usaha-usaha yang aku lakuin udah punya arah yang jelas, ga blur lagi. Bidang media, lewat tulisan ^.^

Cuman ini yang perlu diinget, jangan pernah membatasi Dia dengan pemikiran kita... Coz kalo Dia menciptakan kita untuk satu tujuan yang spesifik, Dia juga pasti sudah memperlengkapi kita dengan karakteristik dan passion yang spesifik juga dalam diri kita supaya kita bisa terus berkembang dan mencapai tujuan itu... Dan, dalam perjalanan, Dia juga pasti bakal semakin memperlengkapi kita juga...

So, have you already walk on your spesific path?