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Helping Others to Help Yourself

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I was feeling nostalgic. I cleared out the middle of my bedroom floor. I mustered up enough strength to pull a large, blue, 50-gallon plastic tote from the back of my closet. This tote contains some of my most prized possessions including autographed sports memorabilia, my vast coin collection, photo albums, and so on. I put everything in this tote following a house fire when I was nineteen years old. I rarely took these items out of this tote. Part of it was the convenience factor of keeping it all together during the frequent moves associated with my college years. The other part of me thought it was cool to have a designated box for this kind of stuff.

So there I was sitting Indian style of my bedroom floor sifting through my collection. A flood of memories and sentimental moments sprawled out in front of me. Moving through the pile one item stood out. I looked down and picked it up. It was my college application essay I wrote for my senior year English class. To this day, it was my favorite personal essay to date and for several reasons. I hated English throughout high school, and I received high praise from my English teacher for that essay. He told me that he bragged to the other teachers about it. After I spoke to him one-on-one after getting my grade back, I could see why. I poured my heart into that essay. I wrote that essay during a a particularly tumultuous time in my life. That essay though was a testament to my true self. Reading over it provided a much needed reminder of who I was and am. Even amid tough times and life’s chaos, I put others ahead of myself. I found peace of mind in helping others. It helped me to help others.

People greatly underestimate the power of helping out a fellow human being. When it comes to self-care, being there for others carries with it extraordinary benefits.

Help someone in order to help yourself.

-The Caring Counselor

 

 

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