The most colorful characters I’ve ever known are people I’ve met in recovery. Every one has a story, and so many of stories are hilarious. Also sad and very pathetic. I can relate to them all. But by the time you have some sober time under your belt and the mental fog has lifted, most people in recovery can look back at drunken shenanigans and laugh. And thank God they’re alive.ππ½ Indeed, a lot of boisterous laughter is often heard coming from the rooms of recovery.ππ½
One of those characters texted yesterday to say he was celebrating his 36th sobriety birthdayβmeaning that heβd not had a drink of alcohol for 36 years!ππ½βand it got me thinking of all the sobriety birthday celebrations Iβve been blessed to witness over the years.ππ½ Most of them follow the same format: a good friend gives some sort of lengthy introduction and then the birthday person says a few words. Never has one bragged about the accomplishment being all theirs and the result of something they did; on the contrary, nearly all gave glory and gratitude to God. Without Him, they admit, they wouldn’t have been able to do it. This is humility in action.
I learned about humility in the rooms of recovery–what it was and what it wasn’t–and in doing so, I had to admit just how self-centered and preoccupied with myself I’d been all my life. And still would be if I didn’t hold myself accountable.
“Humility is not thinking less of yourself. It’s thinking of yourself less,” so wrote C. S. Lewis, and he was right. No one respects a door mat. Humility is about seeing oneself as he truly is–nothing more, nothing less.ππ½ Humility is about being “right-sized.”ππ½ Humility is respectful and considerate of others.ππ½ Humility is devoid of arrogance, superiority, pride, conceit, or self-aggrandizement.ππ½ Humility is quiet self-assuredness and confidence.ππ½ Humility just might be the secret ingredient to being a part of something instead of being apart from it!ππ½
Humble yourselves in the sight of the Lord, and He will lift you up. ~James 4:10