Burn Out or Divine Discontent
Copyright 2005 Black Butterfly Press
Listen to your spirit when it's telling you it's time to go
Burn out or Divine Discontent
By Dr. Maxine E. Thompson
http://www.maxinethompson.com
They say that every seven years we change. I believe that
spiritually, this is true. When I look back over my resume, I
see that many of my life transitions (from job transfers within
the same department, to relocation to a new city) occurred after
about a seven-year cycle. I've also read that sometimes it takes
a while for our psyche to catch up with the new person who we
have evolved into over this seven-year period. From this I
gleaned another truth. I have never changed without becoming
very discontent first.
Obviously, my authentic self will have changed when my outer
self remained the same. When it is time for us to grow, we
become restless. I wish I could say, I'm this natural
risk-taker, this pathfinder, or trailblazer. But I'm not. I hate
change. I'm a creature of habit and a moderate-risk taker. I
weigh everything, (try to pay my bills down, wrote 2 novels
while working full time, prepared for a career change, etc.)
Now, I'm realizing that to reach your dreams, if you're a play
it safe person, (like me), sometimes you need to get
''burnt-out'' to make you change! And you have to take a leap of
faith. You can't know what God has in mind for you and how He
will work out all the details of your dream!
To illustrate my point, a year ago, I had no idea that I would
end up writing an Internet column, On The Same Page. But I'm
glad I didn't have the plan down pat. Spirit has surprised me!
Yet it is in sync with my deep desires. I'm a reader, writer,
and lover of words. Why not help other writers, as well as
myself, get exposure for our work?
This brought me to this truth. Any major change I've made has
been preceded by a period of total emotional burn-out. I'm
talking true ''fried,'' (brain dead). Over the years, I've come
to this point at different forks in the road. Generally, out of
a misguided sense of duty, I'd stick to a job when I no longer
liked it. I'd push myself to a point that I'd become so
emotionally exhausted I couldn't put one foot in front of the
other. Also, I'd be in a lot of pain. This pain told me
something was wrong. But often, I would fix myself to stay where
I was, which was the source of this pain.
In the past, I used to attribute this to working in a field with
human problems. Oh, the guilt I felt when I would have to take a
leave of absence, (2 in all, that weren't maternity leaves)! I
would feel like I was a failure because I could not live up to
everyone's expectations of me. How dare I rock the boat? After
all, I was the family social worker. Or how would my clients
make it without me? In addition, when I would come to this
point, I'd let down people (bosses) who had come to depend on my
hard work. Moreover, I surprised family members who previously
saw me as responsible. ''Are you sure you don't want to go back
to social work?'' When I responded, ''I'm working on my new
novel,'' I'd hear their silent shock.
Fortunately, now, what I used to call ''burn-out,'' I know is
simply a case of ''Divine Discontent.'' I've come to realize
that it is only when we go against the grain of what other's
expect from us, or even become failures in other's eyesight,
that we go through our major milestones! This is because our
spirit rebels against doing the things which are no longer in
sync with our life's purpose.
The other realization I had is that when I am content, I stay at
the same level. Looking back, for years I was content as a
social worker. It afforded me a living. It allowed me to raise
my children in their own homes. It paid my bills. However, now
that I am venturing into this precarious world of freelance
writing and publishing, I think my tenure as a social worker
brought me something deeper. It gave me a chance to observe
human nature in all of its complexity, which I feel has
contributed to my writing. But to stay in that field, I would
not grow to the next level.
For all my major milestones have been my failures. Sad to say, I
don't go through a learning curve when I am doing well. I think
Ruby Dee said it best. ''God, make me so uncomfortable that I
will do the very thing I fear.''