If I'm alright with myself, then I'm alright with everyone else
If I'm not OK with me, then I can find fault with everyone
~Tom W.
For as long as I can remember I've never wanted to be me. I wanted to be someone else, anyone but who I was. For years and years I was taught I wasn't good enough, smart enough, or worthy of love. It has been a very slow and painful journey to grasps the straws like self worth and self love that hold the keys to my self-acceptance.
My struggle with my self worth and love transfer to my dogs as well. A friend sent me a video about a female lab gently communicating with a very young boy with Down Syndrome. You can see video HERE. The last message on the video was God Doesn't Make Mistakes. And I cried. Not only for myself but for my dogs as well. They could never be that dog who was so tender and understanding with this boy. Logically I know that they are not meant to be that dog, but in those moments I wish they could.
And so because of my own infliction I instantly discredited myself , our dogs and our entire relationship because we are different. And it is in this inner conflict where I gain my strength from the dogs that I have the right to be who I am, just as I was designed at the core of me.
For as much as I may wish Brut or Zappa or any of them to be like so-and-so they have taught me at a depth that no one else could teach me about self value and worth. For they are the very essence of being true to their being and being who they are. It has taken all of their flaws to keep holding that chord that I am not perfect (another one of my character defects), but that I can make mistakes and still be worthy of their love and mine.
For it is in those moments when our true self arises, whether it is with one dog or all six that they show me again and again, I am worth it. And since I believe every relationship with my dogs whether in part or as a whole is a two way street, then I must have shown them that they are worth it too as we reflect this worth back and forth between us.