The Difference Between Asking and Being Willing to Receive

Sometimes, but not always, there’s a difference between asking for something and accepting it and being willing to receive what’s offered.

This post was inspired by some thing from Jonathan Fields; I recommend reading that post here.

When we ask for something, it’s what we want. It so often comes from a place of Ego. A place of there’s me and what I want and there’s everyone else – and what I can get from them.

This is always the case, and I don’t want to split hairs about language, but for the purposes of our discussion, let’s agree that “asking” comes from Ego.

The alternative is being open to “receive.”

This openness requires a few things: vulnerability, respect and love.

To receive, one must be vulnerable. Willing to admit what they don’t know and what others have expertise and/or experience with/in. One must be open to the wisdom and counsel of others – to be a Novice to someone else’s Expert.

Respect is key as well. To respect others is to honor their journey and wisdom. Also, one must respect themselves in relation to others. To know that we all have our own expertise and that together we can solve problems and improve lives.

Separately we achieve much less than when we seek out the wise counsel, and collaboration, of others. When we come from a place of respect we invite others to teach and grow us.

And, most importantly, love. We must love to receive.

The opposite of this is to fear. To fear that others helping us will make us less. That to accept help diminishes us.

We must love. We must serve. When we do we will receive.

When we receive we learn, and grow.

Similar Posts

  • Fail More, Get Better

    When I look at the kids training today… I can tell which ones are going to do well. It’s not necessarily the ones who have the most natural talent or who fall the least. Sometimes it’s the kids who fall the most, and keep pulling themselves up and trying again. – Michelle Kwan If you…

  • What Really Limits Us

    “The limits of my language means the limits of my world.” – Ludwig Wittgenstein The idea that our language creates our world (each of our worlds… ) is very compelling for me. I have long said that humans are meaning-seeking and meaning-creating creatures. We must not only understand our world, but make sense of it,…

  • Search Inside Yourself

    Rather than blather on about why mindfulness is so important and what you can do to increase your ability to act in the moment with awareness, compassion and intelligence, I am going to send you to an article: click here to read what a search engine company teaches more and more of its employees.

  • What Are You? Really?

    I don’t normally “quote” such lengthy bits, but I wanted to share the following (from an e-mail I received from Dave Booda) to 1) get you thinking and 2) ask you some questions. ***** I’d like to share some good news. You are not loved. You are not safe. You are not whole. You are not…

  • Words Create Worlds

    I have long held humans are meaning-seeking and meaning-creating creatures. Language is our primary tool of meaning creation and transmission. The words we use create our lives, both individually and organizationally. If you work in an organization (of any sort, or size) the words that are chosen, and repeated, make a huge difference. Take a…