Sunday, January 10, 2010

Unfairness - what a blessing!

It's eating me alive! I am so mad, because I feel treated unfairly. It happens to me all the time. Over and over again:

I work really hard - and my boss or a co-worker takes credit for it.
I go above and beyond with my work - but my co-worker gets an award, even though she didn't even accomplish half as much as I did.
I struggle to afford something new - and they sell me something that has little flaws that I will only notice once I can't take it back anymore.
I save my last penny to get my car fixed, they replace a part - and two weeks later, the car starts making the same weird sounds again.

Life is not fair.

I guess it happens to all of us, but still, I feel mad about these little things in everyday life. I feel treated unfairly.

Maybe I am a little overprotective because I am a single woman. When I go to a store or bring my car to a garage, there is no man behind me that stands up for me.

Maybe they really think:
"Oh, she is just a woman, she has no clue about cars... she won't notice if we do a bad job. And she has a foreign accent - what is she going to do, anyway?"
Or maybe I'm just imagining this.

Fact is: Life is tough. And I have to be tough, too. We all do. ... Really?

The truth is: I'm not tough at all. And I don't want to be tough at all times.

I'm not the kind of person that fits well into an elbow society. I can't walk over people to get to the top. I don't always fight to get it my way. I don't want to fight all the time!

So, how can I survive in a world that is full of unfairness? What can I do so that I won't get eaten alive by all of this unfairness?

Maybe the solution requires a change of perspective. True, life is not always fair, but there are so many situations in which it was to my own advantage that life wasn't fair.

There are all the little things:
Like the colleague who was nice to me, even though I was in a really bad mood the other day. The waitress, who brought me another refill in a to-go cup, even though I definitely didn't overtip her.

There are the big things:
Like my parents - the absolutely bestest parents in the whole wide world - who I don't really deserve, when I take into account how often I yelled at them as a teenager.

And then there are the really big things:
God's mercy. The fact that he died on the cross for all my sins. Thank God that this world is unfair. Thank God that all my sins are forgiven even though I do not deserve it.

Next time, life shows its unfair side - maybe it will help to remember this. I might just be a woman with a foreign accent and no man that stands up for me at work or at the car repair, but hey! I have a God that stands up for me! So, keep your work award and your perfectly humming engines, I'll just stick with my eternal salvation, thank you very much!

Friday, January 8, 2010

Why I believe

I know a lot of people in academia who do not believe in God. They regard themselves as rational people and who "go by the facts". In their eyes, I am naive and blue-eyed. In their mind, they look at things "objectively" when really, they look down on me.

I believe there is a God out there, my God. I'm also in academia. I'm a researcher. I can tell the facts from the fiction. I notice whether an argument is sound and strong or has fallacies and flaws. Because I do not just look at facts, but also at emotions, because I do not just look at everything rationally, but with passion, because I don't just think with my brain, but also with my heart and soul - that's why I believe.