Yesterday I told someone they were not special. And I waited
as all the people around me opened their mouths in shock and shot me their judgmental
glances.
I’ll say it again, YOU ARE NOT SPECIAL.
I say this not to put you down. I say this because it is the
cold hard truth. You are not special and neither am I. Society has taken each
child, sugared them up, and cushioned their fall— telling them that they are
special and extraordinary and the best child in the world. This is seeing a child
getting a participation ribbon because we don’t want to hurt anyone’s feelings.
Doing this ultimately sets a child up to fail. Life is NOT
for sissies. It is going to be cruel to you and you are going to cry. You are
going to have times when you want to give up and quit. And there is NO WAY to
prevent or stop it.
You are not special. You are going to get hurt and you are
going to fail. But guess what? That’s okay.
Did you hear me? That’s okay.
In this society of telling people that they are special and
padding their falls, we forget that it is okay to be ordinary, and to fall.
You are ordinary. And ordinary people are the kind of people
I want to surround myself with. Ordinary people are the ones that are behind
the scenes. The people that are making things happen. These kind of people are
the ones who know that life sucks, but it doesn’t stop just because you are
hurt. They are the people who find something that gives them hope because they
know that there is something more than participation ribbons. They know that
they have to work for what they want and that what they want will not be handed
to them.
Ordinary people focus on the nitty gritty tasks in life. They do
the jobs that aren’t flashy. They are the teachers who love their students and
stay after school to help a student who is struggling in their class. They are
the counselors who are so spread thin that they feel they can’t help themselves
let alone another person, but they keep coming back. They are the father who
works late and misses dinner with his kids to provide food for them. They are
the single mothers who have to put their children in child care so she can work
meanwhile the other mothers judge her for not spending more time with her
children. They are the college students who work while they take classes
because they aren’t handed everything. They are the survivors— the ones who
have been through the hard things and keep fighting. These are the ordinary
people.
Society needs ordinary people. The Kingdom of God needs ordinary
people. We need ordinary people.
So, no, you are not special. You are ordinary. And that is
one of the most beautiful and needed callings to have. You are needed. You are
loved. And you are enough. But my goodness, you are not special. You are
ordinary. And that is a beautiful thing.