everyone is illuminated when we allow others to shine
Good News blog. You are always so full of inspiration! 
Marianne Williamson in her book Return to Love, says,  “Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is  that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our darkness  that most frightens us. We ask ourselves, Who am I to be brilliant,  gorgeous, talented, fabulous? Actually, who are you not to be? You are a  child of God. Your playing small does not serve the world.” I love this  quote and what it teaches us about ourselves. 
But this  attitude of mediocrity is being fueled by something besides our  attitudes about ourselves. Sometimes it is other people’s light and not  their darkness that we fear.
The  self-esteem movement led us into the “everyone gets a trophy” era, and  that way of thinking has become detrimental. We have stopped giving  children and ourselves models of what light is. Therefore, mediocrity  has become the standard. We have stopped praising and acknowledging the  light of others. Thus in subtle ways we have stopped encouraging our  children and each other to shoot for the stars. We avoid touting other  people’s accomplishments because it might make someone else feel bad. We  cringe at the very thought that laying out several people’s  accomplishments side by side might make one of them feel bad. But while  this may sound like it is a Christian, charitable thing to do, it  contributes to the problem of no one understanding what constitutes  lights or having models of what can be accomplished or what  possibilities of achievement are out there.
When we live in truth, instead of avoiding any mention of a person’s “brightness” or  their accomplishments, we recognize the truth that we aren’t going to  reach every star every time. But we also realize that by studying,  learning from, defining the “stars” and seeing how others have reached  those stars we are all helped to grow closer to them. No one is helped  by hiding other people’s light or pretending it isn’t there. Everyone is  illuminated when we not only allow others to shine, but we acknowledge  and help share their light.Playing others as small or all alike does not  serve the world.

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