The Gift of Acceptance: Loving Who They Are, Not Who You Want Them to Be
There is a quiet ache many people carry into relationships. It is the hope of being loved, paired with the fear of being truly known. To be known means to be seen. And to be seen means to risk rejection which is hard for all of us, regardless of our age, gender, or status. Yet, acceptance, real acceptance, is one of the greatest gifts love can offer.
This week’s blog will focus on the gift of acceptance. Acceptance is not loving someone for who they could be, your dream version of a person, or even the potential that you see. All of those ideas may be included in your love. But true acceptance means that you love them for who they already are, not who you (are them) want to be.
Long before James and I ever became a couple, we were friends. And even then, something about talking or being around James felt safe. I could talk. Really talk. This made it easy to share everything with James. I shared my disappointments, my hurts, my fears, and yes, even the parts of myself I believed made me unworthy of love. I never had to polish my story or protect my image. James would always listen without judgment. Always.
He never filtered what I shared through a critical lens. Never tried to fix me. Never made me feel small. I believe that kind of acceptance disarms you to allow you to be vulnerable for love to grow. I think love grew between us because we created a space where walls came down naturally. We created a space where honesty was possible and uninhibited. This allowed inner healing to begin without effort or performance.
The Gift of acceptance is my focus this week. I’m not certain that love can occur without acceptance. I'm excited to explore that opinion a little further. Let me hear from you. I would appreciate your perspectives as we prepare to write the rest of this week's blogs. Let’s talk about acceptance and what happens when Love begins with safety.

