I casually joked with a colleague
whose name was Kelvin, I asked if his own Kelvin was Kelvin Hart or Kevin
Costner. Another colleague pointed out how Kevin Costner had lost most of his
hair and was no more the looker he used to be. That statement got me thinking
about trends in my space for the past two months.
I went on a training recently and
by the time I came back, a building very close be my office had been possessed
by court order and eventually the process of demolishing commenced. As of
yesterday, the whole building had been demolished. I wondered how things could
change in such a short period of time.
As I walked home from work, I
observed a complex where I usually shop for cosmetics and I saw that it was
being demolished too. I wondered again at how things could change in such a
short period of time.
As humans, we need to be able to
define where our identity stems from and one big lesson I have learnt, and I am
still learning is that your identity must stem from the intangible.
Some of us get our identity from
our jobs, the question is what if that job ceases to exist tomorrow, will you
also cease to exist? The point is nothing in life is certain. You are not your
job or whatever you do to make a living.
For some other group, their
identities are gotten from their relationships. This also is dangerous; we all
need to be able to look inwards and not derive our identity from our
relationships. What if that loved one passes on tomorrow or that friend betrays
you? Remember that man at its best is still a man. Also, you shouldn’t forget
the dangers of putting your trust on a mere mortal like you.
Beauty and looks for some people are
what defines them. Well, if that is it- remember that age will come and no
matter how hard you try to defy it, it will take its course. Beauty is
fleeting, anything can take it away.
The last, which is the most
common is that- people derive their identities from their possessions which in
my opinion, leads to a life of struggle and the need to always want to amass
and amass. Coming from a religious angle and drawing from the Good Book, remember
Jesus once said- “beware of covetousness, the worth of a man is not in the
abundance of the things he possesses”. That was why Job’s wife told him to
curse God and die. She was indirectly telling him that ‘you have lost
everything and that makes you a nobody- there is no longer any reason for your
existence’. But Job knew better, he knew that all he had gotten was from God.
After so much pondering on the
uncertainty of life, I came to conclusion that my identity should stem from my
faith in an unfailing God and the work that Christ wrought on the cross on my
behalf. This will develop my values from the intangible and form who I become.
My Identity is rooted in the God who causes all things to work together for my
good. So, no matter what life brings my way, I am not moved, I know fully well
that the things which are seen are subject to change but the things which are
not seen are eternal.
What are your thoughts on these,
has any occurrence really explained the uncertainty of life to you and how did
you scale through?
Written by Guest writer- Adeteju
Adeniran
Photo Credit- Adeteju Adeniran
Story Reference from the Good Book- Luke 12:15; Job 2:9-10
She can be reached via-
LinkedIn/Facebook: Adeteju
Adeniran
Hmmm... This are deep stuff.
ReplyDeleteI would like to think that my work defines me and not in the way of the if that work leaves but what next but in the fact that I find purpose in my work.
I enjoy writing, creating content, strategizing and coming up with new ideas... but just like you rightly stated from the good book, "A man's life does not not consist in the abundance of things that he has" so at the end of the day I agree with you that it is always best to look at the things that are eternal.
Good Read, deep insights.
Thanks for sharing.
DeleteThank you @Yimmie for your comment. Nice having you on the blog.
Really amazing and an insightful read too.
ReplyDeleteWe thank our amazing blogger for the day- Adeteju.
DeleteGood thoughts, Adeteju. The reasonableness of deriving purpose from the "invariable" is just incontrovertible.
ReplyDeleteThis is very thoughtful.It`s a good insight in defying identity.
DeleteThank you for visiting the blog. @Kayode
DeleteWorthy read! Praying our thoughts do not get fixated on ephemerals at the expense of the eternal. Thanks Adeteju!
ReplyDeleteAmen! Great prayer.
DeleteI feel you baby. My entire life relates to this, and the hope in Christ has been the sustenance. This piece is a great stuff of eternal value. Our focus should be on Christ - the author and finisher of our faith. Thanks for the insightful write-uo
ReplyDeleteVery true @our focus should be on Christ.
DeleteThank you for sharing your thoughts on the article.
My identity is based on the intangible, not the tangible. True!
ReplyDeleteTrue. Thank you our oga at the top for your worthy comment. We appreciate you.
DeleteI can so relate,I use to depend so much on relationships and things for validation. But now i know better,as a child of God, identity crisis can only be shut out by constantly anchoring our entire human race to the father. The satisfaction and bliss that we really yearn for is in him, not the things that will in no time prove ephemeral.
ReplyDeleteThank you for this piece Adeteju
True. It's so easy to derive our worth from the things and people we see around us. Meanwhile, our only source and worthy anchor who wouldn't change with time or leave is God. He is a stable Anchor, and so, worthy of hinging or identity on.
DeleteThank you for joining in the conversation.
Lovely write-up, deep stuff.Proud of you Sis
ReplyDeleteWe bless God for her life. She is indeed a blessing.
DeleteSo insightful
ReplyDeleteThank you.
DeleteAdeteju, this is a masterpiece. Indeed our identity is really about who we are, not only about what we have. One question I occassionally myself is "who are you becoming?". Also, my direct supervisor often asks a question that resonates with me "would you rather be or have?". Mind you, in the process of being, we would have.
ReplyDeleteI love the topic and the areas you addressed. I have fears. This generation is so vain. I am concerned how many identities have been lost. While we do not rest on our oasis in achieving our dreams, I hope we put ourselves under constant reality checks.
DeleteHmmmmh. Very true. The answer indeed lies in putting ourselves under reality checks per time, so we won't anchor our identity to ephemeral things,because it's so easy to do.
DeleteThank you @Oluwatosin Ilori for the awesome addition/comment.
This is a wonderful piece. I just had a mindshift. God bless you for the insight Adeteju.
ReplyDeleteI say Amen on Adeteju's behalf.
DeleteThank you for stopping by.