The Desire to Be Appreciated - Richard L. Evans
The deepest hunger in human beings,” said William James, “is the desire
to be appreciated.” A wife, a mother, can put up with faults and
imperfections—with inadequate income, disappointments, difficult
conditions—if there is kindness, consideration, appreciation. A father
can work and worry, meet problems, debts, discouragement, and face the
world, if there is kindness, consideration, and appreciation. A teacher
can try harder to teach and labor patiently and long, if there is
willingness to learn—and appreciation. A worker can work longer and do
better if there is encouragement and appreciation. We can be driven by
others only so far, but we can drive ourselves much further, if we feel
there is fairness and appreciation. This is true in marriage, in the
home, between parents and children, in business, and in all
relationships of life. Hearts are broken, lives are blighted with
unkindness. Talents and creative gifts are squelched and stifled without
encouragement and appreciation. Children can be made to feel as
nothing, and go nowhere and learn little, and young people never fulfill
their possibilities, except for encouragement and praise and
appreciation. A person can drive, exhort, intimidate, threaten, yet
never realize the results that fairness and appreciation will produce.
It isn’t the work of life that so much
wears us away as the frictions and frustrations: not being noticed, not
being recognized, not being appreciated, not being kindly considered.
Men shrink with fear, withdraw from coldness, and with unkindness harden
or break their hearts; but with kindness, encouragement, appreciation
there can be peace and blessing in the home, satisfaction in service,
and happiness in the heart. In this time of frustrations and too many
tensions, let there be a renewal of appreciation for people, with loved
ones coming closer, with families caring and encouraging, and with
kindness, encouragement, appreciation for all that others do to lighten
and lift the load of life. “The deepest hunger in human beings is the
desire to be appreciated.”
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