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Donna McArthur's avatar

Elizabeth, I appreciate the way you have been able to wrestle the difficult idea of sacrifice into this beautifully cohesive, and challenging, essay that calls us to both look inward while also creating a wider lens. Thank you for calling our attention and demanding that we open our eyes.

I need to question myself about the sacrifices I think I make but which might be more like playing the martyr or victim. I hope I have done the inner work to move beyond this but I will be moving the whole idea back under the microscope.

I often think about what the parents and children and regular folks in the war-torn countries are called to bear and sacrifice just to get through the day and it gives me a massive reality check.

Massive blessings to Dawn Wooten who is an angel in disguise.

Meanwhile, Elsewhere's avatar

Ditto Donna M's comment: a "beautifully cohesive, and challenging, essay." Like a fine needlepoint. Amazing. Thanks.

Some sacrifice feels objectively virtuous: any of the examples of service beyond self, living in service to others. Some is, as you note, invisible. I imagine also that some is subjective: was it a worthy cause that one gave up something for? did the person really give something up? or are they spinning their own tale of sacrifice that others see through? We might disagree as to the worthiness of cause, the degree of sacrifice, or even the intent of the person.

Another thought: there are those who hear Dawn's story as a cautionary tale - see what happens when you act on what's right? And there are those who are inspired by it, and who ask "where could I step up my game even a bit to sacrifice - really give up something?" As with many things, ones worldview will determine if you think there is more of one type and less of the other.

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