Accepting kindness with grace is not one of my superpowers. Accepting it with awkwardness, yes, but grace, no. Every time one of the girls at work asks if Iād like a cup of tea, I deliberate for a beat longer than I should. Usually, the answer is yes, but then I feel beholden to make everyone else in the office a cup of tea at some point in the future, and what if they donāt like the way I make it? But I can hardly say no every time, only to get up twenty minutes later to make my own cup. Then I think, pull yourself together woman, itās only tea.
In the US, it was every woman for herself, with each coffee individually purchased and all restaurant bills meticulously divided right down to the extra side of guacamole. If I borrowed a dollar from somebody, you better believe I paid it back. In Australia, itās a swings-and-roundabouts mentality: Iāll get this round if you get the next one. Donāt worry about splitting up the check, itāll come out in the wash. And you know what? It usually does. Karma isnāt just something that strikes down the bad guys; itās something that helps us to live in harmony.
Of course, itās not just my cultural background that makes me anxious about returning a favor; itās also personal. During my twenties, I was the borrower, the one whose bank account seemed to be set on a slight delay behind real time. Whether it was my roommate spotting me for the rent or my travel buddy shouting me an extra round of beers, I maintained a running tally of what I owed people and made sure that I paid them back in kind. By the time I hit thirty, Iād resolved that weakness, the one that rejected budgeting in favor of instant gratification. It was a hard lesson to learn, and itās not without a few lingering side effects.
Itās been years since Iāve had to pay a friend back, but when someone is kind to me I still canāt shake the feeling that I owe them something in return. At the very least, I owe them an appropriate level of appreciation for what theyāve done, but I donāt always know what that is. Thank you feels hollow, not enough. Returning the gesture at some point is probably a good option, but adding āReciprocate act of kindnessā to my mental to-do list seems to make it less genuine and therefore inadequate. Every Christmas, I throw gifts at Jared, hoping that sheer quantity will overcome the fact that I can never manage to come up with the one perfect present. (Which, by the way, is one of Jaredās many superpowers. He always finds the present that strikes the ideal balance between simple and meaningful.)
Giving, in any capacity, can be fraught with emotional baggage, which is why Christmas, birthdays, and other annual events tend to be twinned with unwanted stress. A wedding, then, is the pinnacle of giving and receiving, because itās only supposed to happen once. Everyone has to cram all of that gifting into one single event, and trying to keep score is a recipe for burnout. Thatās why I found the business aspect of a wedding oddly calming, minus the whole give-me-all-your-money thing. Hereās your invoice, thereās the payment, deal done. No fretting over exactly how to express my thanks because itās right there in a predetermined dollar amount.
Then I entered an online competition for free day-of-coordination services. For an entire month, I was the only entrant. āIf no one else enters, then you win by default,ā the coordinator wrote. āHa ha!ā I didnāt laugh. Two days before the contest closed, a local Hawaiian couple entered, racked up hundreds of ālikes,ā and swanned off with the win. That afternoon I received an email offering us a runner-up prize of partial-day coordination. As soon as my initial excitement wore off, I was stricken. How could I express my appreciation without going overboard or, worse, undervaluing her services? Should I give her a tip? How much, in dollars, was my gratitude worth?
I sent a gushing thank you email and signed off with a promise to add good reviews to Wedding Wire and Yelp. Working out tips could come later; at least for now I wanted to offer her some sort of pledge that Iād do something tangible to repay her favor. As soon as I hit send, I felt like an idiot. She wasnāt doing this because she wanted something. She did it to be kind. She offered me a wedding day cup of tea and I splashed it on her shoes in my haste to make one in return.
Iām stuck in the mindset that kindness is an obligation, but itās not. Showing kindness comes naturally, even if receiving it doesnāt. It feels good to be nice to people. Thereās a reason Ellen DeGeneres signs off her show by saying, āBe kind to one another.ā Any time I catch her show, thereās Ellen, practicing what she preaches. The people cry, and they say thank you, and that is always enough. No one tries to give Ellen a tip or promises to like her Facebook page. Ellen never says, āYour response was unsatisfying, give me back that $10,000 check.ā Kindness does notāor should notācome with self-serving conditions, and running away from it never made the world a better place.
I am trying to remember that kindness is inherently a swings-and-roundabouts system, not a way of keeping score. This morning, I made a cup of coffee for one of my co-workers while we were both in the kitchen. When she found that it wasnāt quite strong enough, she added a teaspoon of instant coffee to her mug and thanked me. I didnāt feel bad; she didnāt either. There was no guilt, only gratitude, because lending and giving are not the same thing. It wasnāt the way I made the coffee that mattered; it was the fact that Iād made it at all.