The Toltecs
From the Grapevine: "When I took the Seventh Step, I had to give God the good and the bad, to do with as he saw fit, not as I saw fit. I don't get to decide which is which any more than I get to decide what he sees fit to remove and when it gets removed, I just had to be totally willing. It's God's time, not mine. That's when people started noticing, even before I did. Over time, God started taking away some of my defects of character, that quite frankly, I didn't even think were defects until people started complimenting me for no longer behaving in the way I once thought perfectly acceptable. Who knew?"
A lot of the time I can confuse pity with compassion. I want to be compassionate, to have concern for the well-being of someone else while at the same time respecting their free will. It means being present for someone while respecting their strengths and capabilities. I try to make myself willing to help but only if the other person wants that help.
Pity: An emotion defined as a sympathetic sorrow, sadness, or compassion evoked by the suffering, distress, or misfortunes of others. While it can act as a bridge to empathy, it can also carry negative connotations of condescension or contempt when it implies a sense of superiority over the person receiving it.
Empathy: The ability to understand, share, and experience another person's emotions from their perspective. It bridges the gap between individuals by allowing you to step into someone else's shoes and vicariously feel their emotional state without taking it on as your own
Pity is feeling sorry for someone and assuming that I have the capability to fix whatever I think needs fixing. It means trying to carry their pain for them instead of allowing them to discover their own ability to change what they don't like for the better. Pity is when I let my concern for others overtake me, make me want to step in and make decisions for them, help them when they should be helping themselves.
We carry the message - we don't carry the drunk.