IS YOUR LOVING SACRIFICE AN INVESTMENT?
You may believe that love requires sacrifice, yet within that requirement may come a sense of deprivation if your sacrifice goes unrecognized. If you feel deprived of your sacrifice you may seek for retribution and possibly even vengeance. You will do that through anger and guilt.
When you sacrifice for a loved one, do you consider that as an investment or is your giving free of all expectation? Does your sacrifice bind the loved one to you with the expectation that they sacrifice in return or else experience guilt? If your beloved fails to provide the expected sacrifice, or meet your standards of sacrifice, does that justify your condemnation? Does your indictment create guilt? Is guilt the glue that binds you to each other but also the reason for your distance and loss of love?
If you invest in a loving relationship as defined by sacrifice, you will expect a return on that investment. If your love is not completely defined by sacrifice, but only partially, and you believe that your sacrifice is unequaled, then you may find sacrifice magnified to become the chief defining quality of your love as you demand an equal return on your sacrifice. If that ‘return' is not forthright, you will indict the other as guilty of NOT recognizing your sacrifices from love and you will expect that they experience guilt. How could they not? And if you have frequently been the impetus of his/her guilt, why would you then expect sacrifice in return?
Guilt is an insidious impediment to love that can sit deep within the subconscious. It festers and slowly eats away at one's self-concept and one's concept of the other. The guilty may seek relief through psychic mechanisms that include repression, reaction formation, denial, displacement, passive aggression and of course, projection. If the ego mind will struggle so hard to deflect and avoid guilt, what could be the result of your constant reminders, often subtle and subliminal, of his/her guilt in not recognizing your sacrifices? Anger and rage will most likely come between you.
Anger projected onto loved ones becomes a substitute for love and has only one purpose - the establishment of guilt. But many believe that creating guilt in the other is an effective means of attaining desired results. Guilt becomes an effective punishment for lack of love.
Does the indictment of your spouse or partner alleviate your guilt, helping increase your innocence? Your ego/self must struggle to be guilt-free, since guilt is suffering, and so it becomes very easy to project it outward in the hope of relief. This is often how many see the world. There are the guilty and then there is me (of course, I, too am guilty, except when I can deny my guilt by focusing exclusively on yours). In your relationship, there is the guilty other and then there is you. The more you indict the guilty, the less guilt you experience, or so you believe.
Guilt and anger tends to rip relationships apart, but also can hold them together, since I'm sure we can all agree that it is the ones we love the most, that bring up the most anger and rage. If I can maintain your guilt, I can make you sacrifice for me. How else could they free themselves guilt if not through greater sacrifice? Therefore, if you follow my plan for sacrifice you too, can be free of guilt.
Do you really believe that by increasing his/her guilt you diminish your own, thereby increasing your innocence? But if we all make errors in judgment, are we not all guilty? Yet, how easily you forget in the moment of anger when they are guilty and you are NOT. But what are they guilty of? Indicting you as guilty, of course! Guilt and punishment are the foundation of society, so we should NOT be surprised that our relationships frequently follow the same rules.
Mutual indictment makes love more of a hell, than our "heaven on earth." Many couples go round and round in the blame game never realizing that the game is so many years old and no one really knows who started it or who's really to blame (this is also seems true for the macro world).
Yet, as time goes by and needs go unmet because sacrifices are ignored, the object of the game is to increase your innocence, by increasing their guilt. Unfortunately, you both know the rules of that game and he/she is playing the same game! Indict him and he easily and effortlessly indicts you. We seem programmed to repeat this compulsive drama countless times, often for many years and through countless relationships. If you find that guilt is an effective motivating strategy, you might employ it in all your relationships.
Guilt is your ‘baggage" and you will seek release from it by defending your innocence and, as we all know the best defense is an effective offense. But your attack inadvertently makes you the guilty party and you must in turn defend your righteousness. This is often the domestic hell committed couples perform, in which sacrifice for each other, (as well as sacrificing for the children) is gauged and measured. Woe be it to the one who fails to meet the most restrictive expectations of sacrifice and often we unknowingly 'raise the bar' following each and every guilty verdict.
Sacrifice is the chief platform in the foundation of our Judeo-Christian culture. We are expected to sacrifice for those we love (just as Christ sacrificed for our 'sins') and it has for some become an obligation regardless of any actual truth. Although I may have been abused and beaten mercilessly as a child, yet, depending on what cultural rules I adhere to, I may be obligated to honor and love thy father and mother.
In addition, sacrifice has become the means of displaying not only our love for our partner but even our children. The problem is that we often enslave our loved ones to guilt because sacrifice is based on relative terms and we all seem to vary in our definition of appropriate sacrifice.
Mother Teresa sacrificed beyond all expectation, but there are few among us who would even consider meeting those unlimited standards. It seems that we partake of a precarious balancing act of sacrificing the 'self' and embracing the 'self;' giving to others and expecting others give in return. So, who wrote the rules for this game, God?!
If we employ sacrifice as a measure of love, we may tend to compare and contrast sacrifice by ‘degrees' and those who sacrifice less may be considered ‘selfish' while those who sacrifice more are ‘selfless' and this can change from moment to moment and vary based on the situation or person. Thus, we have intimate relationships that exist within the limits of such contrasts and base their love on such ‘degrees' of sacrifice. The battle of guilt rages on and resentments settle deeply in the background of our "love" waiting to rise to the occasion, "and after all of done for you!" For some, this is a true representation of 'love.'
LOVE CANNOT SACRIFICE, SINCE IT CANNOT SUFFER
Sacrifice from love is not an expectation, but an honest expression of truth and cannot represent loss. Love is free of conflict and when I give freely and honestly to you, I experience NO deprivation and therefore, how can I define my giving as "sacrifice" since I do NOT suffer loss. Loving sacrifice is not sacrifice at all and has no expectation of observance, need not be emphasized (that's called ‘payback') and has no obligation to necessity. It cannot be measured and is an investment made with NO expectation of future return.
When you make sacrifices for your loved one's, you may do so out of love, but then how could that be suffered as sacrifice? Therefore, deeper truth dictates that sacrifice from love is impossible and thus, you are suffering out of deprivation and not love at all. In our relative world facsimiles of love often pass for the real thing.
Yet, if you employ your sacrifice to contrast another's lack of sacrifice, you have sentenced yourself to the chains of righteousness and you will suffer from lack of love, as will they. But, at least you can rest assured that you were right and if there's one thing the ego requires in this world of relative 'truths,' it is to be right.
In this way, love is defined as "you scratch my back and I'll scratch yours" which is less about love and more a business arrangement requiring numerous conditions on what we seek to have unfold as unconditional, or at least as a gradual dissolving of limitations. We so deeply long for that highest of all love, the love without condition. But, although we all seek this deeper love, we demand it be on our terms and that merely smacks of conditions.
If love is authentic, honest and real, sacrifice is impossible. If love is not 'real' then we should seek for its renewal or discovery in ways other than by measuring and comparing one's degree of sacrifice. Keep in mind that when love wanes we may feel less inclined to sacrifice and this can occur over many years. Therefore, the other may indict you as guilty of not sacrificing when actually, after many years, it is love that has been sacrificed in the name of guilt.
This essay does not attempt to define love since that is a relative concept with many definitions contingent to the mind that thinks it. However, my objective is merely an attempt to identify the possible conditions which may obstruct us from our desire for a love free of limitations. Sacrifice, and the suffering inherent within that belief system, may be just such an obstruction.
Love knows no sacrifice, because giving from love is an abundance, unencumbered by conditions and therefore, adding to you. While an experience of sacrifice is an experience of deprivation and this means you have less and suffer from it.
Therefore, if sacrifice is your experience, recognize that this can only mean that you feel deprived and if you feel deprived then make no mistake, you measure love through sacrifice. Many may contend that love is both giving and getting in return and I would agree. My point is that giving from love should EXPECT no return.

Help




Mike, it really requires such a high level of thinking to not see what you put into loving, as some kind of sacrifice and consequently deserving of some kind of reciprocal reward, preferably in the short term! It is possible, but has its standard human challenges.
The idea of giving ‘just for giving’s sake’ in my opinion also needs one to have such a big picture outlook on life as to conclude that ‘I am giving to the Universe and it will give back to me ultimately’. Gosh, that’s difficult. [I’ve tried that hahaha]
I believe the bigger picture, universal time approach is something very much worth working towards, for those persons who aspire to great spiritual growth and desire to optimise the full range of human experiences, in this case, in sharing with another earthly spirit. The toughest part of such an approach is to maintain your thoughts of purity and also to make peace and harmonious living as your key priority, such that the ‘small stuff’ doesn’t creep up and overwhelm you and your relationship.
Too, too often, the small stuff fades and turns out to be a tempest in a teacup and really not worthy of the pain that went into reacting to it in the first place.
Those were my immediate sentiments. Thanks for the interesting discourse.
Blessings to you my friend. sherri
Sherri,
This essay was specifically tailored to long-term, committed, intimate relationships. However, I think it can apply to all relating.
Working with couples and families has been my work for the past 25 yrs, I have observed these dynamics played out frequently with those who profess to love, yet fail to recognize destructive patterns, such as this essay emphasizes, which become solidified and enfolded into unconscious comfort zones thereby, draining love away.
I'm not sure I agree that identifying patterns of expected sacrifice and resultant guilt requires such a “high level of thinking.” Nevertheless, as you know, I'm an absurd idealist and therefore, I may be reaching to far into the cosmos than most busy people today are capable.
My focus in my work with couples and families has been in assisting them to recognize the default comfort zones that they often unconsciously become mired in and dragged down by, through many years of repetitive patterns. Spiritual ideas are often absent from this overt work, yet spiritual ideas are in me and thus are covertly the foundation of my assisting others (and I practice what I preach in my own relationships).
I agree that we often sweat the small stuff in fear of its growing, when actually it may be simply fading away. However, it is the patterns of seemingly small slights that is often overlooked as “small stuff” but may drain the life from what originated as pure and loving.
I suppose we need to look at both perspectives of overreacting and ignoring.
Thanks again, Sherri, for adding your insightful perspective.
mike S
Well you do know I am an absurd idealist myself too hehe and I am actually thankful that I have others like myself in my circle that are willing to share their perspectives as well. Idealism has its place in the world though, keeping in mind it is visionaries and dreamers who make the biggest steps for change. So let us keep stepping!
Like you, I don't think it is not doable, but I speak above on the general population and their willingness to engage fully. If many people can get away with, let's call it indulgence of their little-ness, then certainly they will! But as you said, one losing sight of the accumulated effect is very often the cause of the stressors building up. Ignoring such things is akin to enabling, if it is behaviour which will lead to unnecessary frustrations ultimately, and cause harm to a healthy relationship.
There is a great quote that says: We do not err because truth is difficult to see. It is visible at a glance. We err because this is more comfortable.” — Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. I have seen this a great many times… hahaha
I do try hard to give the best in all of my relationships, in part because of the feeling of freedom it gives me, that's the truth. Perhaps that is the free spirit in me speaking… It is only recently that I started registering a need to feel free flow right through, i.e. including coming back in! I guess it's been part of my evolution. It's still not a 'tit for tat' thing, whatsoever, but my desire for harmony - myself and with others - does require that I insist on respect for my emotional and mental state at any time, as I will be sensitive to yours as well.
I'm getting much much better at communicating this now. It literally used to drive me to illness to deal with it, I'm that intense. But I'm still a work in progress.
Thanks again to you. sherri
Mike this hits really close to home for me right now. I was doing this when I thought I was being loving and now it has collapsed. But good lesson learned. hopefully next time i will be wiser and more truly loving and giving. thank you for your wisdom
Mike,
I agree with you. In loving my son, starting with carrying him and giving birth, I sacrificed my body's comforts for his life. And there was no loss, only gain.
In my relationship with Jesus (what could be more fraught with issues of sacrifice?) this issue is central as well. I am still trying to work it out. Coming from a Catholic perspective in which sacrifice is everything (starting with Jesus' crucifixion, on to the martyrs of the early Church, and the “holy sacrifice” of the Mass each day being re-enacted in churches around the world, down to the individual sacrifice of entering religious life, which I tried to do for years), I now feel that Jesus does not desire this sacrifice (“I desire mercy and not sacrifice” Matthew 12:7, quoting Hosea 6:6). And in offering these sacrifices to God, it is true I did feel a sense of entitlement. Quid pro quo. I do this for You, God, now You need to do this for me. And how angry I got when it didn't work out that way!
I think the reason I used to think sacrifice was justified as religious expression is because for years I was deprived of things, and so I sought a religious system that exalted that in order to justify my experience and even sanctify it, if you will. Even so, I think that one can do extremely difficult things (like giving birth) without feeling a sense of loss if one does it with great love, and that in this kind of giving there is no need for a return in kind. It is selfless.
Thank you for your thoughtful discussion.
Blessings,
Julie