If first base is establishing a principle (mine is She who sleeps on the floor will never fall out of bed), second base is knowing your people.
This flows in two directions, and you need both.
It's both knowing you can absolutely trust them, and being 100% committed to their wellbeing.
I personally think that ideally this will be your family. In my case it is, but in the maternal line. I found that I could completely trust my mother, who would never abandon me and never let me down, and in the same way I know I can completely trust my daughters.
I am also blessed to be married now to a trustworthy man; we make a good team.
A while ago, reviewing my life and the path ahead, I asked myself "Who are my people?"
In tough times, when mutuality becomes starkly important, to whom do I give my commitment and whom do I wholeheartedly trust? Who are my people?
I found that for me the answer is this small group of people that makes up my immediate family. I have unreservedly thrown my lot in with them — when they were children, of course, but also as adults. There are other people who have been true fellow-travellers, people I entirely trusted and for whom I would have done anything, but they are dead now. And there are others I count as friends, people I like and admire and consider trustworthy, but the relationship is bounded in these cases by other commitments — if circumstances were different we could make common cause, but as things are I could not rely on them unreservedly, nor they on me.
It's important to know this clearly, to identify who your people are, because in difficult times you rely on each other. Think about the Amish communities in America; if someone has a barn fire, the whole church will be round to build a new barn. If someone has unusual medical needs, the church has a fund to cover that, or a church action will be raised to generate the funds. Family and church solidarity creates strength in Amish country, practical skills can be shared and pooled.
This can also be true in England — not far from where I live in Hastings there is a Bruderhof community (years ago they were Hutterites and share a similar dress code but no longer belong to that church). They live together and hold all things in common. And In the centre of Hastings we have a church that's a recent plant; it's a sort of grandchild of Holy Trinity Brompton, a strongly Evangelical church in London from which Holy Trinity Brighton was founded, from where in turn people came to make a go of Holy Trinity Hastings which was struggling and small. Some of the founder members actually sold their homes in Brighton and came to live here in Hastings (a place with very apparent challenges), because of their shared vision and commitment. So sometimes the belonging within a church can be trustworthy and strong; I think if you would up sticks and move house for the vision of your church leaders and the call of God on your heart, that is commitment others could trust and rely on.
Yesterday — Christmas Day — my husband spent with his children and grandchildren and ex-wife. She lives in a block of flats where there is a flat set aside for guests, and he'll stay there overnight and the two of them will have breakfast together in the morning before he comes home. He feels a deep loyalty to me and Christmas is a special time, but this is something I encourage him to do because I think it is a very healing thing for families of divorce to be restored in their original family unit at important moments like birthday and Christmas, funerals and weddings. It is a kind of keeping faith. You should be there for the people who trusted you even when the paths you walk have diverged; and trusting someone as I trust my husband and he trusts me means you can trust them to be somewhere else with someone else without it being a loss or betrayal.
So I and my daughters met up for Christmas. One of us has a car (ours was elsewhere with my husband driving it) and she drove round the neighbourhood to collect me (with a hot chicken and some cookies) and her sister (with a trifle and some prepared vegetables).
We all (three households) live within twenty minutes walk of each other.
So lunch came together, prepared in the different houses, and there were Christmas cakes that three of the sisters had got together to ice and decorate a week or so ago. We all brought small presents for each other, meaning no-one's outlay was great but the aggregate result was thoughtful and joyous.
The house where we met up has no car but has a woodstove, so the cheerful fire we sat by was fuelled with logs and briquettes that we went on a mission together to collect a fortnight ago.
We live separately, we each make our own living and manage our own accounts — but we all look out for each other. if anyone hits disaster then she can move into someone else's home until she's back on her feet. That's how it works.
My own preference is for a small group with very deep authentic ties; that's why I think family is the ideal option. In a church community (like the Amish or the Hutterites or the Buderhof), the belonging is ideological but not really personal; so you are sheltered and supported as long as you toe the party line. But if you transgress ideologically, if you fall out with the leadership, you can find yourself out in the cold. That's not what I mean by finding your people. You don't want just fair-weather friends, you don't just want something that works until it goes wrong, you want people who will stick by you through thick and thin, and believe in you; and that is partly their gift and partly earned by your own trustworthiness and unconditional support and love.
It doesn't have to be family. During the second half of the 1980s, a challenging time for coming to terms with the AIDS virus and its impact, when I was giving much of my time to hospice chaplaincy work, I was blessed to make friends with a variety of gay men, and discover the Terence Higgins Trust and such initiatives as the London Lighthouse (which was an AIDS hospice then; I don't know if it still exists or keeps the same emphasis now). These friendships opened my eyes to the existence of a robust network of mutual support among people whose families often had rejected or abandoned them. Living outside the structures of conventional society (this was before the days of civil partnership or gay marriage), I saw how they set about creating found family, establishing sturdy, affirmative and protective links of love and care. I learned so much from that, lessons about how you have to take responsibility for building family and belonging. It's not just something you can take for granted, and it's built on mutuality; it is to some extent transactional. You build it from the quality of your character.
Brené Brown writes and talks about what she calls "the anatomy of trust", using her concept of the marble jar (see here or here). She goes into the anatomy of trust in her books Rising Strong and Dare to Lead (where she applies the concept to the workplace). I think it's a helpful phrase because it conveys that trust holds together, it is a living thing that grows out of connected components developing over time.
Trust is built by faithfulness, by showing up for one another.
There's a really powerful moment in the sixth chapter of John's gospel (verses 66-69, here my paraphrase), that goes like this:
Then many of his disciples turned back and no longer travelled with him. Jesus said to the twelve, “Do you also want to go away?” Simon Peter answered him, “Lord, to whom would we go? You have the words of eternal life; and we have believed, and have come to know, that you are the Holy One of God.”
In asking yourself, "Who are my people?", you want to have got to the place where if someone suggests you should turn your back on them, your soul response is, "to whom would I go?" They are your home, your mycelium of belonging, they are your people.
Of course, you can get this wrong. You can give your heart and your trust and your all to someone who walks away and leaves you, who lets you down — yes, don't I know it! But if that happens you still have the ground of your being, the God who is faithful who walks beside you in Jesus and wells up within you as the Holy Spirit; you are rooted, grounded, built in him. "Underneath are the everlasting arms." Even if you lose someone you trusted and your life is blown apart, you can start again, you can build anew. And it's also true that when one person in your trusted circle lets you all down, at that point the rest of you need each other all the more, holding together to survive as a body and heal the wound that has been made.
But although all humanity is flawed and frail, and even the best of people may disappoint you, even so I think that, after you have established your life principle, the second thing you must do is establish your community of trust — your family, be that born or found.
So:
- What is my basic working principle?
- Who are my people?