Navigating through life's challenges often requires support, yet many struggle with asking for help due to pride or fear of appearing helpless. This article recounts a personal sailing adventure that highlights the significance of reaching out for assistance, whether from people or divine sources, and the joy that can come from accepting help.

In This Article

  • What challenges arise from not asking for help?
  • How does pride affect the willingness to seek assistance?
  • What methods can be used to practice asking for help?
  • How can asking for help improve personal experiences?
  • What risks are associated with refusing to accept support?

I have to admit. I have a hard time asking for help. I have that “false pride” thing about being able to do it myself, that if I have to ask for help, it means I’m helpless. It makes me think about the two year old who proclaims, “I can do it myself!” And now that I’m on the other side of the life spectrum, at age seventy, it means even more to me to be able to still do things by myself. A recent weekend brought all of this into the light.

I pulled our 19 foot sailboat up to Lake Tahoe to experience sailing and camping on the largest alpine lake in North America. Yes, I was alone. I would have preferred that Joyce accompany me, but she wanted to stay home and help with our daughter, Mira’s, newborn son. And I have a need for occasional solo adventures.

Swallowing My Pride

By the time I launched, I had only a few hours of daylight left. The wind had died down, so I started my outboard motor and headed toward a small beach I found on the map. I didn’t get very far. The motor sputtered and died. I couldn’t get it started again. When I pulled on the starter cord, the little flashing red light proclaimed “low oil.” I forgot to check the oil level before launching. Did I have extra engine oil stored in the boat? Of course not!

A very faint breeze allowed me to inch into a private boat harbor and tie up to the only vacant mooring buoy as darkness was descending (a miracle in itself). I slept that night in the boat.


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In the morning, I saw a boat leaving the harbor. Perhaps they might have some engine oil. I only needed a small amount, maybe half a cup, to allow me to start the motor. But that would require asking for help, flagging them down by waving my hands, inconveniencing them, showing my helplessness.

I swallowed my pride, flagged them down, and asked the young man for oil. He didn’t have any, but gave me a ride to the dock, where I could walk a half hour to a small convenience store. On the way to the store, I practiced asking for help/oil a few more times without success. I did notice, however, that most people were very nice, wanting to help even though they couldn’t. They felt needed, and that brought out their best.

Do You Need Any Help?

I bought a quart of engine oil at the store, walked back to the dock, got another ride out to my boat (more asking for help), and added the oil to my motor. I got it started, but just barely, and headed across the vast lake to an area of small, more hidden, pocket beaches. As long as I squeezed the primer bulb hard and continuously, I could keep the motor running. Obviously, the low oil was not the problem. There was something else wrong with the motor.

I kept waiting for the wind to pick up, so I wouldn’t be so dependent on the motor but, alas, it was not to be. No wind the entire day! And hard to believe on such a huge lake!

My hands were cramped and exhausted from all the squeezing when I saw a cute little beach. About a hundred feet offshore, the motor finally died. I pulled and pulled on the starter cord with no success. Finally I jumped into the lake, holding a length of rope attached to the bow, and started pulling the boat to shore. Amazingly, a man on the beach called out, “Do you need any help?”

At that particular moment, however, I was actually doing just fine, and enjoying being in the cool lake water. Another part of me silently added, “Barry, you just missed another opportunity to ask for help, whether you could do it yourself or not!”

Asking for Divine Help

The next morning dawned practically windless again and I decided to end my trip and get back to the boat ramp as soon as possible. I pushed off from shore and, while again inching at a snail’s pace from the beach, tried to start the engine. Nothing! I kept at it. For three hours I pulled on that starter cord, trying every trick I could. I’m amazed the cord didn’t break, leaving me in much worse condition. And all the while, I hoped the wind would finally come up. But that was not to be.

I practiced asking for a tow from other boats that passed, but no one offered that level of help. I called a boat towing company who was happy to help, for $375! I told him I’d call him back.

Finally it dawned on me. Not in all this time had I even had the thought to ask for divine help. I pray for divine help every day. I pray that Joyce and I can continue to be instruments of peace and love with our books and events. I pray that I can learn to trust God in all things, big and small. I pray for the well-being of our children and now grandchildren. But to pray for an outboard motor? Didn’t even cross my mind.

But why not? Nothing is too small or insignificant for the angels, those heavenly helpers. I let go of the starter cord, placed my hands on the motor, and asked the angels for their all-powerful help. I asked sincerely, then gave thanks for their help. I pulled the cord once more.

All You Have To Do Is Ask

The motor instantly roared to life. I had to laugh at the odds of that happening. I yanked on that starter cord maybe a thousand times with no success, said one prayer to the angels, and voila! What a lesson! I could almost imagine a group of angels sitting around just waiting for me to ask them for help, perhaps having this conversation,

“Any asking yet?”

“No, he’s still pulling on that cord, trying to do it himself.”

“How many hours has it been now, in Earth time?”

“Hey, wait. He’s asking us for help. Finally! Okay, who wants to bless that motor?”

Leaning the Joy of Asking for Help

I sincerely hope I can once and for all learn the joy of asking for help, from people and from angels, from those I can see and from those I can’t see.

I hope I can remember how much joy it gives others to help me.

And I hope I can remember that problem size doesn’t matter, that I can feel my dependence on God and the angels in all situations.

* subtitles by InnerSelf

Book by this Author

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About the Author(s)

photo of: Joyce & Barry VissellJoyce & Barry Vissell, a nurse/therapist and psychiatrist couple since 1964, are counselors, near Santa Cruz CA, who are passionate about conscious relationship and personal-spiritual growth. They are the authors of 10 books, their latest being A Couple of Miracles: One Couple, More Than a Few Miracles.

Visit their website at SharedHeart.org for their free weekly 10–15-minute inspirational videos, inspiring past articles on many topics about relationship and living from the heart, or to book a counseling session on-line or in person.
   

Further Reading

  1. Ask and It Is Given: Learning to Manifest Your Desires

    Esther and Jerry Hicks present teachings centered on the principle that help — from the universe, from source energy, from the divine — is always available the moment we are willing to ask for it. The book explores why so many people struggle to receive what they need, and why the act of asking itself is not weakness but a fundamental alignment with the flow of life. For anyone struck by the Lake Tahoe motor that roared to life the moment a sincere prayer was offered, this is perhaps the most direct spiritual map of that territory.

    Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1401904599/innerselfcom

  2. Angels in My Hair: The True Story of a Modern-Day Irish Mystic

    Lorna Byrne has spent her entire life in the company of angels she sees as clearly as the people around her, and this memoir is her account of what they have shown and taught her. Central to her message is precisely the lesson the article arrives at after three hours of pulling a starter cord: that angelic help is always waiting and available, but the angels cannot intervene until we ask. Her simple, direct voice makes what could be an extraordinary claim feel completely matter-of-fact.

    Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0385528973/innerselfcom

  3. The Gifts of Imperfection: Let Go of Who You Think You're Supposed to Be and Embrace Who You Are

    Brené Brown spent a decade researching what gets in the way of people living fully, and one of her central findings is that the belief we must handle everything ourselves — what she identifies as a mythology of self-sufficiency — cuts us off from connection, belonging, and genuine help. The article's author names it directly as false pride, the conviction that asking for help means admitting helplessness. Brown's research shows that the willingness to be vulnerable, to need others, is not a flaw but a prerequisite for the life we actually want.

    Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/159285849X/innerselfcom

Article Recap

Recognizing the importance of asking for help can lead to more fulfilling experiences and connections. Acknowledging pride may hinder growth, so practice reaching out for support from both people and divine sources.

#InnerSelfcom #AskingForHelp #PersonalGrowth #SailingAdventures #DivineAssistance #EmotionalWellbeing #LifeLessons #OvercomingPride