Whew, some good posts here. Thank you! (li'l compliment there,

).
Um, but Tibby, could we work maybe a little bit on our English--maybe as a FIRST language?? Okay, Pal?

Boy, Reba, let's see:
Most often when I bake a special cake (or any project) take my time to decorate it for the person I NEED to be told how nice it is. Is this pride? or my insecurities? or some of both?
Hm, does that strike a nerve. We have someone just like this, in the family, going the extra mile, domestic, kitchen, pies, cakes.
And that's all great. But sometimes, I fear she might be accumulating disappointment, in the future somewhere--i.e., what if the appreciation never seems to match the effort or work done??

Yikes. And I've heard this complaint from older people frequently. One guy, with a jeep, said he bought and fixed a snow plow to it; cleared neighbors drives with it for years. Never got a thank you. He was bitter about it.
Somehow, when we do kindnesses for others, maybe it's about how we do it, or why.
Of course, Jesus, or PPaul, cautions about expecting nothing in return. The heart of a cheerful giver.
So I'm skeptical of "the baker's dozen", both giving or receiving it. In the right spirit, I suppose.
I don't think it's really about "taking pride" in what we do at all. I certainly don't think that's biblical. 'Tho in the book of Ezra, Darius, for example, does decree beautification of Jerusalem, after the Captivity.
I think "doing things well" doesn't have to be about pride. I think it's a reflection of our happiness in the Lord. "The joy of the Lord is your strength".
You'd want an engineer to build his bridge "well", when' you're driving over it.
I think when we do things it's more about joy that either is there or should be there.
Of course, I know of one wrecker driver, when he finished towing a car, the driver neglected to pay him; so he hitched the car back up, took it back, and put it back in the ditch.
Maybe it's a fine line; some people accumulate ill will, and it's easy to use our "generosity" in order to control people. It all seems a very fine line to me, giving or receiving.
Jesus said to give to those who can't repay...