Friday, April 4, 2025

Church Accountability


Contempt dripping from their words permeates my body through my ears and runs down my spine, making it difficult to sit still. The other sheep in The Flock injured and mistreated a sheep. When that sheep lost its ability to travel with the others, fell behind and was eaten by a wolf - those responsible for shepherding the flock led the rest of the sheep in mocking the wounded and left for dead sheep. 

I’m sure that sounds shocking, but it happens within churches sometimes. Members of the church harm another member, but instead of dealing with and disciplining the person who caused the harm, the person who was harmed is told to be quiet and “get over it”. 

Sometimes the person or persons who injure the other member apologize and the injured person is expected to immediately “drop it”. Instead of working with the person who committed the sin, thinking through what caused the behavior and what boundaries need to be put into place so it doesn’t happen again, it is all swept under a rug. When the injured person trips over all the junk under the rug, they are blamed. 

There comes a point when the rug, where it is all swept, is so full of junk that it is no longer viable to walk on. When the injured party decides to leave, the people in the church take no responsibility for the hazard the rug has become. 

People are responsible for their decisions, but when they are abused (sexually, emotionally, spiritually) within churches and people with the power to correct the problem don’t, it may create a situation where the victim has to choose between two true things. The Truth of how and where to worship and the Truth of how christians should treat people. 

If we won’t be introspective and consider our part in things, we are forcing people to make difficult decisions. 

If we won’t be introspective, consider our part in things and make amends, we are placing a stumbling block in the path of others. How can we have contempt for someone who trips over a stumbling block that we placed in their path?

Being “right" doesn't give anyone a pass to act wrongly. There is as much of a right way to treat people as there is a right way to do anything else. 

I wonder how many people who were "right" are going to have to give an account to Jesus for their actions when they were "right"?

Saturday, March 29, 2025

What if?

I shared my story with the room, including the hurtful aftermath of words. The people in the room supportively rolled their eyes and lamented how stupid the response was. 

I felt the support. But the conversation routinely went to the careless and "stupid" words that people say in response to other people's pain.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I moved in the periphery, scared to approach. I determined to wait to speak to the man who had lost his wife until I could do it without becoming emotional. 

I wanted to acknowledge his pain and sit with him in it, but I wanted to do it perfectly. 

Time went by, and I finally decided that I needed to go ahead and say something. I was avoiding him at this point. I couldn't speak to him about the weather if I hadn't acknowledged this terrible thing that had happened. 

So I spoke to him. I cried. We sat in silence. 

I don't know how he walked away feeling about the moment. I hope he felt supported, but I'm not sure he did. Maybe he walked away and has used what I said and our interaction as an example of the terrible things people said and did after he lost his wife.  

There are lists all over social media of all the "stupid" and "terrible" things that have been said to people in whatever situation they find themselves in. 

A complaint I often hear from people going through difficult situations is that nobody says anything at all. 

I have to wonder if there is a correlation between these two things. 

If we are judgmental of what people say, what is the likelihood they are going to get over their nerves to actually say something?

What if, in order to receive the support we long for, we have to be willing to see through the imperfect words used to provide it?


What if we assume that when people say things like, "well that's the best cancer to have" they mean "I hate that you're experiencing this but I'm also afraid to discourage you so I'm saying something that I feel is positive so you won't lose hope"?

Or, when they share their own experience, they are just trying to say, "you're not alone". 

Yes, we should all be trying to learn and grow, but we are all imperfect. We get nervous, and say dumb things. 

What if that's okay? What if we assume the best of each other and accept the words as the support they are intended to provide instead of judging the person who says them?

Wednesday, January 8, 2025

The Weight of Feeling Unloved

They studied women who lost weight and put it back on. 

Turns out, a huge percentage of them started gaining weight around the time a major even or abuse happened. It was their brain and bodies way of protecting them. 

So I asked myself, what was happening around the time I started gaining weight? What is my extra weight protecting me from? 

The answer I came to is this: My weight is protecting me from anyone seeing the real me. The real me is ugly and vile, and being overweight is like a boundary I set for myself to only be "so" comfortable and to never draw attention to myself or take up space. It's like my own punishment to myself where I remind myself that I am worthless and unloved before other people have to remind me and I experience the pain of being unloved.

Being loved for a few minutes isn't worth the experience of losing that love when I screw everything up. 

My body is a physical manifestation of the war between my desperate desire to be known with the utter terror of being seen. 

Sometimes all of this feels like it will never be healed. Will I ever get to the bottom of my self hatred and rejection so that I can move on with my life in peace?

In addition to my weight issue I struggle with Major Depressive Disorder. For the last few years I've struggled to have hope. Lately I've found myself singing these lyrics to myself when I'm struggling to have hope or to be confident that God is listening to my cries, "but I can be sure of this, the Lord will answer when I call to Him". It's not a cure but it renews my mind and refocuses my heart heavenward. 


Monday, December 2, 2024

Contentment and Surrender

For a variety of reasons, I struggle to accept my place in the world sometimes. I struggle to accept the limitations of my gender, financial situation and the family patterns that I was born into. 

The other day I was reading the Psalms and noticed the inscription above the one I was reading said that it was written by the sons of Korah. I know the story of Korah but I went back to Numbers 16 to refresh my memory. 

I was convicted by my lack of contentment as a woman within the body of Christ. Even though I live in a time and place where women have way more freedoms than they've ever had, I am not content with that. I assign motives and feelings to God, and resent the required submission and silence - instead of accepting my spiritual birth order and flourishing in my role. 

When I think of all the people through out history who have had way less freedom within their life circumstances, I wonder how they could have found the courage to be content. 

Our world preaches that we can all change our circumstances if we just work hard enough, but at what cost? Is changing my circumstances really what God wants for me? Is that the good that's He's working in my life?

I don't have all those answers. I'm not saying I should never work hard or change my circumstance. But if I'm too tired to focus on Jesus, maybe the hustling is out of line. If the changed circumstance becomes what I'm focused on instead of Jesus, then maybe it isn't God's plan for me. If the circumstance I am trying to change requires what I know about God to conform to the change, instead of the change conforming to His will . . . then maybe the hustling to change my circumstance is amiss. 

Maybe the problem is not my circumstance. Maybe the problem is how I see my circumstance. Maybe the solution isn't hustle. Maybe the solution is contentment . . . surrender. 


Saturday, May 18, 2024

15 Years

 


Fifteen years of doing anything prompts celebration, in my book. Thank you for taking the time to read what I've written. 

Monday, April 29, 2024

Being Brave and Stirring the Pot

 Sometimes I’m not sure whether it was crazy or brave.

Regardless of how many times this girl washed her face and stopped apologizing, exhaustion and cortisol reminded me that no amount of hustle would allow me to maintain two full-time gigs indefinitely. I was working a full-time job to help support my family, fulfilling a labor of love that required full-time energy and still attempting to show up for my family. Something had to give. So, I dreamt big.

I dared to imagine that I could do the full-time, volunteer position and get paid to do it. So I looked for cracks in the infrastructure, designed a position for myself, and asked for a meeting with the three men who could implement my vision.

Armed with a nifty proposal and my resume, I walked into that room, sat in front of these men and released my dream into the wild.

The no that came days later felt like a sucker punch. I had been brave, put in the work and the answer was still no.

What had felt brave only days before, now felt impotent and more along the lines of farfetched and crazy.

As I’ve spent time processing what I did and what happened, I’ve come to realize that even though I didn’t get the answer I wanted, what I did was incredibly brave. And even though my exact, original dream didn’t come true, the real dream did.

I went back to school, and I’m currently working on a Master’s degree that will empower me to do the job I dreamed of and make a living on my own terms, without the need for the approval of three men.

I learned that sometimes the act of bravery can be the end and not just the means to the end. One act of bravery will be the stepping stone for the next.

It wasn’t crazy, it was brave. I am brave. Other peoples inability to dream big with me isn't an indictment of my dream. My dream isn't for them, and that's okay. Their no helped me see that it was time to pick up my dreams and take a hike. My dream was a catalyst and their no stirred the pot. 

Tell me about a time you were brave.

Tuesday, April 23, 2024

Loneliness is a Choice?

I gaslit myself into believing it was true. 

But I've come to understand that often people who don't experience something, misunderstand it and mislabel it. It's like extroverts pathologizing introvert qualities. Or the people who have a problem with things like "you are enough" and insist on saying "you are not enough" instead. They don't have the same personality traits, and misunderstand the meaning behind the reassurance that I am enough. 

Sometimes, with some people, loneliness might be a choice, but I spent years shaming and berating myself for being lonely in crowded rooms. I denied myself the gift of saying no and completely burned myself out on the off chance that each opportunity presented might be the occasion that God was going to use to break my loneliness. Mentors blamed my loneliness on me and cited times when I said no as the reason for my loneliness. I would leave social events, binge eat and not understand why. 

Burn out lead to deconstruction, and barely surviving it. 
Celebrate Recovery teaches that "loneliness is a choice", but I could never figure out how I was making the choice. I said yes to everything because I thought saying no was making the choice to be lonely, but I was lonely either way. If making a simple choice could cure loneliness, my loneliness would have been cured a long time ago. 

I think Celebrate Recovery is wrong on this point. I don't think that all loneliness is a choice. 

For some people, loneliness is based in attachment issues that they developed long before they were aware it was happening and isn't cured by being around people more often, or having deeper, more transparent conversations. 

For me, it means never trusting that other people will stick around, never believing that people like me or want to be friends with me, and that there is something inherently unlovable about me. It means experiencing the pervasive and real experience that there seems to be something about me that puts other people off. It also means completely missing signs that other people do like me or are seeking a relationship with me. It also means I just don't feel the connection when it's there, when other people feel it. I've traced my earliest feelings of loneliness to when I was 3. 

More than once (it's actually a pretty regular occurrence) I have made a connection with two or more other people, but then the next time I see them they are better friends with each other, have been spending time together without me, or I see pictures of them hanging out together on social media. They aren't being mean, but I am left feeling baffled about how it happened. I usually tell myself that there is just something wrong with me that makes them not connect with me . . . like a noxious odor that warns off predators. 

I told myself that I don't like talking on the phone, but the truth is, I love talking on the phone. I told myself I didn't like it to inoculate myself against the sadness of never doing it, to manage my own expectations and guard myself from disappointment. It's easier to guard myself against possible friendship than to deal with the grief when it doesn't work out or I am left feeling abandoned and alone.

I would love to tell you that I have a cure, but I don't. I'm currently seeking it. I'm reading a book called Changes that Heal by Dr. Henry Cloud and I am waiting to hear back from a therapist that I am hoping can help me with this. 

I've sought counseling for this before but the advice was surface level and didn't really help. This time, I have a good understanding of what I'm dealing with, and I can communicate it well - both of which should help. 

I'm still learning how this has affected my ability to mother my children well. Once again, motherhood inspires me to learn better, so I can do better and help them to do better too. 

Thursday, April 18, 2024

Forgiveness, or Denial?

I felt coerced. Unfree to say no. 

When I was asked for forgiveness, there was nothing to say but yes. If yes is the forced response, can it ever really be true? 

When our kids were young we went through a childrearing course a couple of times. One of the things they taught is that when an apology is due, the perpetrator should ask for forgiveness. For a long time, we practiced this as parents and taught our children to ask for forgiveness as well. 

Until we learned that making amends, or apologizing, should be done without expectation from the person I have wronged or hurt. When I thought about the times that I have been asked for forgiveness and realized that I never felt free to ask for time to process or to say no, it became clear to me that requiring the person I have wronged to say they forgive me is inappropriate. And if there is no room for saying no, then the forgiveness is either a lie or coerced . . . both of which render it impotent. 

Forgiveness is a gift. It can't be earned or coerced. Trust is earned. Forgiveness is done independently of the perpetrator. An apology or amends is helpful and right in a lot of circumstances, but forgiveness is not dependent on either one. 

Trust and forgiveness are often mixed up. Trust is earned, forgiveness is a gift. Unearned trust is not forgiveness, it's denial. Equating forgiveness and trust is dangerous, and requiring trust (while calling it forgiveness) without earning it is manipulative and unequivocally disqualifies the demander of being trusted.  

A good apology recognizes what I did, how it affected the other person and what I hope to do differently in the future. This requires premeditation about what I did, why I did it and how I am going to work toward a different action going forward. 


Wednesday, April 17, 2024

Lies Marriage Books Told me

I have read a lot of 'how to be a good wife' books. They have helped me to varying degrees, but either the content of the books or my perception of them led me down dark paths of despair when I followed the instructions of the book and didn't get the result the author promised. I'm not going to reference any specific books, because I don't want to disparage a book that might be helpful to someone else, with another set of issues and character defects. The thing I wish that I had done differently is talked to a wide variety of older women, particularly ones who had dealt with the same issues themselves. 

Without further adieu, here are three lies I learned from 'how to be a good wife' books:

1. Men are simple. As long as they are fed and have plenty of sex, they are good. Maybe some men are simple, but believing this led to a long journey of me being diligent about fulfilling those two needs and feeling utterly devastated when all of our problems were not solved. Michael is every bit as complex as I am, with needs beyond food and sex. He has a need for conversation, feeling safe in relationships and non sexual physical touch among other things. Men are human beings too, with complex histories, family relationships and thoughts.

2. If I'm not happy in my marriage, it's all my fault. Yes, it's not my husbands responsibility to make me happy, but I wasn't happy in my marriage because there were very real, wrong things in it. When I reached a pit of despair I shared those wrong things with other people and they helped us deal with them. Deciding to be happy in the middle of what was happening in our marriage was like sitting on a dung heap and talking myself into being happy instead of getting off the dung heap. 

3. It's the responsibility of wives to keep their husbands attention and it's the responsibility of other women to not draw it. If you want to know what the Bible says about how men should delight in their wives you'll have to do your own study. I will say this: it doesn't qualify any of it with how the wife looks. Years ago I lost a bunch of weight, at several points other women said things like "I bet your husband is all over you now". I smiled and replied in the affirmative, but this confused me. Our sex life didn't really change. For a while I thought there was something wrong because his desire hadn't increased to any noticeable degree, and these women seemed so sure it had. But apparently I just married a good man. Michael has loved me at all shapes and sizes. Am I advocating for spouses to let themselves go? No. But I am saying there is more to desire and attraction than what media and porn would have us believe. 

Secondly, while I believe it is my responsibility to dress modestly, I believe it is also the responsibility of men to control their own eyes and minds. None of us get to live in a world devoid of temptation. It's each of our responsibility to flee from that temptation. Men can decide where their eyes and minds go. They are human beings who are capable of controlling themselves. Believing that other women bore responsibility in my husbands ability to keep his eyes and mind to himself created an unfair resentment of and competition with other women.

Changing what I believed about all three of these things has freed me up to delight in and have compassion for my husband. It's also given me the freedom to check my own self, deal with my own stuff and for him to do the same. 



Monday, April 8, 2024

Holding Space in Between



Poles of opinion compel us, 
pick a side and choose a team,
it's comfortable in the black and white,
in the mix and camraderie of a crowd. 

Standing our ground in the gray 
as emotions and reactions attempt to entice
us to one pole or the other
and definitive and clear comfort of black and white.

Holding space in the in-between place 
watching as the people standing with us
gradually give in to the pull of polarity
for protection against the stones being hurled
by those in the black and white.  

It takes courage and steadiness to stand in the gray,
to hold our ground in the winds of doctrine,
to remain planted in place as the streams of water erode
the ground around our roots. 

We are rooted, 
we are planted, 
and we are firm,
we are holding space in the between place
because it's the right, but not easy, thing to do. 

Friday, April 5, 2024

If You're Thinking I am Sad

I've kept it mostly to myself. 

In the beginning of my Dark Night of the Soul, I wrote about my experience a little bit. But as I felt misunderstood, I stopped and decided that until I had fully processed what I was going through and could feel secure in what I knew I was experiencing, I felt like I couldn't handle input from other people who weren't walking through it with me. 

So, I have about 6 years worth of things I've been processing and going through and writing about: thoughts and feelings I've worked through and healed from, but I'm just now sharing. 

Life is complicated, and walking through it alone is hard. The last six years have largely been filled with things I've walked through, worked on and healed from on my own with God. Even though I'm just now sharing it, most of what I'm sharing I've processed and healed from and now I'm sharing it because I feel ready.

I could only share easy things, light things and happy things. But that wouldn't be true. 

The Bible is filled with the experiences and feelings of real people, and they aren't all upbeat or happy. 

Christians walk through difficult things, have complicated feelings and are sad sometimes. And that's right and okay. It doesn't mean I'm not trusting God, it means I'm real. 

Over the last six years, I have listened to Hurt by Johnny Cash too many times to count because it felt like somebody could see me and understand what I felt. I also listened to Unchained because I love the line "it's hard to see the rainbow through glasses dark as these, maybe I'll be able from now on, on my knees"

Loving and trusting God doesn't mean I never have bad feelings or experiences, it means I love Him and trust Him through them.




I Belong.

 I am two presentations away from having earned a Master's degree.  I walked into the interview day, the day that would determine whethe...