What My 13yo Wants You to Know About Life

I don’t know how to mama an adolescent. The thought of it kind of makes my stomach hurt. Really bad. Because it’s not the same.

It’s not the same as when they stuck Honey Smacks up their noses or insulted slow grandmas in grocery stores.

[Sigh].

Those were the days.

Now I mom a young lady who is witty, saucy (Sarcasm is one of our family values), and brilliant. My girl is brave and real. I am watching her ford the headwaters of anxiety, stress, responsibility, hormones, decision-making, independence, and I am ever trying to determine where my mom sphere ends and her space to flourish begins.

That property line is pretty fluid at this time, but I am trying my best to be mindful of it.

To respect it.

Even when that means I sit in my recliner in the dark of morning, head bowed, tears fresh, and pray. While I sit on my hands, purse my lips to detain my words, and allow her to learn difficult lessons. Only because I believe that’s part of my job in preparing her to walk in the fullness of all that God intends for Carson Lane Cawthon to be.

And she’s doing it beautifully.

So while I am thick in another writing project (HINT), my girl’s gonna take the helm here…


Be still.

The thing about still is….I don’t especially like it. I’m a mover. I get bored easily. I like to be challenged. I’m a D personality. I’m driven. I’m somewhat of a perfectionist. Still is not my jam. Nor is it how my generation operates.

In our world today, we don’t have to be “searched out.” No one is looking for us in the Yellow Pages. On any given day, my agenda can be found full of to-do’s and appointments written with an array of colorful pens. It is easier than ever for our lives to become “I was supposed to be there 10 minutes ago” and “If one more person gets between me and Starbucks, I may just lose it.”

The results are less than great.

Anxiety can take over and we might as well schedule worry into our Google calendars. This is not God’s best.

We are not pursuing our callings, using our gifts, and experiencing what God has created for us as well as He intended. The Bible has something to say about this.


Moses answered the people, “Do not be afraid. Stand firm and you will see the deliverance the Lord will bring you today. The Egyptians you see today you will never see again. The Lord will fight for you; you need only be still.” Exodus 14:13-14


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He says, “Be still and know that I am God; I will be exalted among the nations, I will be exalted in the earth.” Psalm 46:10

These words ring true in my life through panic attacks, stress, and fear. I felt like I couldn’t trust God with my circumstances because of difficult times in the past. But, I learned when fighting my own battles, I always lost.

Even today the Lord presses us to show that we trust Him enough to let Him fight for us. Oddly, it takes faith to be still. And let God handle our storms. However, still does not always look like not moving. Sometimes still is a state of mind. Sometimes still is just taking a breath amid hectic circumstances and trusting that the Lord will deliver us from Egypt.

Dad in Intensive Care Unit. Breathe.

Moving to a new city. Breathe.

Starting a new school. Breathe.

Play response due. Breathe.

I haven’t always gotten it right, but I have experienced the power of this trust in small increments just enough to understand that it could change my life. Still is a radical form of trust that I want. And the world needs.

What would happen if we all found peace even when “the mountains fall into the heart of the sea” or when “nations are in uproar, kingdoms fall“?

What if we believed that “The Lord Almighty is with us; the God of Jacob is our fortress”?

A steadfast Psalm 46 type of trust could start a movement in our world.

Just because we were still.

Guest post by Carson CawthonCarsonHeadshot


You may also enjoy reading Madness I Say and rewinding to a post about my Carson when she had just completed first grade, I Get a Kick Out of That Girl…


[Feature images: Barta IV and Tim Lenz]

Hidden, but not healed

One of the treasures of real deal friendship is living closely enough to another human that you get to marvel at God’s work in her. That’s not so if we keep our relationships splashing in the shallow end. Diving deeply in our own self-absorption until our lungs burn and there’s no air for others.

For most of my adult life I have preferred those friendships. They require little. Yield little. Which was fine by me.

But God had other plans when I met Lindsay seven years ago. She spent fewer words than most people I’d ever met. She glowed red if she contributed during home group and concealed a white-hot penchant for competition that made me know I always wanted her on my team.

A lot of life happens in seven years, and we’ve been privileged to do most of that life together. During our relationship, God has grown her into a force. He has given her a voice others are wise to give ear, and she is more committed to pushing herself, more committed to walking in the shoes God intends her to fill than anyone I’ve ever met. She’s committed to growth and honesty and obedience and grace.

We are friends.

We are ministry teammates.

And it is such a treat to have her sharing her story on the blog today…


Antidepressants and anxiety meds became a part of my daily routine at the tender age of 13.

Though there are parts of my childhood I remember only in a hazy fog, I do know that at some point a switch flipped inside of me. I transformed from a vivacious and fun-loving kid, to a withdrawn and fearful adolescent. I can still recall my mother taking me to the doctor to discuss the abnormality of my temperament.

I would spend the next 10 years keeping the darkness at bay with a pill every morning. I had no real friends. I avoided most people. I occasionally prayed to a God I claimed but did not really know. I had a great family, but I also had a secret shame.

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One that was stuffed down so deep that I couldn’t have told you about it if I wanted to. Oh, to be sure it would resurface time and time again, only to be desperately shoved back into the depths of my mind. Forgotten in my head, but like an untreated wound it was left to fester in the deepest places of my heart. Hidden, but not healed.

Then one day my life changed. The far-away God I had known about my entire life finally became personal to me. Jesus. And, exactly as I was –burdened and broken– I began to follow Him. To love Him. To trust Him.

As I did that, ever so gradually, the darkness began to dissolve.

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For someone who had lived in darkness for so long the light was both a beautiful and scary thing. I discovered the amazing joy and love found in the light. But I also discovered that hurts can’t stay hidden when there is no darkness to conceal them. No dark corner to bury the memories of my molestation when the shame threatened to overwhelm me. And that is when I finally came to understand…

Jesus didn’t want to hide it. He wanted to heal it.

Healing for me started with confession–a willingness to acknowledge my past instead of running from it. And oh, how beautifully Jesus orchestrated the relationships in my life through this season. Providing me with someone who loved Him and had openly shared similar experiences. Someone who could loan me strength and hope as mine began to fail.

Talking about it didn’t kill me as I felt certain it would. Much to my surprise it brought me freedom and peace. The shame of my past lost its grip on me. The open wound eventually became nothing more than a scar–part of my story to serve as evidence of Jesus’s love and faithfulness.

Our past hurts. Our past sins. Our burdens. Our stories. These become our ministry. These are all tools Jesus has equipped us with. To draw others to Him. To bring healing to the broken. To help others see beauty rise from their ashes.

How would anyone ever know how to get out of a pit without someone who had been in the pit before willing to tell them?

We never know who needs to hear our story. We never know who may need to borrow our strength. Jesus doesn’t want us to hide our pain. He wants to heal it. And then to use it to draw others to His love and grace.LZ-face

Guest Post by Lindsay Haselden



We would love to hear from you. If you have a story you would like to share, or if you would like prayer, please email stories@tenaciousgrace.cc.

On Being White and Southern

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“I’m not going to talk,” I’d contend.

Early in Chris’ career, he often entertained and hosted educational programs for physicians in the swankiest of restaurants. Anytime I accompanied him, I vowed silence.

I grew up in a charming, tiny town on a tobacco farm. There was no swank and not many physicians either.

These dinners, wholly of my own creation, made me feel inadequate and inferior. I feared I would appear foolish and simple.

“No. I’m really not talking this time,” I’d insist.

Because, without fail, each time I would discover I could navigate all the pieces of silverware and enjoy engaging conversation with his guests. I’d tentatively gain ground on my fear and allow a bit of me to come out to play.

I have also experienced a parallel timidity about visiting other countries. Each of the times I’ve boarded flights to the UK, Germany, Kenya, and Israel, I’ve been afraid of the differences in culture and perceptions and language.

Fear certainly hindered me from becoming involved in jail ministry before now. I was frightened by the place and the people; the trappings of incarceration were foreign to me.

This cowardice towards difference stretched so far as a new home we purchased a decade ago. By all accounts, it should have been our dream home. It was twice the size of our previous house, possessed upgrades we could only afford because the house had been on the market a loooooong time, and was well-built with a smart floor plan.

Nonetheless, I lay on the couch our first night there and sobbed. I wanted my smallish house back. There were eight exterior doors on the new house, which alarmed me from a safety perspective, and I was afraid it would never feel like home.

Different scares me initially.

In fact, I think that’s so for most people.

That’s what’s infecting our Facebook and Twitter feeds right now.

Fear.

Racism. Classism. Feminism. Legalism. Cynicism. Chauvinism. Anti-Semitism. Homophobism (I may have just concocted that word).  All the black sheep -isms.

These are systems or ideologies rooted in fear. Based on unfounded generalizations about a group of people who are different.

It’s not new.

In the Old Testament in Exodus 1, the Egyptians were afraid of the Israelites, so they enslaved them.

In the New Testament in John 4, Jews feared defilement by the Samaritans and had no association with them.

And this phenomenon has continued to pock the history of mankind via countless wars and atrocities. And it always will.

It’s not new at all.

Difference scares us.

During our vacation to New York, we stayed in Stuyvesant Heights, a largely African-American community in Brooklyn. We landed only days after Dylann Roof killed nine African-Americans just two hours from our home.

I felt conspicuously white.

When we checked into our brownstone on a beautifully tree-lined street, we found it decorated with strong political statements:

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It made me uncomfortable. Afraid even. Can I be that honest? Afraid that my whiteness would be offensive. Because people of my shade have committed acts of horror against African-Americans.

Not a hundred and fifty years ago.

Four days ago.

And I knew my region would be as apparent as my race the first time I spoke. I expected their disdain based on the color of my skin and the sound of my voice.

We dropped our bags and walked to lunch just around the corner. By the conclusion of our meal, I had shaken the fear that different can summon.

I can honestly say I felt less aware of being Southern and white in an African-American neighborhood in Brooklyn than I do in South Carolina. It was a non-issue in our interactions. I’m guessing the residents realized we were white 🙂 , but my race had never felt more irrelevant.

It was freeing.

After lunch, we caught a taxi to the Brooklyn Tabernacle, a predominantly African-American church led by a white pastor, and felt so warmly welcomed by the ladies seated around us.

It was the next morning in our flat, while the girls were still sledgehammered by exhaustion, that I sensed the Lord whisper Truth very clearly:

Perfect love casts out fear, Cookie.

Huh?

My mind drifted to a t-shirt I ordered in mid-May, long before hatred had its day on June 17. It would be delivered while we were away. Maybe Chris could ask William to grab it off the front porch and stick it in the house…

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And then it was as though God put a puzzle together right before my eyes….

The passion ignited by my visit to Kenya years earlier + Recently hanging out and speaking to folks at our local homeless shelter + Getting involved with jail ministry + Being smitten with a quiet neighborhood in Brooklyn.

All people different from me.

When love is the driving force in you,

there is no place for fear of difference.

Only love. 

Because love is never satisfied

until it takes over every room of life space.

It’s a mutually-exclusive saturation. 


I feel like I’m supposed to say I don’t see color. Or whatever difference exists between you and me. That that’s the correct response.

Maybe it is.

To me, it may be richer progress to acknowledge that we’re different.

To admit that you and I are different people, be that based on race, region, religion, gender, or sexual orientation.

To admit that we have different histories.

That we have experienced the world differently because of our differences.

And appreciate that. Even greater….LOVE THAT.

Can we have the freedom to see each other as exquisitely different? That feels truer to me than pretending I don’t see color. Or gender roles. Or class inequities.

Because I only know Southern white girl; that’s all I’ve got. I don’t know what it’s like to be Middle Eastern or a felon, Asian or gay or a man or black, but to the extent that I am better equipped to love people and understand the heart of God, I want to.

I want to divorce unwarranted generalizations of people based on the actions of individuals.

But I don’t want to ignore the things that make you you.

Because how can I truly love you, with a genuine knowledge, if I ignore what your experience brings to the table where mine lacks?

We can take down the Confederate flag, which I staunchly support we do.

But we can’t legislate love.

We can fight for it though. We can be advocates and purveyors of it.

I’m about that. All about that.

I’ll take my example from a man who loved people very different from himself. A man whose every action was motivated by love. Whose death was the greatest expression of love of all time.

He is uncompromising with regards to our hearts. They are to be soft, affected, and undivided. Pure.

Wholly submitted to the Truth……..love trumps fear.


You may also be interested in checking out these popular posts on depression, pursuing a woman’s heart,  or a really, really neat personal encounter with God.

Blog subscribers….look for an email headed your way this week with the skinny on our fall Bible study.

[Feature Image: Kat B]

Humans of SC Take NYC

The Cawthon quad recently took on the Big Apple for our family vacation….

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Upon arrival, we caught a cab to Brooklyn. “I driving one week only,” he says. #fab

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Yikes!

To his credit, he found our brownstone in Stuyvesant Heights on the first try.

We rented a flat in a residential area of Brooklyn and loved it! It was less expensive and gave us a commuter’s experience for the week. The subway was four blocks away and had us in Manhattan in twelve minutes.

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After reading Fresh Wind, Fresh Fireattending a Sunday service at the Brooklyn Tabernacle was my number one must-do.

Holding hands across the aisles singing “Pass Me Not, O Gentle Savior.” Stop it.

On Day One, I also lost my driver’s license. Because I have a knack for losing really important things. It’s a gift. We had a friend overnight my passport, so I could board a plane at the end of our adventures. #lovely

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On our first full day in the city we visited the 9/11 Memorial and Museum

Steel column and crossbeam cross found in the rubble

The Last Column from the World Trade Center South Tower










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With delish cannoli and tiramisu to follow in Little Italy.

Afterwards we landed a pretty dreamy ride on the…

Which is free and the best way to see the Statue of Liberty.

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Much to my chagrin, the eldest Woman-Child thought the Statue of Liberty was in Central Park. Glad we settled that. #OhMy

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After a monstrous day of it, we hoofed it back to Brooklyn across the Brooklyn Bridge (also free) with quite the view of the city.

Next up was the American Museum of Natural History

where we most enjoyed finding the exhibits featured in the Night at the Museum trilogy.

We then spent the evening on Broadway.

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The girls snagged autographs and pics with the cast at the stage door after the show (free). Here Sharpie is twinning with Caroline Bowman, aka Elphaba in Wicked. We all geeked out pretty hard that Matt Shingledecker, cast in the role of Fiyero, hails from the great state of South Carolina…a Charlestonian.

The next day we noshed on dogs at Yankee stadium, rooted for another local fella

(Brett Gardner #11),

made a super brief appearance on the Jumbotron, and belted “New York, New York” after the Yankees stomped the Phillies.

Eldest continued her education as she made peace with the fact that the Yankees game featured neither an intermission nor a half-time. #Bless

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We took the subway to Grand Central Station and hit Fifth Avenue on the way to…

Times Square.

On the next day, we fed our brains a trip to the Metropolitan Museum of Art. It’s important to know that you could never ever “do” the whole museum. Even if you lived there. To call it vast grossly minimizes it. Folks who live in NYC have access to so much knowledge and so many experiences.

Being the simpletons we are, I reserved us four kids audio tours, and it was perfect. While I loved seeing real pieces of work by Degas, Van Gogh, and Picasso; the Junior Fry could not have cared less. During the week, if she caught an unpleasant attitude, I threatened to take her back to a museum. #QualityParenting

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We then took in a little sunset view of the Empire State Building from the Top of the Rock. I would possibly not recommend trying to catch sunset because so many people go up and just wait, allowing them to catch day shots, dusk shots, and night shots within an hour’s time. It was super crowded.

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On our final day, we hung out on the High Line (free), which is an old elevated railway track turned into a park. Highly, highly (pun intended) recommend!

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We then happened upon a pop-up gallery in Chelsea where we met famed street artist, Mr. Brainwash.

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As it turns out, he’s really great at taking group selfies too.  The title image is a piece of his work, and it wasn’t until we were home and did some research that we learned he’s a pretty interesting cat.

In parting, here are a few other nuggets for you…

  • There’s a lot of beautiful in NYC.
  • So apparently lichee is a fruit. Who knew?
  • New Yorkers are super nice. We did not have one rude encounter during our visit. In fact, a young fella offered me a seat on the subway. I was pleased until I read the posted etiquette that suggested seats be offered to the elderly, pregnant, or disabled. Of course, I was no longer flattered. :-/
  • I cared not for the communal tables in some tiny restaurants.
  • NYC is a city in order. To boast a population of 8 million people, it runs like a well-oiled machine.
  • One of my mama goals for the week was to teach my offspring not to walk four deep on the sidewalk. We small towners are accustomed to space, so we’ll spread the whole fam across the path. Not sure I succeeded.
  • Take the subway; it’s the fastest and cheapest way to travel in a super congested city. Carson used the Embark app which told us which trains to take and which stops to exit. We did not hop one wrong train during our visit. We traveled it as late as 11:30 pm and walked the four blocks to our apartment in complete safety. And, to be honest, I was tickled that our subway experience was complete when we witnessed a  fat rat scavenging along the track. 😉
  • NYC is a city of performers. On our late night walk from the subway station we fell in behind a student drum-line who was headed home in our direction. Despite the time, they played all the way, and we felt like members of a midnight parade. There are just few things I love more than the collaboration of a drum-line. And on the way to Yankee stadium, we experienced this subway show (if you watched the video I posted on Instagram and Facebook, this is a different one)…

LOVE.

But after a week in The City that Never Sleeps, this introvert who naps as a hobby is way spent on interaction and still short on slumber. I’m tapping out…

Dear God, How Could You?

Dear God,

How could you allow a searing hatred to destroy your people? I don’t understand…

People praying.

Your children talking to you. Your sons and daughters who could have been out to eat or watching TV or spending time with their families…………………..but instead were at church.

Because they love you.

Is this the reward for devotion?

How does this fit against a backdrop of perfect love?

Where were you?

What were you doing?

What will people think about you?

Even those of us who love you with our whole selves ask through hot tears and aching souls…

How could you?

I was there.  

Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for you are with me, your rod and your staff, they comfort me. Psalm 23:4

Be assured, I was there.

In God, whose word I praise,
    in the Lord, whose word I praise—
 in God I trust and am not afraid.
    What can man do to me? Psalm 56:10-11

And I heard.

In my distress I called to the Lord;
    I cried to my God for help.
From his temple he heard my voice;
    my cry came before him, into his ears. Psalm 18:6

BUT WHY?

I know you don’t understand.

“For my thoughts are not your thoughts…

neither are your ways my ways,” declares the Lord. Isaiah 55:8

People sing "We Shall Overcome" during a service at Morris Brown AME Church June 18, 2015 in Charleston, South Carolina. US police on Thursday arrested a 21-year-old white gunman suspected of killing nine people at a prayer meeting in one of the nation's oldest black churches in Charleston, an attack being probed as a hate crime. The shooting at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in the southeastern US city was one of the worst attacks on a place of worship in the country in recent years, and comes at a time of lingering racial tensions. AFP PHOTO/BRENDAN SMIALOWSKIBRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP/Getty Images

“As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts.” Isaiah 55:9

But what about our hurting souls?

Know this…

Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his faithful servants. Psalm 116:15

I have caught every tear.

    You keep track of all my sorrows.
    You have collected all my tears in your bottle.
    You have recorded each one in your book. Psalm 56:8

And I have things under control.

God is just: He will pay back trouble to those who trouble you and give relief to you who are troubled… 2 Thessalonians 1:6-7

Let me be clear….I more than have things under control……..I am working good.

And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose. Romans 8:28

John says in 1 John 3:15 that if we harbor hatred in our hearts, we are murderers. Exactly the same as a young man who sits in a prayer meeting and then murders its participants. The same. The very same.

That’s not okay.

That’s not okay at all.