My Big Fat Trust Issues

friends

“I believe people are wholly selfish. Why do I need them?” I asked with flat, thorough conviction. There was no quibble in my query. I wasn’t playing a game. He was a professional and the burden of proof lived on him.

After all, I was armed with forty years of evidence.

“Other people may need people. But not me. I have a vibrant relationship with Jesus, and He’s perfect and has no disguised agenda. He knows me completely, loves me anyway, and He is briefed on all facets of every circumstance of my life. Why would I invite other jacked-up people to drag their dysfunction into mine?” I sincerely continued.

I guess I’m a reformed loner. That dialogue was with my Christian counselor two years ago; I suppose he won the argument since I now find myself thick in genuine relationships. You see, my people are meeting at my house tonight. In fact, I should be vacuuming and hiding the disgust of our lives right now instead of this, but….

Last week I was five minutes late. And I was hosting. I ran in with 2/3 of my wet hair clipped to the top of my head, designated Meredith as the substitute hostess, and pointed them in the direction of the kitchen. I don’t think my dust bunnies will catch them off guard this week.

ladies group

These people are seventeen gals looking for a safe place for friendship and an honest pursuit of Jesus. We began meeting weekly a year and a half ago, and it’s ridiculous. I have cried, cussed, and gasped for air, suffocating from breath-snatching laughter. This is where I asked for prayer as I weaned myself off the anti-depressant. This is where we cry out for wisdom as we parent. This is where we admit we have lost the desire to read our Bibles. This is where we send each other heinous pictures of our morning carline attire and our mountains of laundry. This is where we have permission to be flawed.

laundry mountain

Our purpose is gritty. Because life is.

And then beyond that circle, there are a handful of people with whom I have no secrets. None. And there is no freedom that I have ever experienced like being fully known.

I have zero fear these people are checking out on me. If they had been that kind, I gave them ample reason to vamoose long ago. And they’re still kicking it around these parts.

So how did my counselor change my mind?

FOMO.

Fear of missing out. He sold me on the aspect of life I had never experienced – intimacy. He championed its benefits while acknowledging its risks.

“The real and probable risk of being hurt is worth the richness of relationship,” he lobbied.

I am no longer afraid people won’t love me if they really know me. I am no longer afraid people will use my feelings against me if I share them. I cannot remember the last time I intentionally walled people out to protect myself.

Am I speaking anybody’s language here?

As I learned through counseling, due to childhood trauma, some parts of me stopped developing at age 5. The ability to trust was one of them.

Now I still have some wonky defaults. I still automatically assume the worst about people. It’s my natural response, but I catch it almost immediately and recalibrate to truth and love. I still have to force myself to share with other people….even meaningless details about my life. Sometimes my internal exchange goes like this, “Cookie, you have to tell this. Not because it’s important but because you are committed to this relationship and sharing yourself in it. Now do it. It’s not optional. And it does matter.” I still have to bully myself into it at times.

I was recently told I had been described several years back as “a really neat girl that you’ll never get to know.” Absolutely nailed it.

And, fellas, after extensive conversations and expensive counseling sessions with my dude, you are often apt to live in this place too. Probably for different reasons, but the dangers of isolation are the same. You need other guys who will cut the BS and shoot straight. Who will challenge and support you simultaneously. You carry a weight we gals don’t acknowledge enough. You need the company of other men who shoulder the pressure to succeed and provide. You aren’t meant to be the lone ranger.

Because isolation is dangerous.

We need people to speak hope when our circumstances seem hopeless.

We need people to speak Truth when we are believing lies.

We need people to lend us strength and faith when we are thin.

And we need people to text us nutty YouTube videos and memes that make us snort cackle on a cold Thursday morning.

That’s how we’re built.

friends

So if your bicycle is stuck in the mud of distrust, and you’re exhausted from spinning that back tire and catching no traction, here are my suggestions:

  1. Be wise about whom you trust. My counselor suggested I test the waters with a couple of people before emptying all of my closets and dumping a heap of skeletons at their feet.
  2. EVERYONE needs at least one person they can tell EVERYTHING.
  3. For the most part, people are doing the best they know to do. When you get hurt, be wise, extend grace, and move forward in a healthy way.
  4. If someone breaks your trust, don’t allow it to negatively affect your capacity to trust others.
  5. Everybody needs a group. I highly suggest a same-sex group committed to real dialogue about real life.
  6. If you have trust/intimacy issues, Scary Close by Donald Miller is the best book I’ve ever encountered. If you don’t read, get the audio version.

As much as I hate to admit it – I was wrong. I do need people. And so do you.

Because YouTube wasn’t meant to be enjoyed alone.

[Feature Image: Mathias Klang]

Let’s Get This Party Started…

Screen Shot 2015-11-16 at 2.50.24 PM

Happy New Year, friend!

It’s time to get this party (and 2016) started.

You can now kick off your day and new year with the first Who’s Your Daddy? video. Grab your workbook, 20 minutes, a pen & journal, and head here to dive in.

*Read the introduction in the workbook, so you’re familiar with the format.

*The video password is on the first page in your book.

*Each video is about 20 minutes in length.

*You will need an internet connection to access the videos, but you can download them and watch them anytime, anywhere.

*The Group Discussion Guide is a free downloadable pdf, with all the info you need to lead an effective WYD group.

If you have friends you want to join you in your WYD experience, they can test-run the study with access to all of Week One (video & workbook pages). Encourage them to take it for a spin before purchasing the rest of the content.

If you have any questions or issues, please email us at howdy@tenaciousgrace.cc. It is our absolute pleasure and honor to serve you.

Know that we are praying HUGE prayers that God reveals Himself in a crazy powerful way during your time with Him.

Massive love to you,
Cookie

PS – If you haven’t ordered your copy of WYD and would like to, you can do that here, and we’ll stick a copy in the mail to you tomorrow. In the meantime, feel free to get started with Week One.

12 Days of Giveaways!

santa

On the first day of Christmas,

my true love sent to me

a partridge in a pear tree…

It’s the happiest time of year! And we, at Tenacious Grace, want to share some Christmas love and loot with you during the first 12 days of December.

Our study, Who’s Your Daddy, will be available for purchase at tenaciousgrace.cc this Tuesday, December 1 [insert freakout moment/happy dance combo].

And we want to lavish the spoils of our celebration on you – our favorite people.

The giveaway will be hosted on the Tenacious Grace Facebook page, and we’ll feature a different giveaway package every three days. The packages include a free copy of Who’s Your Daddy? plus items from Thistle FarmsThirty-One, Mainstream Boutique, Rodan + Fields, Jubilee Farms, and Cashua Coffee. Not to mention, adult coloring pages, custom stationery and prints designed by the uber-talented Lindsay Haselden, fun apparel, and more.

Here’s the 411 on how you can enter & win…

  1. Like the Tenacious Grace Facebook page (If you’ve already done that, you’re golden on #1. Now, make sure you complete #2).
  2. Like and comment on each giveaway package separately (These will be posted on December 1, 4, 7, 10).

We will announce the winner on the evening of the third day of each package.

What a fun way to kick off the month! Join us & score the good stuff – for yourself or someone on your Christmas list.

And you have my word, there will be no swimming swans or laying geese or French hens or calling birds or turtle doves amid the packing peanuts of your prize. This is a fowl-free giveaway.

Merry Christmas to you, friends!

[Feature Image: David Melchor Diaz]

Does Fear Make Me a Bad Person?

A Syrian refugee flashes a victory sign at Reyhanli refugee camp in Hatay province on the Turkish-Syrian border March 31, 2012. REUTERS/Osman Orsal

It looks like I’ll be enjoying turkey, dressing, and cranberry sauce with a side of fear and trembling this Thanksgiving.

I’m afraid.

The kind of fear that needles sleep and browbeats waking hours.

It takes my breath.

It steals.

I have slept through the night twice in two weeks. Mostly my brain tosses and turns. I imagine someone casing my home, determining its vulnerability. I obsessively imagine Amanda Blackburn’s encounter with her attackers. They have invaded my house every day since they broke into hers.

__________

Sunday night we scurried from a scrumptious dinner at an Indian restaurant to the theater across town just in time to catch the previews before Mockingjay, Part II. We dashed about, speed walking, and camped in perfect seats with our friends before the opening scene, giggling and giddy with anticipation, tickled to be kid-free and on a double date.

But when a character stuck a gun under Katniss’ chin, a panic flared in my gut.

And then a fellow moviegoer’s need to head to the restroom painted Paris all over me. My breathing shallowed and I was flush with a hot sweat.

I am afraid of seeing evil in the eyes of another.

__________

And for the first time, jail ministry has frightened me. After all, the inmates I’m in relationship with aren’t there for yanking the tags off mattresses. Recidivism is real.

Your enemy wants to handicap your love, He said.

I know……..but how is murder Your best for anybody?

I don’t get it.

I don’t author evil, He said.

I am incapable of sanctioning it.

__________

I was against allowing refugees into the Unites States.

Did I think refugees were terrorists? Absolutely not.

Did I think Muslims were terrorists? No.

Did I think terrorists could potentially hijack the sanctuary of refugees to advance their cause? I did.

There is inconsistency in your passion, He said.

You mean, how can I beat the drum of the marginalized and not have a heart for refugees?

Fear. That’s how.

Love trumps fear, He said.

Love trumps fear, I agreed.

I do now believe we should admit refugees to the US; I do believe we are under a Biblical mandate to assist the oppressed, but I needed a little grace to get there.

I’d like to think fear doesn’t make me a bad person. It makes me a mama with an unhealthy worry over her children. It makes me a human with a clenched fist around safety as an idol. It makes me an advocate tempted to coddle fear instead of pressing into boldness.

But I’m working on it.

It means I may love with wobbly knees, but this is me dragging the thing into the light.

Remaining free is a hard business. The weaknesses that threaten to sideline us are always at hand.

And when you write a Bible study extolling God’s goodness, His faithfulness and His safety, He makes sure you’re not a liar. That those Truths live in your belly, not just on your tongue.


Freeing Truth to Fight Fear

  • God is absolutely incapable of evil. He doesn’t need it to accomplish His purposes. Evil occurs because we live in a broken world full of broken people. (1 John 1:5)
  • God can use circumstances created by evil to accomplish great things. (Genesis 50:20)
  • God is angered by injustice. (Psalm 7:11)
  • God is always near. We don’t ever trod this messy dirt alone. (Psalm 62:5-8)
  • Our fears point to our idols. (Joshua 24:23)
  • We can be free of fear. (Phil 4:4-7)

So maybe I’ll pass on that side dish of panic on Thursday after all.


Free Stuff – As we prepare to launch the sale of Who’s Your Daddy? on December 1, we’re hosting Twelve Days of Giveaways on the Tenacious Grace Facebook page next week. Come back here on Monday to get all the scoop about how to win a bunch of free loot and kick off the month of December right.

Have the best Thanksgiving, friends.


[Feature Image: Freedom House]

The Advice That Changed My Parenting

awkward family

Disclaimer: Yesterday it was 55° (that’s cold to South Carolinians), and my girl rolled out the door for school in shorts and a short-sleeved tee. You may not wish to read any further…

I’ve been at this parenting gig for thirteen years now, and it’s a beast. Along the way I’ve snatched up tips like a rabid woman on Black Friday, throwing elbows and pressing in assertively. A mama needs all the help she can snag. I’m a generous rabid woman though, so here’s the goods (no throwing of elbows necessary):

1) As your children age, move from control to influence. This gem is from the teaching of Andy Stanley, pastor of North Point Community Church in Atlanta, and it provides a truth we can break ourselves against or adjust ourselves to.

My oldest girl is 13, and the fastest way I can alienate her is to attempt to exercise the control over her I did when she was younger.

There are certainly decisions I still hand down that carry the weight and finality of the mama, but there are other dimensions of life where wielding influence is most protective of our relationship AND most effective in preparing her for post-mama life: classes, friends, extracurriculars, dress & style (she’s quite modest), schoolwork, social opportunities, room decor, and time management.

While our non-negotiables remain our bedrock, I have found a margin for independence buys me a lot of influence in this season.

2) Respect cannot be commanded. I learned this one from my Education degree. I began teaching high school English at twenty-two and looked like I was fresh off the school bus. True story, a fellow teacher asked for my hall pass during the beginning of my first year. I had to learn to walk in an authority that neither my age nor my inexperience commanded. Mutual respect and sincere apology were the tickets to looking up into the faces of grown boy-men, requiring them to toe the line.

I wasn’t a pushover. But I wasn’t a tyrant either.

Behavior can be marshaled, but respect rubs shoulders with trust and care. As a former teacher of adolescents, this truth is serving me well with my tween and middle school woman-child.

3) Laughter is relational glue. I have been so guilty of living in the serious. Of taking myself too seriously. Of making life too serious. Of chasing off fun to be responsible. And you know what? That’ll make you sharp and tired, friends. I extinguished there.

Matt Chandler, pastor of The Village Church in Texas, says in his study Recovering Redemption, “I believe with all my heart that God delights in the laughter of Christian homes.”

I have really messed this one up, but my people and I, we are trying to make up for lost time.

We cackle on the regular.

cawthon humor

cawthon humor

cawthon humor

4) Don’t try to protect them from God. I snagged this one from the Big Guy Himself. God is always more concerned with who we are becoming than what we’re doing. Well, that’s true for our kiddos too, and it doesn’t start when they’re adults.

Unfortunately, adversity is a great character builder.

I have found myself standing before God with my gals metaphorically tucked behind me. As if to say, “I’ll tell them what You say, and I’ll help them grow into who You want them to be.” We only delude and terrify ourselves when we think we have the ability to protect them from the work He wants to do in them.

The great news is He loves them more than we do.

5) Be a student of your child. I first encountered this idea from a Sunday School class corporately studying The 5 Love Languages of Children. To me, learning my offspring – their passions, their personalities, their gifts, their wiring – is how I can be most efficient and effective in my parenting efforts.

Carson, my oldest, is an introvert whose love language is gifts. This summation informs a lot of my interactions with her. When I pick her up from cross country practice, she doesn’t want to talk. She’s been “on” all day and is ready to quiet and withdraw. But by dinner, she’s ready for questions about her day.

And buying her a new book or her favorite snack sends her into her own self-described love cocoon.

the fam.

Campbell is 10. She’s an extrovert whose love language is quality time. This past Friday she and I picked up a couple of birthday gifts, grabbed dinner, and carried it home to eat and watch a movie. I could give away all of her favorite possessions – bow and arrow, BB gun, legos, puzzles – and she would only notice if she realized they were missing.

Which she wouldn’t because she’s an extrovert and never spends time in her room.

6) Be guilty of being demonstrative. I recently read this in a book about raising teen daughters. Hug and say “I love you” a lot, even when they feel they have outgrown it. I’ve never heard an adult with parent issues complain, “My parents were too affectionate and harassed me with ‘I love you‘s.” And if mine do, I’m striving to be guilty as charged.

7) Allow your children to make choices you disagree with. Okay, we’re gonna revisit why I allowed the 10 year old tadpole to wear shorts and a t-shirt to school when it was 55°.

My husband and I once attended a PTA meeting where a school administrator challenged us to allow our children to face the consequences of their choices. If they refuse a coat, allow them to be cold. If they forget their homework, don’t bring it.

I took his advice, recognizing school as a safe place to allow my girls to exert some independence and feel the consequences of their choices. We don’t return home for forgotten ID’s, and we don’t require coats. If they don’t do a homework assignment, they pay the piper. Did I try to convince my child to wear jeans instead of shorts? I did. But I didn’t mandate it. Luckily for her, Mother Nature was feeling gracious later in the day.

8) Resist settling conflict for your child. One day I was driving, listening to a parenting segment on the radio. The speaker lauded the value of allowing our children to navigate conflict, especially sibling clashes, on their own. Once a disagreement takes a trajectory of escalation, put the siblings in a confined space, she suggested, for a specified period of time to resolve the issue. If they have not reached resolution at the conclusion of the time frame, they are assigned another block of time for forced togetherness.

cawthon humor

cawthon humor

For years since, our girls are relegated to the bathroom for 15-minute intervals when they can’t tame the tongue or rein in the rage. They may paint their nails, scream, apply make-up, cry, play a game, but they aren’t allowed out until the altercation is no longer active. More than anything it removes me and my ire from the mix.

9) A family dog eradicates the food-on-the-floor impasse of parenthood. Speaks for itself, but yes and thank you. #ThreeCheersForObadiah

I would love to hear from you, fellow soldiers in the trenches. What has been the parenting advice that changed your parenting?

[Feature image: Kevin N. Murphy]