What do Perfectionism, Control, Vulnerability and Love have in Common?

My pregnancy was the beginning of an unravelling – of finding the end of my rope – and the battle grounds to surrender.

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I was blinded by my own abilities and talents, by my self-discipline and self-motivated ways. If something needed doing, leave it to me. If something needed changing, give me the steps to follow. From my career, to my marriage, to my health and even my faith, I had everything “under control.”

But the problem with control is that it’s simply an illusion, because we are only ever “in control” when things are within our ability to control them!

Read that again.

We are only ever “in control” when things are within our ability to control them!

 

And what is it we can control? Our thoughts, our perception, our attitude, our response and reactions. But that’s about it.

And the problem was, I spent 80% of my life worrying and striving to control things that were out of my control.

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I strived to be perfect in everything: to have the perfect career, be the perfect friend, daughter, wife and Christian woman; to have the perfectly clean house and cook x number of days a week; to have the perfect body, eating habits and work out routine; to never get mad, angry or frustrated with people (to their face); to help out and give (time, resources, money) even when it was at the determinant to my personal priorities; over commenting in fear of letting people down; marking every Christian “check box” to keeping and progressing in my faith….

 

I was bound by (my) laws and rules and if I broke even one, I believed I was a terrible person- a failure and surely I needed to try harder.

I tried – and tried some more- until I nearly died. 

And if I boiled it all down, it was all simply an attempt to control what people thought about me and whether they liked me; things that are completely 100% of our my control!
The accolades and achievement were striving to feel worthy. The over committing was striving to be liked. The helping and giving was striving to be accepted. The perfect marriage and body were striving to be wanted. And the perfect faith was striving to be loved.

 

But what was the real motivator behind my behaviour- the master that held me slave to my striving: FEAR; Of People seeing me – really seeing me- of being found out, rejected and ultimately unloved.

Do we see the vicious cycle?
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The reality is, perfectionism – the chase for perfect – is entirely unattainable because we cannot control the uncontrollable. And when we spend 80% of our energies trying to control what isn’t within our abilities, we have no energy left to work on what we can control. And we ultimately end up feeling like a failure at everything!

 

Perfectionism is a myth and a lie. It’s completely and entirely impossible to achieve and in chasing it, we’re setting ourselves up for failure in every area of our life. We will never win the race, we will never arrive and we will never find lasting peace, joy or contentment on this journey.

And every area we struggle in is an arrow pointing to a genuine problem with our heart- a referral pain to the deeper issue down below:
 
  • Eating disorders
  • Anxiety
  • Achievement
  • Accolades
  • Addiction
  • Workaholism
  • Fear
  • Worry
  • Stress
  • Glorifying “Busy”
  • Indecisiveness
  • Sexual Strongholds
What do all these things have in common? Control.
They were an attempt at grasping for control. And while I attempted to balance the spinning plates for years, they kept me blinded to the real problem – pain I’d simply kept pushing down deeper.

 

The problem with pain is that when unresolved it continuously resurfaces in our life, many times deceiving us, because it looks different the last time. 

My perfectionistic ways were simply masks – armour I was using to protect myself from being seen- from having to acknowledge and own the pain from my past.

 

When we choose to hide our real selves from the world- when we omit the messy hard parts of our lives and keep them hidden the world – we cloak ourselves in shame.

 

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Shame is a word we all struggle to connect with or we reserve for people who have done “really bad things.” But the fact is:

Shame is universal. We all have it, but it’s triggers and how it manifests itself behaviourally looks different for everyone.

What it does have in common for all of us is feelings of fear, anger, sadness, depression, blame, disconnection and loneliness.

 

So if we look at the areas in our life where we feel like that, we’ll discover that truthfully, were blanketed in shame; there’s something we’re running from or something were choosing to hide, maybe even from ourselves.

 

And the key to removing the cloak – to breaking free from shame-  while simple in theory, can be extremely difficult in practice.

 

Vulnerability.

 

Vulnerability is the key to breaking the chains of shame- of all the negative feelings we’d rather run from.

 

If we imagine a graph, shame on one end, and acceptance and love on the other, then vulnerability is the dial the moves us from one to the other.

 

When we choose to allow our selves to be seen- when we have the courage to own our stories and share them with others no matter how marred or messy- we give others permission to own their own hard parts.

When we can learn to sit in our own dark cave and not run from it, than we can sit with others in theirs.

And what does that do? It connects us.

 

And connection is the key to feelings of love, acceptance, belonging, joy, meaning and ultimately purpose.
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16-18 Whenever, though, they turn to face God …they suddenly recognize that God is a living, personal presence.  Nothing between us and God, our faces shining with the brightness of his face. And so we are transfigured much like the Messiah, our lives gradually becoming brighter and more beautiful as God enters our lives and we become like him.
So what does it take to do this? How can we begin to embrace vulnerability and own our stories?
It starts with taking an honest look in the mirror.
 
  • What do we struggle with?
  • What do we dread others finding out or seeing about ourselves?
  • What parts of our past do we want to hide or are ashamed of?
  • In what ways do we beat ourselves up, harm ourselves or push our selves into “behaving?”
 
It starts there, with a pen and paper, writing them down and choosing to no longer hide them; to own who we really are, right now in this current season, and trusting we’re not alone.

Take just one thing, go and share it with someone.

Might I suggest God first?
He is faithful and just to forgive us, heal us and make us new when we seek him with our whole heart.
 Even before he made the world, God loved us and chose us in Christ to be holy and without fault in his eyes. God decided in advance to adopt us into his own family by bringing us to himself through Jesus Christ. This is what he wanted to do, and it gave him great pleasure.
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But we must remember, our lives are in a perpetual cycle of learning, growing and ultimately of surrendering control; moving into a deeper relationship of trust and intimacy with The Lord.

 

God knows what we need and when. He’s not impatient or hurried to see us smarten up and get our act together. He is patience, steadfast, gentle and merciful, seeing us not for who we are now or defining us by our circumstance; he sees us for who we are in Christ- for the women we will become and for all he designed us to be.

 

The ultimate rose cored glasses if you will. Not because he’s a fool in love [but he is that too!] but because of our inheritance in Christ- the ultimate gift we’ve been given through his death.

 

God is slowly at work in our lives, ever refining us, purifying our minds and transforming our hearts to be more like Jesus, until the day of Christ’s return.

 

Highly effective lukewarm Christians

This past summer, we visited a small, new church plant in the country.

Dave and I are contemporary worship music junkies [can’t get enough of this and this song right now!] and by the looks of their website, they were bound to wow us with their “performance.” [aka: move us emotionally, bringing us into a space where we feel God’s presence amongst the congregation and in us]

What I didn’t expect what one of the bluntest, most pointed sermons I’d heard in a long time. Truth be told, it was exactly what I needed to hear!

As I opened my bible this morning, to commence my home work for the Seeking Grace Women’s Study, my notes from this message fell in my lap and as I quickly refreshed my memory, I realized like always, it’s timing was prefect. The 7 habits of highly effective LUKEWARM christians, were some of the exact areas in which we, in the study, felt STUCK.

lukewarm Christianity

You know you’re a lukewarm christian when you….

 

1. Date the Church

Believing the church exists to meet your needs and wants [be it the preacher, worship style, programs or service atmosphere and amenities] and if you don’t like it, you’ll just leave.

2. Don’t Commit

Bare minimum, if anything in terms of offering your time [sunday dates only thanks] , your efforts [serving and volunteering], your resources [tithing and contributions] and your loyalty [never pledging membership or being baptized] .

3. Distrust God

Trusting your wealth [money and/or financial stability] , your possessions [finding security and seeking comfort in your environment, home and assets, rather than in God, his truths and his plan for your life /future] and your own abilities [I can take care of myself, do it on my own, my way and provide for myself and my family], over the one who’s made you that way and given you the very things your trusting in instead of him.

4. Pray Dumb Prayers

Your prayers revolve around yourself – your problems, needs and wants from God- rather than asking what you can do for God, how you can be a blessing to others or praying for others who could use your prayers and support.

Praying on auto- pilot  or out of guilt, as if it were a checklist item [hurrying something as you rush out the door and don’t registering what you said, but hey,  at least you prayed!]  rather than a personal talk with your Father.

Approaching God timidly, rather than with bold, scary prayers,  trusting him with your deepest hurts, biggest dreams and honest feelings, be them small and trivial or huge and all-consuming.

5. Don’t care

Not seeing your own brokenness as spiritually bankrupt and being blinded by your strengths and worldly involvement. “I’m ok and God accepts me. Plus he’ll just forgive me when I ask…”

6. Don’t reach out

Structuring your life around your own to-do’s and desires, never leaving room to help,  serve or introduce others to Christ.

7. Don’t repent

Feeling bad about your shortcomings but never to the point of action; continuously making excuses for your sin and comparing yourself to others sin in an effort to make yourself “feel better” and “not as bad or in need of Jesus” as others.

 

Friends, please note, nowhere does it say “doesn’t follow the rules!” And I say this as much for myself as I do for you.  Jesus did NOT come so that we could have a religion, but that we may know him intimately and have a personal relationship with him.

 

I share this not to condemn us, but simply to bring into light the reality of our hearts condition. We’re arrogant, prideful, selfish and many times fail to see our need for God in every way! If nothing else, this list should show us our sin and bring us to true repentance- to a place where we can acknowledge how broken we are and how desperately we need God to change and refine us.

Because no matter how hard we try, we cannot change on our own and we’ll inevitably keep coming back, finding ourselves in this list. But with God’s grace and love, he promises to finish the work he started in us and give us everything we need to do his will.

All he needs is our surrender. It’s time we take an honest look at ourselves and confess our areas of lukewarm christianity…..