An Open Letter to My Wife, to God, & to You

phontoIf you don’t mind my getting a little personal… or even if you do mind, I’m going to anyway.  Let me get personal about me and my story… and then I want to get personal about you and your story.

I’ve got something extraordinary to celebrate.  

Caron and I are celebrating our 40th Wedding Anniversary this week.  Under any circumstances, this would feel like an extraordinary thing to celebrate.  40 years of doing anything doesn’t happen that often.

 

FullSizeRender

But as you know, under our circumstances, it’s a sign and a wonder.  It’s a miracle of miracles.

Almost 2 1/2 years ago when I woke up my wife one morning, to confess to her the worst failure of my life, that had happened more than several years earlier, I watched what had been a fabulous marriage for both of us, descend into a depth of hell, that there is not adequate enough language to describe.

Because of the massive pain it brought to Caron… and the massive disorientation it brought to her and our family… as well as the public humiliation that ensued, I would have never predicted we would be where we are today.  I believed in miracles… and had participated in many over the years, but this was in another miracle galaxy that I wasn’t sure we could reach.

47 Quotes That Will Change Your Life

IMG_1967True confessionI’m a quote hoarder.

I underline, dog-ear, highlight, copy and paste other people’s wisdom several times a day. I keep 3×5 cards in my purse and scribble quotes in the dark at the movies. I say, “Ooooh that’s a good one.”  A lot.

And I’ve been doing this for years.

So, today, I’m sharing just a sliver of the insight, advise and sayings that have caught my eye, grabbed my heart and challenged me to grow. They are changing me. And I hope these ancient/modern musings make you stop and think or reevaluate your own view of things and, like they have for me, may they give you a little more juice for your journey of living, loving and leading.

What I want you to know: 

* It caused me great pain (no torture) to limit this to merely 47.  

*Quotes appear in no certain order.  They are ALL my favorites.

*Just because I quote someone it doesn’t mean I agree with every single thing they have ever written or what they believe. (Heck, I can’t recall ever agreeing with everything ANYONE has ever said.) I like the adage, “Chew the meat and spit out the bones.”

*All truth is God’s Truth no matter who presents it.  I draw from all kinds of sources that resonate with my own life experience or with the Spirit in me. I want to be able to learn from anyone.

* Pick one quote to pass on or to tape to your bathroom mirror. 

*Read slow and… savor.

—————————————————-

1) The longer one stays in flight from reality, the more painful will be the landing.

Taite Adams

 

2) Your task is not to seek for love but to merely find the barriers within yourself that you have built up against it.

    Rumi

 

3) The thing about denial is that it doesn’t feel like denial when it’s going on. 

    Georgina Kleege

 

4) We become whomever we trust the most says we are.

     Bob Goff

 

5) I was born, when all I once feared, I could love.

    Rabia

 

6) Where is the Life we lost in living? 

    T.S.Eliot

 

7) We have all laid the best plans for our children, and then they go out and ruin it all by growing up any way they want to.

   Kristina Riggle

 

8) The way we treat people we disagree with most is a report card on what we’ve learned about love. 

    Bob Goff

 

9) In prosperity our friends know us. In adversity, we know our friends.

G.K. Chesterton

 

10) For although God is right with us and in us and out of us and all through us, we have to go on journeys to find him.

Thomas Merton

 

 11) When I believed my thoughts I suffered.

       Byron Katie

 

12) It’s all that pretending to be perfect that breeds inauthenticity in the church.

       Rich Mullins

 

13) All paths do not lead to God. But God will meet you on whatever path you’re on.

      Unknown

 

14) You can either practice being right or practice being kind.

Anne Lamott

 

15) Sin never introduces itself to us as pain.

      David Loveless

 

16) The lesson that has been hardest for me to learn: there is nothing to prove. 

      Rob Bell

 

17) You have power over your mind- not over outside events. Realize this and you will find strength. 

     Marcus Aurelius

 

18) You need to select your thoughts the same way you select your clothes every day. If you want to control things in your life so bad, work on your mind. That’s the only thing you should be trying to control. 

     Elizabeth Gilbert

 

19) Sometimes, to be happy in the present moment, you have to be willing to give up hope for a better past.

   Robert Holden

 

20) One good thing about music, when it hits you, you feel no pain.

     Bob Marley

 

21) Sometimes, in life, nothing happens. But, sometimes, nothing happens beautifully.

      Colum McCann

 

22) When you say a situation or a person is hopeless, you are slamming the door in the face of God.

     Charles Allen

 

23) We find it hard to love imperfect things so we imagine God is just as small as we are. If we expect or need things to be perfect or to our liking ( including ourselves) we have created a certain path for a very unhappy life.

    Richard Rohr

 

24) We are shaped by what we love.

      Goethe

 

25) Sometimes good things fall apart so better things can fall together.

      Jessica Howell

 

26) The impeded stream is the one that sings.

Wendell Berry

 

27) No matter how bad things are, you can always make things worse.

      Randy Pausch

 

28) Love is the absence of judgement.

      Dali Lama XIV

 

29) I was changing my outfits, my looks, my wig, sometimes several times a day. That’s when I know my soul is restless. 

     Lady Gaga

 

30) Sin is unwillingness to trust that what God wants for me is only my deepest happiness.

Ignatius of Loyola

 

31) There are three things we have to let go of. The first is the compulsion to be successful. Second, is the compulsion to be right—especially theologically right. (That’s merely an ego trip, and because of this “need” churches split in half, with both parties prisoners of their own egos.) Finally, there is the compulsion to be powerful, to have everything under control.

    Richard Rohr

 

32) The truth is everyone is going to hurt you. You just got to find out the ones worth suffering for.

  Bob Marley

 

33) The way you measure the difference between being blessed or being spoiled is the degree to which you feel entitled to it. 

    Mike Breen

 

34) Be with those who help your being.

    Rumi

 

35) I will learn to love the skies I’m under

      Mumford & Sons

 

36) Someone’s therapist knows all about you.

       Dominic Riccitello

 

37) None of your sins survived the cross. 

Clark Whitten

 

38) You can cut all the flowers but you cannot keep Spring from coming.

       Pablo Neruda

 

39) How will you know if you are at the end of your journey if you take the road to another man’s city?

      Thomas Merton

 

40) He has great tranquility of heart who cares for neither the praises or the fault-finding of men. You are not holier if you are praised, nor more worthless if you are found fault with. What you are, that you are. And no human opinion can alter who you are in the sight of God. 

Thomas ‘a Kempis

 

41) It’s never about “them.”

      Byron Katie

 

42) If you don’t love the life God has given you then you’re not seeing the love God has for you. 

Francis Anfuso

 

43) Everything that irritates us about others can lead us to a better understanding of ourselves.

      Carl Jung

 

44) Suffering is a privilege. It moves us toward thinking of essential things and shakes us out of complacency. Calamity cracks you open, moves you to change your ways. 

Pico Iyer

 

45) Everyone wants to change the world, but no one wants to help mom do the dishes.  

Unknown

 

46) If you do not transform your wounds you will transmit them. 

Richard Rohr

 

47) Be not angry that you cannot make others as you wish them to be since you cannot make yourself as you wish to be. 

    Thomas ‘a Kempis

—————————-

 

48) BONUS Freebie! 

Whatever comes, God comes with it.

Caron Chandler Loveless

 

 

You can reach me at [email protected]

***And THANKS FOR SHARING THIS BLOG with someone you think may be interested.

Seven Habits of Highly Gracious People

imageSeveral years ago, I was honored to share the platform at a “Better Man” event with Kennan Burch. It was there I first heard his captivating story and a powerful metaphor that has encouraged me so many times over the last few years.

Kennan has since become a good friend and I recently asked him to tell his story again, as a guest blogger, for you, our LiveTrue subscribers. As you read this, I pray you discover a greater grace for yourself and others.

——————-

“One morning I journaled my way into a huge discovery that has changed my thinking forever. It was a discovery that I had a mindset that worked very much like a hockey penalty box. However, mine was not a visible or physical penalty box, it’s an emotional one.

 So there I was in this place of isolation, doing penance.

Back then, this is the way my mind worked. Any time I “goofed up” I would go into this internal place of isolation until I did my atonement and then finally coming out again after I felt that I had done enough.

While I was in this place of emotional isolation, I was still actively engaged with people socially, but privately there was an emotional barrier between us. Above all else I needed to emotionally hide from them.

Seemingly, the worse thing that could happen to me was to let them know I didn’t have control over my stuff. Exposing any failure or loss of control could be devastating.

Why was I doing this? Well, for some reason it just seemed to make sense. If I could demonstrate to God that I was sorry for my infraction, and I could rebuke myself enough, then maybe He wouldn’t have to expose me, or judge me in front of others. I punished myself so He wouldn’t have to.

Here’s what I finally realized.

If I’m in the penalty box, I’m cut off from the only thing that gives freedom.

True life.

And that’s God’s unconditional love. His amazing grace. It’s like cutting off the oxygen to my soul.

 

Can you relate to this idea? Have you ever been in the penalty box? Do you know someone who is in the penalty box?

Is this the plan of a loving God? Or, the plan of an archenemy designed to keep God’s people completely ineffective. Well, here’s what I now know:

The Seven Habits of Highly Gracious People

 Habit 1:  Allow God to love me even in my imperfections

If a person suffers from the Penalty Box mentality, one of the hardest things to do is to allow God to love them, even in their imperfections.  They beat themselves up for their imperfections and somehow believe that God is beating them up too.  Why?  They deserve it.

They aren’t performing to the standards they know they should.  But this is where the journey begins.  This is is the crux of grace.  Grace is unmerited favor, not based on performance, or doing anything at all.

Habit 2:  Have the Freedom to say “No”

Did you know that guilt and grace are opposite, mutually exclusive emotions?  They cannot occupy the same mind-space at the same time.  So, if I am experiencing guilt, I am not experiencing grace.  And vice versa.  People with the Penalty Box mindset do not like disappointing people.   They tend to feel guilty if they say “no” to others demands and agendas for their lives.

They tend to be “guilted” into a lot of activity they ordinary would not say “yes” to.  So, if a person is to experience grace, they need to have the freedom to say “no” to others’ demands and agendas for their lives.

Habit 3Have the Freedom to Express your Innermost Thoughts

We all have bad thoughts.  They come and go.  We all would be appalled if someone else could really see and hear what we are thinking.

A person with very high standards may be appalled by their own thoughts.

If they entertain them, and indulge in them, they tend to go into the Penalty Box.  Or, they may simply decide to stuff or ingnore them, and pretend they do not exist.   Either choice isn’t good.

Stuffing thoughts and pretending they don’t exist carries it’s own problems and issues.

 

We can know we are experiencing grace, when we have the freedom

to express our innermost thoughts appropriately without fear of judgment.

 Habit 4Feel God’s Love and Forgiveness

When looking at our life’s shortcomings and major infractions, we all have a tendency to think “well, I deserve to feel guilty for this one.”   The “big ones” I mean.  The ones that you really never want anyone else to know about.

If I believe that, then I’m basically saying this, “God you didn’t pay enough for this one.  Your son’s death on the cross was not enough for this one.  I’m going to have to pay for it.

What does God have to do?  Does he have to send another son?  Do you seriously think you’ve done something that he cannot forgive?   So, if a person is going to experience grace, they needs to feel God’s love and forgiveness throughout their entire body, holding no guilt back – even for big ones.

 Habit 5Forgive Others of All Wrong and Remove all Blame

If am to experience grace, the Lord’s Prayer says to “forgive us of our trespasses as we forgive those who have trespassed against us.”  It’s almost as if God wants to use my heart as a conduit for his love to other people.

But, if I don’t forgive someone, or if I place blame upon someone, then it’s almost like I shut off the flow of grace. If I’m not showing it to others then I’m not receiving any myself.  So, if I want to experience God’s grace I need to forgive others of all wrong a remove all blame.

Habit 6Be Open About My Faults (Don’t Wear a Mask)

Hiding is one the defense mechanisms of the Penalty Box mentality.   The internal mantra is, “above all else I must not let others see my faults.”  The tendency is to hide all imperfections and constantly wear a mask.

But if we always wear a mask, then only the mask gets loved. 

And, the fear of taking the mask off gets greater over time as the cavern between the public person and the private person gets bigger.  But, if I am to experience grace, I need to be open about my faults with myself and other safe people.

Habit 7:   Share God’s Grace with Others   

One of the greatest ways to experience more grace is to give it away.

The more grace a person shares with others the more their reservoir will keep being refilled.

Kennan Burch is the Founder of Brand Catalyst.  He is a branding expert and master facilitator.  He spent 20 years at Darden Company and then launched Brand Catalyst Partners in March 2008.  He is also Founder of Dream Builders, a network that provides encouragement, group mentorship, and creative resources to help men pursue their God-given dreams.

Email: [email protected]

Website: www.brandcatalystpartners.com

What I’ve Learned In The Desert

I’ve spent some time in the desert. 

One August friends loaned us their home in Palm Desert. Daily temperatures were around 114 degrees. When I went looking for a tennis partner I was told no one played past 11:00am. Just breathing was a chore in that kind of heat. We drove up into the mountains nearby and as far as you could see the land was brittle, barren and forbidding. I think all we did that trip was sit in the pool.

I’ve spent time in gardens, too.

A few weeks ago, Caron and I went to a little town in north Florida and spent a day biking through some of the most beautiful landscape we’d seen in awhile.  Giant, moss-draped oaks lined the streets.

Deep shade kept us cool in the heat of the day. Everywhere you looked there were flowers and miles and miles of lush coastal marshes.  Just a few hours there and we felt refreshed and renewed. 

All relationships and leadership seem to flow on a continuum

between garden and desert experiences. 

It’s interesting to me that our spiritual story begins in a garden in Genesis 1… and our biological story begins in a garden-like womb. Everything we need to thrive and grow is there.  We are fully provided for.

But, look where we’re first introduced to the ministry of Jesus ––in the desert.  God’s Good News Tour doesn’t open on top of a scenic mountain or in a palatial garden.

It starts from a place of isolated emptiness. 

In the beginning of John’s gospel a voice called people to the desert.  The desert is a deeply evocative place in the scriptures, because we’ve been there, metaphorically, in our own lives.  In the Old Testament the desert speaks of leaving, losing, wandering, struggle and preparation. And it’s where people first hear the promise of a promise land… the promise of a messiah

Years ago, after decades of what felt to me like relentless sacrifice in loving and leading, I got increasingly resentful whenever I was forced into “desert time.”  I didn’t deserve to be there. I had worked so hard to get to the “promise land.”

I never said it, but I know I felt that after all I’d done,

I didn’t  deserve ‘no man’s land.’

Know what I’m talking about?

What is your desert of difficulty or temptation or hardship where you feel most discouraged? 

Out in the desert John the Baptist preached,  “Prepare the way for the Lord.  Make straight paths for him.”  

God seems to be saying: make a straight path for me to walk in the desert places of your life… let’s walk straight into it… and straight through it.  You don’t have to stay there, but let’s not miss there.

I’m writing today from the ‘outback’

of the greatest desert experience of my life.

It’s been a couple of years now. And,, as much as I initially agonized in it, over time, I’ve actually grown fond of much of it’s unique terrain and monastic qualities.  

Here’s how I think I got here:

  1.  I had to ‘get straight’ in my mind, that God had led me into this desert experience. I was fully responsible for what got me here and yet, it was God who brought me here. And though there have been many times of extreme loneliness, we know we are not alone.
  1.  I had to ‘get straight” in my mind that this path, while difficult beyond description, was going somewhere profoundly good-and it wasn’t to hell.  God promises that ALL things end up bringing us to where we began- home. And God’s home always has a garden.
  1. I had to ‘get straight’ in my mind that this path, wasn’t going to last forever…. even though I could see no other road ahead. There is a time and season for everything.  And there’s a reason time passes in seasons.God is always creating, redeeming and resurrecting. So this thing IS actually going somewhere. Somewhere really good.

Jesus came bringing good news.  

And a part of what makes it so good is that

it stands up to the heat of even the most difficult places.

Where is your desert?  

Where do you feel you don’t have enough?  Where do you feel hungry for approval?  What are you lacking? What’s always missing? Where is it you don’t deserve to be? What is it you don’t have enough of? Must you always have a next hill to climb, another mission impossible to accomplish?  What things are you using to ‘medicate’ yourself?

* We can get pretty desperate when we think we’re in a desert.*

Wherever that place is for you, God says let me walk with you THERE, because I’m not ashamed of it anymore than I am ashamed of you.  I’m good news to you in the desert, as well as the garden.  I love you. I’m with you…wherever you are.

…Wilderness and desert will sing joyously, the badlands will celebrate and flower—Like the crocus in spring, bursting into blossom, a symphony of song and color.  

Energize the limp hands, strengthen the rubbery knees. Tell fearful souls, “Courage! Take heart! God is here, right here, on his way to put things right And redress all wrongs. He’s on his way! He’ll save you!”

Springs of water will burst out in the wilderness, streams flow in the desert. Hot sands will become a cool oasis, thirsty ground a splashing fountain.

The people God has ransomed will come back on this road. They’ll sing as they make their way home to Zion, unfading halos of joy encircling their heads,  Welcomed home with gifts of joy and gladness as all sorrows and sighs scurry into the night.

Isaiah 35 (Message)

This is what I’ve experienced in my current desert.  In the midst of all the pain and loss, a symphony of song and color have emerged that I wouldn’t trade for anything in the world.

You can reach me at [email protected]

***THANKS for SHARING this blog with someone you think might be interested.

Who Do You Think You Are?

Here’s an important part of my sense of things these days, as I look at my life and others:

We are all wanting to feel secure, safe, and significant in every part of our lives.

We desire to live, love, and lead from deeply satisfied souls.  

Yet something seems to be standing in our way… and it’s not what we think it is.

Here is the message I taught this past weekend at Grace Church, in Longwood, Fla.  You can view it as my video blog for the week:)  You might even think about watching 1/2 one morning for your devotions and watch the other 1/2 another morning... and see if something fresh begins awakening within you.  If it does, feel free to pass the video or link on to others.

5 Ways Failure Makes You A Better Leader

Every leader I know wants to get it right. We have incredibly high expectations for ourselves .

We pretty much think we should do it well and get it right the first time – every time.  As a result, we often expect the same from those we lead.

 So… how’s that working for you?

Today is “Mastering Mondays” where we tackle often experienced but not often talked about personal and professional issues affecting leaders… leaders in homes, businesses, and ministries.

Some years ago, when we lived in Vancouver BC, I dashed out of my office into the pouring rain to get to a meeting. And, on the way, I got a flat tire.

So, I pull over, get out (in my dress shirt, slacks & dress shoes) grab the spare, jack the car up and quickly change the tire. Totally soaked, I jump back in the car and speed off to my appointment.

Suddenly, the car starts shaking and shuddering and swerving all over the road– and then there’s this horrendous metal- scraping -pavement sound and sparks are flying —I end up at a dead stop, headed into oncoming traffic.

Cars whiz by, honking. And, yes, its still pouring down rain.

Apparently, when I put the spare on, I failed to attach the lug nuts properly.

Since I didn’t have a lug wrench (I mean, who carries these things in their car?) and I was in such a hurry -this was eons before cell phones–I just tightened the lug nuts with my bare hands.

 Yeah. I really did that.

My spare tire had fallen off around 50mph. This is where we say the rubber failed to meet the road.

Have the proverbial wheels fallen off something you have given yourself to?   Have you ever intended to do good and it turned out bad?

Do you always expect what you set out to do or assign others to do (i.e. your kids, your team-mates, etc) will be a sucess?

I don’t remember having changed more than one tire previous to that infamous day.  I was still learning.  I didn’t get it right.

 

Failure MUST be an EXPECTED and ACCEPTED part of every good Success Playbook.

 

Here are 5 things I now keep as a permanent part of the Success curriculum I use in leading myself and others.

  1.  Remember when Jesus invited us to follow him and be his disciples, he ‘baked’ failure into the recipe.The greek word for “disciple” is “mathetes.”  It means LEARNER.

A Learner who is learning the art of living, loving, and leading from THE rabbi.

Anyone in the learning phase will be prone to make mistakes and fail.

  1.  Remember that the process of learning is the process of figuring something out. It is the process of step by step. It isn’t about performance or perfection, it’s about process.  And process is how we slowly make progress

Most of the time, religion has taught us that discipleship is all about: demands… standards… things to achieve… things to perfect… haven’t done quite enough yet…  (Note: all of which are great for the ongoing growth of our ego).

But that’s not what Jesus is inviting us into.

His discipleship is a grace-filled process.

Check out this astonishing statement in Matthew 26.

Then Jesus told them (his disciples), “This very night you will ALL fall away on account of me… But after I have risen, I will go ahead of you into Galilee.”  Then Peter and other disciples got incensed that Jesus thought they would fail him. 

Well, we know how that turned out.  Not just Peter, but everyone of the most committed, faithful failed Jesus badly… at what seemed like the worst possible time.

I’ve thought and said similar things:

“There is no way… under no condition will I ever fail in a horrific way.”

I couldn’t have been more wrong.

And I have been stunned by all Jesus has done in our lives even after such a colossal failure.

What I see Jesus doing with his team, I don’t remember hearing many of the rest of us say to those we’re leading:  Your knowledge and your willpower will not be enough.  You are going to fail.  I know you better than you know yourselves.  But wait!  I’ve made compassionate, grace-filled plans following your failure.  After your ‘fall’, I’ll see you later in Galilee…I’ll see you on the ‘other side’, and all will be well.” 

A few weeks later,…

Jesus commissions the same ones who betrayed him

to lead and multiply His movement. 

That’s unthinkable harvesting from failure.

I’m realizing that as leaders in churches, businesses, and homes

we do a great job of teaching people how to succeed

 but we do a HORRIBLE job at teaching them how to fail! 

I don’t remember the last time I heard a leadership talk or sermon on the fact that:

“Oh, by the way, no matter how devoted or smart you think you are, or how much money you can throw at something or how strong your willpower is —some part of you is going to fail.  More than once. And when you do, it’s not the end of the world.

Mistakes are baked into any good recipe for success.  

Out of our failures our greatest successes will be born.

  1.  Quit obsessively asking yourself: “What was I thinking?”No one has ever faced the unique challenges that you have, while being you.  You literally are the first… so take it easy on yourself.

I’ve lost count of all the times I’ve said “What was I thinking?”… regarding personal, family, and leadership decisions over my lifetime.

Most of those decisions, seemed like the best move at the time… even though some of them turned out not to be. Still, I would not have learned the volume of things that came with those mistakes and misjudgments.

 My failures actually set me up for even truer and better success than I had hoped for.

  1.  Quit listening to the critical and harsh voices in your own head or coming from others.You and I both know when we’ve been royally wrong.

We would give anything to have a “do over.”

Often we can’t. But what we can do is to receive the grace Jesus gave from Day One in the step by step process of learning about living, loving, and leading.

You know the proverbial 3 steps forward, 2 steps back?  Turns out Jesus knew all along, that would be our path… and it would be a path He would walk with us daily… not even stopping us from where we were going… knowing it would actually be this very path- the two steps backward- that would bring about our greatest transformation.

  1.  Own your failures, don’t hide them.  When you fail, your ego will immediately lead you to hide.  Instead, allow the best part of you to take responsibility for whatever didn’t work out, and truly learn from it.

I’ve found that the greater failure is to hide and shame yourself or let others shame you, instead of finding restoration in it.

I wish my tire falling off years ago was the last time I had the ‘wheels come off’ in my life.

But that just isn’t the human story.

As much as I’ve fought to keep my act together and lead well at various times I didn’t have the full information I needed to make a critical hire, or didn’t fully see a part of the ministry that was draining us financially, or I misjudged a moment as being from God and paid dearly for it as people voted otherwise with their feet.

The list goes on. Yours probably does too. And each time it hurt.  Each time there was regret.  Each time I internally beat myself, mercilessly.  But now, I don’t always have to be the smartest guy in the room.

I’m tumbling into the new found freedom of a True Learner.

I am slowly succeeding, and sometimes it’s by failing.

When the ‘wheels’ fall off of whatever you’re doing, know it’s not the end of the world.

(BTW- I’ve nearly perfected the art of changing a tire. I call AAA.)

We’re here to learn alongside you @youlivetrue.com. If you often have the mindset ” failure is not an option.” We need to talk. Call us for a consultation.

And please SHARE this blog with someone you think may be interested.

Question: “What attitudinal shift needs to happen in you, both for yourself and those you lead, when you don’t nail things right the first several times?”

10 Warning Signs You Might Cross the Line

Staying faithful to my wife was a solemn promise I made to her before God.

I utterly intended to keep that promise to the end of our days. I lived without doubt that nothing could ever tempt me to do otherwise.  I never went looking for ‘trouble’ and thought I was aware when ‘trouble’ was looking for me… and believed I was always avoiding it.

The vast majority of good people who betray their marriages never see it coming.  Many establish clear, healthy boundaries and have no desire to stray, in fact, their marriage is one of the highest priorities of their lives.

That was my story. Totally. 

I enlisted trusted friends to ask hard questions to help me stay accountable. And, over the years, my wife, Caron, and I, often talked openly about our marriage being a prime target ( actually every marriage is a target) because we believed there is an enemy seeking to kill, steal and destroy our relationship with God, our witness for Christ, and out to rob us of the true joy God designed for us to experience in our marriages. 

So what happened?

Actually, a whole slew of things contributed- and Caron and I want to unpack as many of those here as we can in the months to come.  We are passionate about helping you avoid the most unthinkable nightmare you, your spouse and your family could ever imagine.

In future blogs we want to talk about

* How to know your own state of vulnerability to tempting conditions. 

* How we often contribute to our own emotional burdens making ourselves more susceptible.

* Lies we believe that contribute to our deception

* Unhealthy personality patterns that diminish our marital and relational capacities

–& a whole lot more. 

We’ve already blogged about entitlement, a subtle driver with a powerful engine for certain personality types. If you haven’t read that blog click the link here: “When You Think You Deserve Better Than This.”  An “I deserve a break today” mentality seems to play a major role for many people who experience moral failure.

In This Blog

We want to talk about how to catch yourself before a random encounter, casual aquantaince, innocent friendship or working relationship even comes close to crossing the line

Here are some warning signs you should NEVER EVER ignore

#1) When you start to notice you are not telling your spouse about certain conversations you are having with another person. 

#2) When you notice the other person avoids your spouse, makes no effort to include your spouse in a friendship with you or you avoid bringing your spouse into your interactions with the other person. 

#3) When you begin to feel this other person may be paying attention or listening to you with more empathy than your spouse has lately.  They may say certain things to you that stroke your ego, things like:

 “I’ve never met someone with such wisdom and insight as you. I so admire and respect the work you do. You really are one amazing person.”

OR

“Wow! You look especially good today. Have you been losing weight? And what’s that great perfume you’re wearing?” 

OR

“Hey, you doing okay? I’ve really been worried about you. You’ve been working so hard lately. Anything I can do to help?”

OR 

“Do you think we could be better friends?” 

#4) When you begin discussing marital problems with this other person, either theirs or yours. 

OR

#5) You avoid discussing your marriage with the other person  (as if it doesn’t exist) or, if they are married, you notice they avoid talking about their spouse. 

#6) When you begin making excuses to yourself like: “Nothing to worry about here. There’s no harm in just talking.” Or, “I’m really strong. Nothing about this person is going to feel attractive to me.  I have this totally under control.” Or “We have a lot of work to discuss.  No big deal if we grab a bit of lunch first.”

 #7) When you do begin to feel some type of attraction toward this  person.  

#8) When you begin to confide in this person in areas normally reserved for your spouse.  

#9) When it feels easier to spend time with this other person than with your spouse.

#10) When you start to notice this person positioning themself to be near you, making excuses to see you privately, appealing to your compassion by “keeping you in the loop” of some troubling personal issue or they “over-serve” or keep seeking to help or assist you in demonstrative or ingratiating ways. 

If ANY of the above situations are currently playing with your head,

then ADMIT that those mysterious brain chemicals are starting to get overwhelming

and GET OUT of there immediately

If you have friendships with members of the opposite sex OR same sex … and you want to avoid situations that could lead in an unhealthy direction make sure you include your spouse in the relationship (in some form or another) from the get-go.  This is probably your safest deterant. 

NOTE:***Any time a person is uninterested or unwilling to be a “friend of your marriage” they are no friend of yours

And when we do not involve our spouse or even begin to keep the slightest “secret” from them we’re already in trouble

If you want to put your spouse at ease, able to trust you with the other people in your life, make sure your spouse is a part of those relationships

It may sound outdated but, when we are married, all our friendships should be open & shared. They should involve both you and your spouse on some healthy level. 

 If, for some reason, you don’t feel a need to make your spouse a part of a “friendship” you have with someone you need to deeply question what your true objective is for maintaining that relationship and make a beeline to talk with a counselor or trusted, accountable friend. 

We @youlivetrue.com can be a safe place for you to talk about

your vulnerabilities and questions. 

PLEASE SHARE this blog with someone you think might be interested. ( And YES! our SHARE BUTTONS appear to be working again:) ( thanks Lorrie Ann & Jocklyn for alerting us to that snafu.) 

6 Tips For Parents of Really Great Kids

So, you have this great kid. 

I mean, really great. 

Some days, you can hardly believe how cool it is that out of zillions of kids out there, this fantastically good piece of human angel food cake landed on your plate. She is always kind, and smart and loving and probably destined to be the youngest star in the Bolshoi Ballet (and that’s just before breakfast.) Or he’s so wise for his age and funny, always respectful, and his #1 goal in life is to eradicate poverty by his 30th birthday!

Everyone knows what a great kid you have. 

You feel so incredibly blessed to be their parent and you go along like this for some years cultivating this really special bond between you and your child.  

And, then, it happens. 

Your really great kid messes up. 

Nah, not my kid. Can’t be. 

But, when the facts get assembled, indeed, the shattering truth is confirmed. It’s like a hard jab to the gut. A major part of your world implodes. You say things like:

What did I do wrong??? How could this happen? We hang out, we do stuff together.  I’ve totally raised this kid by The Book. Everything was going along just fine, then bam.  I’ve done everything I knew to do. I gave her everything. I thought I knew my child inside and out. I have no idea who my daughter is now. No kid could have been more loved. 

So, now what do you do? 

1) Before you freak out & throw The Book at them, walk away for at least a few minutes (preferably longer, especially if it’s a major offense) and take some deep breaths while you do a quick flashback to your own youth

Any house rules broken? curfew violations? drug experiences? practical jokes run amuck?  any undocumented encounters your parents never knew you had? Try to get in touch with a few of THOSE moments in your own story. Try to FEEL how you felt at either being caught & punished or feel the fear you carried at just the thought of being discovered.

Revisiting our own emotions will help us better empathize with how our child may feel about disappointing us, and, in many cases, disappointing themselves. 

We’ve come to believe lack of empathy is THE #1 roadblock to relational harmony. 

But hang on! you might say, this is exactly what I hoped to help my child avoid –stupid mistakes! Everything I did as a parent was to keep them from doing   some of the foolish, dangerous, rebellious, illegal, etc., things I did.

Or you might say: I thought if I loved my child well enough she wouldn’t feel the need to do something that might hurt her or get her into trouble. Or, you might even say: I never did anything like this. What’s wrong with my kid that he would do such a thing? 

2) Identify & own all of your own emotions over what has happened. 

It’s not what you’re thinking about this, but what you’re feeling. Are you feeling anger, shame, guilt, fear, despair, hurt, etc? Our response / reaction to what our child has done will be a critical piece as to how they recover. Our reaction is driven out of our own emotions about what they’ve done.

Before we jump down their throats a healthy response would be for us to recognize what our emotions are saying to us about ourselves, then what they are saying to us about our child. 

3) Assign each emotion you discover to you or your child

Ex: I’m feeling anger at myself for not checking out more details about the party she went to. 

      I’m feeling shame over how her actions will make me look bad as a person and as a parent. 

      I’m feeling guilty for working so much lately and not spending enough time with him.

      I’m feeling fearful about what could have happened or now that ________ has happened, I’m  afraid this will become a pattern or that she could go to jail or that_______________. 

      I’m feeling angry he did something he promised he would never do. 

      I’m feeling hurt that my daughter violated the implicit trust I had in her. 

      I’m feeling angry my son broke the house rules we established for his own protection. 

      I’m feeling hurt and angry that my child is not the person I thought she/he was. 

4) See this event as both a gift & invitation

 This situation, with all it’s disappointment affirms to you and your child that, if accepted, failure can be a great, if not our greatest life teacher–even as painful as it is. We know this is true from our own experience– our own failures have been enormous pathways for us to learn and grow but out of our desire to protect our child, and sometimes ourself, we can’t always immediately see the value.

Most of the time, our fierce desire to protect and defend our kids from pain and suffering is a  good thing. It makes us feel like good parents. But, sometimes, our “protection” actually gets in the way of our child’s growth. 

Necessary suffering will be just as formational for your child as it has been for you. 

We keep thinking there should be a different path of growth for our child than painful experiences. We are actually stifling the growth God wants our child to experience if we try to rescue them from feeling too much pain. 

5) Instead of protecting your child from pain, prepare them for the inevitable

If we don’t acknowledge – ahead of time- the human experiences of loss, failure, and pain, we add to their risk of living with you and themselves in denial, deception and hiding.

If failure is never an option then what will she do with it when she does eventually fail? Will she spin it as “not really all that bad,” or hide it as if it didn’t really happen? 

This would be a good time to share with your child some of your own mistakes.  

Tell your child,  ahead of time,  how you will irrevocably love them when the time comes that they fail. You can still be disappointed, sad or afraid for them but what will make all the difference is that they know you will be there -with unshakable love – when they royally mess up.

Be like a mirror – showing your child the very heart of God.  

6) Be present with your child in the failure

We are most like God when we can sit with our child in his failure and love him through it. 

This is difficult to do when we think her failure is somehow about us: either a bad reflection on us or how we messed up as a parent or how angry and inconvenienced we are by it. 

But what’s really going on with your child here? What emotions has he been feeling that led up to this event? Ask. Don’t assume. 

There may be real self image or peer pressure (which is identity related) or any number of other issues attached to this event that need to be addressed. To gloss over serious rebellion or extreme negligence would be a mistake but it would be an equally bad mistake for your child never to know how irrevocably and unconditionally loved she is regardless of how you feel she makes you or herself look to others.

Don’t over or under react.

Most of us tend to do one or the other in pressure situations. Which one do you do?  What would happen if you react in the opposite way of your normal response?

Be careful that the consequences you lay down are not because of undo embarrassment or shame you are feeling.  And if there are already serious built in consequences for what has happened, consider whether those consequences might be enough of a lesson on their own. 

Since they’ve messed up, you may have doubts about how great your kid actually is. But, you haven’t been wrong. You really do have a great kid!

But, before this happened, you may have over-idealized them- projecting on them a form of perfection no man, woman or child can ever live up to.  Now you are reeling from a shattered fantasy you created around them. 

And, yes, we have done this ourselves as parents more than a few times. What began in pure love, sometimes moved to idealization then on to near idolatry.  We couldn’t see this was happening –  of course- just like you there reading this right now and thinking ( like we did ) —“you obviously don’t know MY child.”

Sigh.

It was out of a sincere desire to raise great sons for God who would impact the world that we sometimes projected a little too much pixy dust on them. Ya think? 

You could say we were blinded by the sparkle in our own eyes when we looked at them. 

But, over time, a fuller, Truer picture of each of our incredible boys emerged. And, after we picked ourselves up off the floor—-they continued to thrive a lot and mess up some. Just like we do. 

Oh, yes, we still blame ourselves sometimes, and struggle with feeling like some things they’ve done or do make us look bad. But, hey, we still have more growing up to do. 

If you feel stuck in relational issues at work, in ministry or at home, we can help.  Contact us youlivetrue.com for a free consultation. 

Written in collaboration by David & Caron Loveless

(Art by: Katie Berggren.  Shopkmberggren.com)

How Breaking Bad Could Be Good For You

By Caron Loveless

“Over and over, we are broken on the shore of life. Our stubborn egos are knocked around, and our frightened hearts are broken open.   When you feel yourself breaking down may you break open instead.”

 Elizabeth Lesser

Somewhere along the way we latched on to the idea that “broken is bad.” It probably started in childhood when we got the stink-eye for breaking Aunt Wilma’s Waterford crystal or when the neighbor came bounding over suspicious that we knew something about his shattered window. Or, maybe, it got reinforced when a parent yelled, “ Do you have any idea how much that toy cost?”

However it happened,

we learned our lesson;

broken things bother and embarrass us.

Bad.

We wear hats on bad hair days, hide broken fingernails, dump dull marriages, and avoid hospitals like the plague. When our car breaks down it’s a “clunker,” and if the vacuum quits we’d rather buy a new one than spend $29.95 to get it fixed.

We have little tolerance for brokenness, especially in our own lives.  It’s doesn’t speak well of us. We’d rather lie, cover up, and gloss over what’s really going on rather than have folks think things aren’t pretty.  And somewhere (we should really track this down) we got the idea that failed or messed up people can’t claim they love Jesus. Or, worse, they don’t deserve to.

Whaaattt?

Did anyone ask Jesus?

Ok, it sort of makes sense to our puny human minds that the Sinless Son of God would steer way clear of anything less than perfect. But, last time I checked, Jesus was totally attracted to bad, messed up, shameful people.

That is not a misprint.

Quick review: The most sickly, unseemly people got Jesus’ attention.  Blind eyes, deaf ears, and outcasts – did not repel him, they compelled him. He preferred to dine with the destitute, call on the crippled and welcome the wayward. The baddest man in the region? Jesus is headed to his house. A compromised woman with perfume?  He says, you watch, this girl will be famous.

Friends, Jesus doesn’t badmouth our brokenness. 

Even if we should have known better.

Then, why is it, when the sorry shambles of our life breaks public, we think we’re done?  Or, if someone we know turns up tainted, we run?

Where, I ask again, did we learn this?

Jesus is a lover and gatherer of the broken, splintered pieces of what was our life (get this: even if it used to be known far and wide as an exemplary, lovely Christ-honoring life) and like a master artisan; he finds a way to refit and restore what is left into something surprising, breathtaking, new.  He says he gives beauty for ashes and gladness for tears. And from all those nasty shards he makes something so purely whole that it shows off his glory like streaming sunlight through an old church window. Come on.

Don’t be ashamed of your brokenness.

As crazy as it sounds,

and as impossible as it looks,

what you’ve got there is fresh material for a masterpiece.

“ The Spirit of the Lord is upon me. Because he did anoint me; to proclaim good news to the poor, sent me to heal the broken of heart, to proclaim to captives deliverance, And to blind, receiving of sight, to send away the bruised with deliverance, to proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord.”  Jesus.  Luke 4:18-19 (YLT)

“Over and over, we are broken on the shore of life. Our stubborn egos are knocked around, and our frightened hearts are broken open—not once, and not in predictable patterns, but in surprising ways and for as long as we live.   

When you feel yourself breaking down may you break open instead.”

Elizabeth Lesser

We are here to continue the grace-laced, restoring legacy of Jesus. And if you feel the need for some of that we know where to get some—-contact us at www.kairoscollective.com

(Painting by mjmccarthy)

Video of David & Caron Loveless Recommissioning Service

We’ve had a number of requests for the video of our Recommissioning Service hosted by Grace Church here in Orlando & led by various local & national leaders on 9.28.14.  The Youtube link is below.   It’s  1hr and 45min.   Each speaker averaged about 6-7minutes.  Caron and I start speaking about 55minutes into the video.  The last 20minutes is a recommissioning prayer that selected leaders prayed over us.

We were surprised by the number of folks who commented afterward that the service & spirit of God represented gave much hope for their own unique situations, renewed their faith in the church or did something in them they weren’t expecting. Feel free to pass the link on to anyone you feel may benefit.  We’ve been told the service brought  great hope for all kinds of impossibilities becoming possible. 

http://youtu.be/EEg6WfuR4Gw