Category Archives: Building Great Relationships

Relationship Truths – Pt III: The Power of Three

We’ve previously talked about the Power of One.  Today I’d like to talk about the Power of Three!

We have three types of relationships in life.  We have a relationship with God, with ourselves, and with others.  Each of these categories is vital to the health and well being of the others.  When one relationship area is out of balance, the other two are also off kilter.

So let’s look at them one by one.

I. Your Relationship with God

Our relationship with God determines everything about us.  How we interact and depend upon God can revolutionize our mood, attitudes, and strength for the day.  Likewise, if we believe things about God that are not true, we are setting ourselves up for tragic failure.  So the most important thing is that we

  1. Know God and worship Him in Spirit and in Truth.  We must have an accurate concept of who God is, what His character is, and what He says about us if we are going to have a healthy relationship with Him.  If we believe that He wants us to be happy, for example, we may make huge mistakes in our lives based on this false belief.  Does God care about our heart and want us to live the abundant life? Absolutely!  But we must determine what this means according to His Word–not based on what someone might lead us to believe.  Read and study the Bible for yourself.  Learn how to read it accurately.  Without proper bible study training and tools, it is far too easy to believe God said something He didn’t.  Many Christians are led astray these days but simply not knowing who God is and what He says in His Word.  Engage with Him every day through private, intimate prayer time, and by reading His Word.
  2. Determine to surrender your will, your rights to Him.  Determine to obey Him, no matter what!
  3. Strive to be His instrument of peace, love, joy, truth, hope, and compassion in your circles of influence.
  4. Trust Him with your life, the lives of those around you, and to work in your circumstances according to His will.
  5. Accept that He is God and you are not!  You be you and let Him be God!

II. Your Relationship with Yourself

The second relationship that is also vital to the overall health and balance of your life is the relationship you have with yourself.  Perhaps you’ve never considered that you are in a relationship with yourself.  Let me ask you this:  Do you talk to yourself? Do you think things about yourself? Do you belittle or demean yourself when you blow it or when you trip over that invisible bump in the carpet? Do you call yourself stupid or fat or tell yourself you can’t succeed at this or that? You can get time away from your boss at work or your spouse and kids at home, but the one person you can never escape is yourself.

Jesus said we are to love our neighbor as ourselves (Matthew 22:39).  In fact, He said this is the second greatest commandment–which makes it pretty important!  So what do you think He meant when He said to love our neighbor as ourselves?

  1. First, it means we have to love ourselves before we can love others.
  2. It does NOT mean we are to have a self-absorbed type of love for ourselves, but an honest, kind and thoughtful love toward ourselves, as children and servants of the Most High God.
  3. Each of us is made in God’s image; we bear His image, and because we have His Spirit living inside of us, our bodies are the temple of the Holy Spirit (Genesis 1:26; Romans 8:9; 1 Corinthians 6:19).  Likewise,  He chose us before the foundation of the world to be His children and to live out His purposes (Ephesians 1:4; Romans 8:17; Ephesians 1:9).  Our lives are not our own; we were bought at a price (1 Corinthians 6:20).
  4. Just as we are instructed to put our oxygen mask on first and then help whomever we are with, when on a plane that has lost cabin pressure, we are expected to care for ourselves so that we can help and care for others.  If you are caring for yourself at the expense of others, you’re doing it wrong!  Likewise, if you’re caring for others at your own expense, you’re also doing it wrong….  It is vital to find the appropriate balance in surrender and obedience to God.

As we learn to appropriately love and care for ourselves, we will likewise be better prepared to love and care for others.

III. Your Relationship with Others

And finally, when we live in relationship with others according to our relationships with God and ourselves–in obedience to Him in both these areas, our relationships with others will more naturally follow suit!  This doesn’t mean that by having a good relationship with God and ourselves that our relationships with others will be without trouble.  It does mean, however, that we are more likely to take responsibility for our choices, our thoughts, words, and actions in dealing with others, and that we are more likely to relinquish those relationships to God as well.

A right relationship with God changes everything!  But most of all, it changes us!  Learn to get to know God, to know who He has made you and how He has instructed you to live, and maintain every relationship in your life in accordance with those truths.  That is the Power of Three!  It is powerful indeed!

Make today count!
In His grace,

Mary

Relationship Truths – Pt II: It’s Never Just About The Other Person

I know.  I used to really resist the notion that it’s never just about the other person as well.  (Actually, hate is probably the more accurate word!  I hated when people said that!)  The truth is that relationships take two, and the only person in the relationship you can change is YOU! That means my choices impact the relationship even when the other person has major issues.

We’ve all dealt with that person.  The person who is all about him or herself.  The person who treats you great as long as you agree with him, but the minute you disagree, the gloves are off and you’re decimated by a barrage of demeaning or belittling language.  The person who is happy as can be until a situation arises that she can’t control, and suddenly chaos ensues.  The person that lies to you, mistreats you, takes advantage of you, or disregards your feelings….  That is indeed a difficult person with which to be in relationship.

However….  (You knew there was a “but” coming, didn’t you?!?)  However, you have responsibility in how you respond to that person.  You cannot make them be considerate of you, express empathy toward your hurt feelings, or show respect for you as a unique individual with differing likes and dislikes.  But, you do have power in theses circumstances!  You have power, and you have responsibility!

So let’s look at a hypothetical situation.

Your husband arrives home from work, tired, cranky, irritable, and spent.  He’s angry with you for not preparing dinner, meaning it’s another expensive meal out.  He doesn’t think to ask you how your day went.  He doesn’t know about the arguments you refereed between your children, or the close call in the neighbor’s pool that could have seriously injured your daughter.  He doesn’t know that the homeowner’s insurance rates went way up, the washer flooded the utility room, your best friend’s marriage is falling apart and she spent the afternoon crying on your sofa,  and that you’ve had a migraine all day.  To make matters worse, this isn’t anything new.  He always seems to think only of himself, showing little regard for you or your feelings.  So in your mind, this is but another infraction in a long line of infractions where he has shown little or no concern for you and has, instead, “beat you up” with criticism, judgment, and contempt.

Normally you “suck it up” and take it, stuffing your hurt and angry feelings, or you respond in kind, telling him what a jerk he is for not even asking you how your day went.  But this time, you make a different choice.  This time, you have spent some time in prayer before he arrived home.  You cast your burdens on God, your frustrations, your fears, your pain, and your sorrow for your friend.  You asked God to help you really “see” your husband and to understand that he’s had a hard day too.  You’ve committed before God–again–to love, honor, and cherish your husband for better or worse, realizing that today falls into the worse category.  You asked God to give you what you need to be the wife your husband needs today, in this instance.

So when your husband walks in the door, instead of being frazzled and used up, you are still weary, but you are buoyed by the Spirit of God.  When your husband barks as he comes in the door, upset because dinner isn’t on the stove, you silently hold up your shield of faith and deflect those harsh words and tones, sending them instead to the Throne of God.  You take your husband’s briefcase from him, meet him with a tired but sincere smile, and you let him know you’re glad he’s home.  You apologize that dinner fell off the schedule today, and suggest that perhaps you make the kids some PB&J’s for dinner, and that the two of you go out for a quiet meal together–using the two-for-one coupon you received in the mail that day.

Your husband has choices about how he responds, and the truth is that he may still vent his frustrations on you.  But as before, you can deflect them, realizing that you know a lot about your day that he doesn’t, and even more, God does know and He understands completely.  Again, you meet your husband’s frustration with kindness, suggesting he change into more comfortable clothes, wash the dirt of the day off his face, and let him know that you see him, regardless of whether or not he sees you.

Now this isn’t a perfect formula that will work every time.  It may work or it may not.  But here’s the thing:  you won’t know until you try.  One of you needs to break the cycle of demanding that your needs be met.  One of you needs to take a step toward the other in kindness, understanding, and love.  But here’s the other thing:  when this kind of response becomes your norm, one of two things is going to happen.  Either he will begin to soften and reciprocate, or he won’t.  If he does, you’ve won over your husband and improved your marriage.  If not, you’ve still done the right thing before God.  And that’s no small thing!

God honors those whose walk is blameless.  Strive to walk blamelessly in your relationships–not just in your own eyes, but in God’s eyes, depending upon Him to meet your needs and to make a way where there previously wasn’t one.  This process isn’t about stuffing your feelings, it’s about taking your feelings to God, turning to Him to meet your needs, and filling up your peace, love, and joy bucket so that you have those things to pour out to the other person.  What they do with your kindness is their responsibility, but I will tell you that kindness breeds kindness more often than contempt does.  Contempt only breeds contempt.  You can count on that!

You can also count on God.  When you get out of the way, it makes a way for God to work in that other person’s life.

The Takeaway

So here are some practical tips:

  1.  Plan ahead.  When you know the end of the day is usually when arguments erupt between you and your husband, plan ahead.  Take 10 minutes or whatever time you can carve out, and pray.  Relinquish your burdens of the day to God, press into His love and compassion, and ask Him to prepare you to be the spouse you need to be when your husband walks through the door.  Pray for your husband that God will use the drive home to minister to his heart, to drain off the stresses of the day, and to give him love and kindness toward you.  Pray spiritual protection over your husband, asking that no weapon formed against him would prosper.
  2. Know and rehearse the truth.
    • Know that your husband is NOT the enemy!  We war against powers and principalities, not against flesh and blood!  (Ephesians 6:12)
    • You know what kind of bad day you had, but your husband does not.  Likewise, you don’t know what stresses he had. Be thoughtful toward him anyway.
    • Know that regardless of the circumstances, you chose your husband because you love him; you committed yourself to him (before God) for better or worse; and your responsibility is to be Christ to him.  That commitment is between you and God, not you and your husband.  Likewise, how he treats you is between him and God, not between him and you!  Do what you know to be right, and ask God to do the same work in your husband.
    • Know also that the fact that you didn’t make dinner does not make you a bad person, an inadequate person, or a lazy person.  Know and accept the truth, and commit to deflecting things that are not true.  (Attach yourself to God’s truth; detach from the lies of the enemy.)
  3. Clothe yourself with kindness, compassion, and love for your husband.  Instead of looking to have your needs met, strive to be there for him.
  4. Treat him as you want to be treated.  Pray that God will soften his heart in the same way.
  5. Entrust the inequities in the relationship to God’s care and justice.  God does care for both of you.  God is a just and righteous God–meaning there is no wrong in Him.  Trust Him with your relationship with your spouse or whomever you may be having difficulties with.  Do the right thing.  Trust God to do the right thing.  Pray for the other person to desire to do the right thing.  And leave the results to God.

Our relationship struggles are never just about the other person.  We have the Power of One.  We have the power of prayer and the power of choice.  Never let the enemy convince you the issue is all the other person.  Commit to being God’s instrument of love, peace, and kindness to the person you’re in relationship with.  Do your part. Trust Him to do His.  Let God be God.

Rejoice in hope, be patient in tribulation, be constant in prayer.  Romans 12:12 (ESV)

No go and make today count!
In His grace,

Mary

Relationship Truths – Part One: The Power of One

No matter what kind of relationships you’re engaged in, there are three undeniable truths about YOU:

  1. You were made by God for relationships.
  2.  You have a choice in how you think, feel, and respond within your relationships.
  3.  You alone are responsible for you—your choices, your actions, your responses to others.

We cannot change others, but we can and **should** take responsibility for our relationships—the good, the bad, and the ugly! Taking responsibility doesn’t mean you’re a horrible failure of a human being. On the contrary, it means you are owning your stuff and taking steps to being the best version of yourself!

Owning your stuff does not let others off the hook for their stuff; it is only about taking responsibility for yourself. However, as we begin to take the focus off the other person and begin looking honestly at ourselves, and as we begin taking back our power over our own hearts, minds, and choices, we can effect change in the relationship. Dr. Gary Smalley (in The DNA of Relationships) calls that “the Power of One.”

God’s Word says it this way:

“If possible, so far as it depends on you, live peaceably with all.” Romans 12:18 (ESV)

Ask yourself these questions and be honest with yourself in your answers:

    • Am I only focusing on what others are doing wrong?
    • Am I owning my own thoughts, feelings, and responses? Or am I justifying them?
    • As I begin to own my thoughts, feelings, and responses, what do I need to ask forgiveness for?
    • Knowing that I have the power to change only myself, what can I begin to do differently to improve my relationship(s)?
    • God, what do You want me to see and take ownership of?

“But from there you will seek the Lord your God and you will find him, if you search after him with all your heart and with all your soul.” Deuteronomy 4:29 (ESV)

 

Today is all you have. Make today count!
In the grip of His grace,

Mary

Guarding Your Heart in a World that Doesn’t

shattered.heart“‘Above all else, guard your heart’ (Prov. 4:23)… It doesn’t say guard your heart because it’s criminal; it says guard your heart because it is the wellspring of your life, because it is a treasure, because everything else depends on it. How kind of God to give us this warning, like someone’s entrusting to a friend something precious to him, with the words: ‘Be careful with this—it means a lot to me.'”

—————-

“Above all else? Good grief—we don’t even do it once in a while. We might as well leave our life savings on the seat of the car with the windows rolled downwe’re that careless with our hearts…”

~ John Eldredge, Waking the Dead


 

Do you guard your heart? Or are you careless with it? Do you flippantly throw it around like a beach ball on a summer day to whomever will catch it? Or do you guard it so diligently that no one else is ever able to penetrate it? All good questions to ponder.

The heart is a funny thing.  It needs to love others in order to remain strong and alive, but it’s so fragile it may be deeply wounded, broken in two, or completely shattered.   We must treasure our heart as the wellspring of life and as the place within us, as God’s followers, that His Spirit dwells and out of which His love, compassion, and mercy flow.

Your heart is important to God, and it should be important to you.  Guard it carefully, engage it often, and when it is broken or shattered, know that God is there to mend it.

The Lord is near to the brokenhearted and saves the crushed in spirit. Psalm 34:18 ESV

He heals the brokenhearted and binds up their wounds. Psalm 147:3 ESV

 

Oh, and if you haven’t read Waking the Dead, or haven’t read it in a while, read it!

Make Today Count!
Mary

Know God….His Grace Toward You

Yet the Lord longs to be gracious to you;
    therefore he will rise up to show you compassion.
For the Lord is a God of justice.
    Blessed are all who wait for him!

Isaiah 30:18 NIV

 How well do you know God? Have you ever thought about how He “longs” to be gracious to you? Or that He will rise up to show you compassion? And that these things are true because He is a God of justice?

A friend shared this verse at our Life Group last night and I had to come home and look it up.  It speaks of our God’s great love and compassion for us in the midst of being Just.  I think that’s pretty incredible!

If you think of God as being harsh, unkind, or that He loves to punish you, you couldn’t be more wrong! His heart breaks when ours are broken.

Get to know God for who He really is, and learn to wait for Him to show up BIG in your life! Trust Him. He will not disappoint!

If you need help in learning more about who God is and having a relationship with Him, contact me.  I can help!

Make today count!
Mary

10 Ways To Improve Your Relationships

Relationships are a part of every area of life. When our relationships are stressful, life is stressful. Over the years, I’ve learned some things that, when I consistently apply them, not only do they improve my relationships, but they also help me to be a happier, more grounded and centered person.  If you want to improve your relationships, read on.

  1. Read emails, texts, letters, etc. very carefully.

Often we read communications from people with a preconceived notion of their intent. The written word is the most difficult form of communication to decipher sometimes, especially when there is already stress in the relationship. Slow down and read the email, text, etc. as it is written —simply black words on a white background—without emotion, without interpretation, and without any kind of inflection. Resist the temptation to read it with the tone you assume is there. Instead, focus on “hearing” what the sender is truly saying. Then read it again, and again, if you need to.

  1. Don’t jump to conclusions.

Most people won’t jump out of an airplane even with a parachute, but most of us jump to conclusions when it comes to relationships. Obviously, the parachute is intended to save your life. Likewise, refusing to jump to conclusions can save your relationship. Again, try to “hear” what the other person is saying—even if they are saying it poorly. Listen for their heart; seek to understand before you ask or expect them to understand you. This simple step will revolutionize your relationships!

  1. Don’t assume you know what’s going on until you have the facts.

Each of these first three points has to do with making assumptions. Why? Because we are all guilty of making assumptions, and doing so is incredibly destructive to relationships! Always look at the facts first, detaching from the emotions of the situation to the best of your ability. It may help to envision that you are an investigator seeking to uncover the truth of the situation by first assessing the facts. As you do so, it will enable you to set your emotions aside, which will automatically take heat out of the moment.

  1. Respond – don’t react.

Reactions are like a knee-jerk response. When we react, we fly off the handle, we jump to conclusions, and we injure the other person in the relationship. Reacting often makes us look bad as well. Responses, on the other hand, occur when we take time to process the facts and the impact those facts have upon us. Responding involves remaining calm, listening well, and taking a time-out if necessary to fully work through your emotions. Always respond. Never react.

  1. Self-control always pays off.

Responding instead of reacting requires a fair amount of self-control. But rest assured, the work it requires to respond versus reacting is well worth it! Just like you cannot put toothpaste back into the tube, words that have been spoken can never be unheard. Once they are out there, they are out there forever. Even if you really didn’t mean that hurtful thing you said, the other person will likely never forget it. As the proverb goes, Be careful of the words you speak for someday you may have to eat them. Make sure the words you speak are seasoned with grace, kindness, and understanding.

  1. Never feel bad for doing the right thing.

By design, the right thing is always the best thing. Conversely, the wrong thing is never right! However, the right thing can cause pain for the other person involved. And while we don’t want to be the reason someone we care about is hurting, sometimes positive change requires pain. On the flip side, the right thing will never cause harm—otherwise it wouldn’t be right! Doing the wrong thing will always cause harm; and it may harm the relationship to the point that reconciliation becomes impossible. Even God allows us to go through painful things, sometimes, in order to make us more like Jesus. But just as God allows things in life to hurt us, He promises never to harm us (Jeremiah 29:11). I’d say His example is the best one to follow!

  1. Do what you say you will do.

In order to be a person of character, we must do what we say we will do.   When we do, we show others that we are reliable, that our word is good, and that they can count on us. Plus, it just feels great to follow through with what you’ve promised. Be trustworthy.

  1. Remember that God is your Defender.

At times we find ourselves being wrongly accused, misunderstood, or unjustly characterized. Our natural response is to defend ourselves, or to work tirelessly to change that person’s opinion of us. However, people will often believe things of us that are not true—even the people closest to us. When these situations arise, respond calmly, confidently, and consistently with your true character. The truth often comes out, eventually, but whether it does or not, remember that God is working on your behalf. He has not abandoned you in this situation. You can trust Him. Wait for Him to work, and trust that even if that person never accepts the truth of the situation, God knows who you are, and in the end, that is really all that matters. The people who choose to believe negative things about you may always make that choice, but the people who truly care about you will stand by you. God is definitely in that group!

  1. Keep in mind that people who do hurtful things are often (if not always) operating out of a wound themselves.

There’s a saying that Hurt people hurt people. Whenever we are hurting, the most natural thing is to act out of that pain. When someone hurts, wrongly accuses, or offends you, ask yourself if this behavior is really about you or if it could possibly be the result of some pain that person has in his own life. People who are bitter, for example, have often been deeply wounded by people close to them. Likewise, bitter people can be some of the most toxic, hurtful people to be in relationship with. Take time to examine yourself and look for grains of truth in what the other person has communicated to you. If there are grains of truth, own them, apologize for them, and seek to make things right with that person. However, if there are no grains of truth, consider the other person carefully—not to analyze them or to judge them, but to better understand or identify the reason for their attack upon you. If they are obviously wounded and are acting out of that pain, try to look past the offense and see the hurting person underneath. It doesn’t make what they did right, but it explains why they may be doing it. Often when others attack us, it is less about us than it is about their own wounding.

  1. Set healthy boundaries.

Boundaries are like fences with gates; they allow good things to come in and they keep bad things out. Boundaries are about you—what you will tolerate or not, what you will accept in relationships or not. They are not about controlling the other person. Boundaries are limits with consequences. For example, one boundary may be that, during an argument, if the other person begins making cutting, critical, or derogatory remarks, you will remove yourself from the conversation. Boundaries need to be clear, specific, and enforceable. Boundaries create mutually respectful relationships that enable us to thrive and grow. Likewise, they can be safeguards to protect us from dangerous or harmful relationships.

As you begin to apply these ten things, look for your relationships to improve. Of course, relationships require that both people work to make them successful. If you discover that you are the only one working in the relationship to make it healthy and mutually beneficial, you may want to consider the amount of personal investment you are willing to contribute to it.

Keep in mind that there are different degrees of relationships. You will be happiest when you have one or two people in your innermost circle who love you, respect you, support you, and continually work to create a safe, and fulfilling reciprocal relationship; people you can trust with your deepest hurts, darkest secrets, and that will love you and believe in you no matter what. The next circle out may have a few more people who are not quite as intimately involved in your life, but they should also be trustworthy and caring. Then, in the outermost circle, that is where you will maintain the relationships that are most trying, but that may be a permanent part of your life. This group may include family members that are critical, bitter, or simply difficult to be around. You love them and are committed to them because they are family, but that does not mean you have to let them into your inner circles. Keep these people in your life, but keep them at a safe distance so as to minimize their influence upon your life.

Now get to work learning and applying these principles! You will be glad you did.

Make today count! 🙂

Mary

(Published at Noomii.com @ 5/18/15)  All rights reserved.

Photo:  Found on worth1000.com via Pinterest