Stress

Struggling with Finances?

Zig Ziglar is quoted as saying, “money isn’t everything but it ranks up there with oxygen.”

Nearly everything we want, need, desire, and dream of requires money. Money makes the world go ‘round more than love does! When we struggle financially, it seems to affect every other area of our lives.

We can provide scriptural evidence that money is important to God, the kingdom of God, and His people in general. There are approximately 2000 scriptures about money and possessions in the Bible, indicating its importance. Many of these scriptures speak to God’s generous nature and desire to meet the needs of His people.

So why do so many good people, who love God, struggle with financial hardship, as if their money is swept away with the current of life. Many people who I personally know are barely getting by, and some are not even close to being able to pay their bills. As much as we want to point a finger, the struggle “ultimately” can’t be blamed on politics, the times we are living in, or any other number of things that contribute to our financial frustrations. Before you stop reading, I’ll address this statement a little later in more detail.

Perhaps you are struggling right now with a financial hardhship. I’d like to simply point out three things to ponder that I hope will help. Actually, I have three questions to ask. This will certainly not be an exhaustive study on the topic, but I believe it might help realign our vision, thoughts and actions that can prepare us for increase!

First of all; do we believe God wants us to prosper and have our needs and even desires met? If we are going to pray for financial blessing and trust God to meet our needs, we must believe that it is God’s will, otherwise we can’t ask in faith. Scripture assures us that, “My God shall supply all of your needs, according to His riches in Glory, by Christ Jesus.” We are also told to, “Remember the Lord thy God, for it’s He that gives us the power to attain wealth, so that his covenant can be established in the earth.” The Apostle John wrote, “Beloved, I pray that you may prosper in all things and be healthy, even as your soul prospers!”

I encourage you to google scriptures that speak about God’s will regarding finances, to create your own beliefs and build your faith regarding this topic. This is important! I don’t just want you to take my word for it. We all “live out of” the beliefs of our heart. That’s why you and I are instructed to “guard your heart with all diligence, because out of it flow all the issues of life!” Unhealthy and unscriptural beliefs lead to unhealthy issues. Money issues come from what we hold to be true about money!

Next - Are we looking to God as our source, or a job as our source. This is an area where we seem to get our eyes off of the abundance of God and onto other things. We stop trusting in the Lord and start leaning to our understanding, or what we can see, and hear!. Trusting in our job can only offer limited security and comfort but not true peace, because it’s a temporary situation. It can change without notice. God never changes! He is always the same. Sure, we are expected to work a job, or be self employed. But our job should be viewed as an avenue, not our source. If God can provide a widow in the Bible with enough oil to sell, and then live for the rest of her life - and if God can provide a prophet with food, brought to him by ravens in his time if need, God can provide for us in untypical ways also! When we look to someone or something else as our source, our faith and the supply becomes limited. When we view God as our source, he meets our needs “according to His riches in glory” (Phil. 4:19), not according to one avenue. As our source, He creates other avenues to help us from. There have been times I’ve received an unexpected check in the mail. There have been times when a gift from someone was given with the reason from the giver that “they felt like they (or God) wanted to bless me!” I don’t know about you, but I want a financial source with unlimited avenues, not an avenue as my source that has its built in limits.

God’s economic plan is not attached to the U.S. treasury. He is not affected by inflation. I believe he cares about the decisions made by whoever is in the White House, but if we are looking to God as our source and not other men, or the economic indicators, we can live from the supernatural flow of His kingdom! Jesus prayed that “God’s will would be done on earth as it is in heaven.” Heaven is not suffering financial hardships! After all, the streets are made of gold!

Finally, How stingy or generous are we, especially when things get tight financially? The golden rule applies all the time, not just when we feel like we have the most to offer. Sowing seeds into the lives of others can look like a lot of different things. We are encouraged to be friendly when we need a friend. We are also encouraged to give financially to the need of others when we ourselves have needs. Proverbs tells us that, “One gives freely and grows all the richer; another withholds what he should give, and only suffers want.” We are also instructed in Proverbs 11 that, “The world of the generous gets larger and larger; the world of the stingy gets smaller and smaller. The one who blesses others is abundantly blessed; those who help others are helped.”

The kingdom of God way of doing things does not always make sense, nor agree with the world’s philosophy. God sees our kindness and “doing unto others” as seeds that will bring us a harvest of the things we have sown. Giving to others, especially when we have a need that we don’t know how it will be met, opens another avenue for God to bless us with. Jesus’ own words in red are, “Give and it will be given back to, good measure, pressed down and shaken together, will be poured into your lap!”

God wants to bless us! He wants to be our source who can bless us through many avenues. He wants our trust placed in Him more than any other person or thing. He also wants to use our unselfish generosity towards others, to create an avenue in which he can bring his provision back around to us.

Be well!

Groundhog Day Mindset!

I know that there are many of you who remember the movie Groundhog Day.  In this 1993 film, (yes, I’m Old!) the main character, Phil Connors, played by Bill Murray finds himself reliving Groundhog Day over and over again.  He stays trapped in this cycle that causes him to relive the same day for what many who have seen the movie, believe to be years.  To make a long movie short, (101 minutes) the character finally finds a way out of his predicament.  The way out of his circumstances was brought by transformation.  When he changed he was released from this cycle! (plus he won the heart of the girl)!

Many of us live in a Groundhog Day scenario by getting stuck in our thoughts and negativity.  The things we hope changes don’t, mainly because we think too much of the same negative way over and over again! According to the National Science Foundation, 80% of people’s thoughts are negative, and 95% of those thoughts are repetitive.  These are thoughts people struggle with, and will continue to struggle with, putting them in a cycle of living with the same results over and over again. What they experienced yesterday, they will experience tomorrow!

People tell me in counseling sessions, on a perpetual basis, “I can’t help what I think about, the thoughts are just there in my head! I can’t do anything about them. They seem to control how I feel and what I do!”

While I understand how natural it is to experience those negative, gloomy thoughts, it’s important to understand that we can do something with them and about them. We do have the ability to arrest and overcome disabling thought patterns that bombard our minds and control our lives. Whether we deal with thoughts of hopelessness, depression, despair, shame, or fear.  Or if the mental struggles are regarding lack or scarcity mindset or even seemingly uncontrollable thoughts of a lascivious nature, we have the power within us to change those thought patterns that lead our lives to an unhealthy place. Thoughts do lead to feelings, attitudes, choices, and actions. Looking back on our lives weI have to admit that a lot of the actions we took were due to unhealthy thoughts we had regarding something, someone or ourselves.

There are a few ways of thinking that I want to address briefly.  Simply being aware of our negative patterns, can be helpful to make the changes that we need to make. Transformation is possible!  Change is possible!

One pattern of haunting mindsets, involves thoughts regarding finality. These are thoughts that deal with only seeing an unchangeable conclusion to some thing or area of our lives. Those thoughts that tell us, “This (I / he / she / it) will ALWAYS be this way! Or circumstances will NEVER be any other way!” This mindset robs us hope for the future and reinforces anxiety, fear, and heartache.

Nearly all limiting ways of thinking have to do with perception. Choosing to see only a part of the picture of our circumstances is harmful. What’s even more harmful is not seeing that all thoughts we have are not necessarily the truth, just because we think them! Many people choose to focus on the negative, even when there are other positive parts to a story or situation. I’ve had a sign over my chair in my office for several years that says this. “Don’t allow the presence of the part to determine the perception of the whole.” Often our sight and thoughts are focused on a particular blemish instead of the benefit or the positive within a scenario. This is evident in relationships when a person is focused on a negative trait of their partner, while disregarding the many good qualities of that person. The same holds true in scenarios like jobs, churches, or group memberships, etc.

Rumination is a word I used to dislike, but I find myself using it quite often! It’s the chronic, repetitive thinking on the negative, causing feelings of dread. King David made this statement in the Bible, in the book of Psalms, chapter 19, verse 14. “Let the words of my mouth and the meditation (rumination) of my heart be pleasing to you oh God.” David wasn’t referring to intentionally sitting down in a quiet place to meditate on something he wanted to manifest.  That kind of meditation can be helpful, but he was referring to his automatic, subconscious thoughts that flowed from the beliefs of his heart. The beliefs of our heart are what we live out of. They guide our lives! If we want to change our behavior, we must change our thoughts and beliefs. Many of us have tried behavior modification to bring some kind of change, but we know what a chore that can be. It’s only when we change our deepest-seated beliefs that our behavior changes automatically.

Some of us are guilty of catastrophizing. This is when we fixate on the worst possible scenario or outcome. It is such a challenging way of thinking. It’s having faith in the negative. It’s a way of manifesting what we fear. The Old Testament character Job made this statement after experiencing a major loss in his life - “The thing I feared most has come upon me.” The story of Job is one of the most “head scratching-est” (my own made up word) stories in the bible. I’m not saying that everything bad that happens is due to our own fears! But I am saying, our fears are an expectation of what we think about with dread.   There’s a good reason why the Bible has 365 scriptures instructing us to not be afraid.  If God tells us to not be afraid, we must be able to not be afraid!  Does this statement I made sound liberating or confusing?  Or something else?  Is it possible to live without fear, stress, and anxiety?  Yes, thank God it is!

Unforgiveness, resentment and regret are also things that keep us from living our best lives. They are each a chain that locks us to the past. They hinder us from moving forward into a healthier life, and from the vision that God has for us. While resentment has to do with our judgment towards others, regret has to do with judgment towards ourselves, and unforgiveness has to do with judgment towards either of the two. Judgment is an expected penalty or sentence passed on someone. When we judge others, our judgment towards others comes back to us like a boom-a-rang. When it does, it seems to ask us this question - what does this (scenario or situation regarding another person who I’m judging) say about me? We typically answer that question in the wrong way, and create a feeling of insignificance and lack about ourselves. Or, we apply too much significance to ourselves that blinds us from seeing the complete truth. Jesus said, “For with the judgment you pronounce you will be judged; and with the same measure you use, it will be measured to you.” While a few translations insert God into this verse, it’s really not referring to God judging us - it’s referring to judgment of our own heart bringing judgment to ourselves. This judgment creates questions regarding our own sense of significance, which in turn creates a negativity regarding our identity. Our heart is the seat of our identity, and we live our lives out of these beliefs of our heart.

So, what’s a person to do about these and other negative mindsets? We begin with accepting responsibility for our thought life. Our thoughts come from three sources. We are intelligent beings who are able to generate our own thoughts. We also receive thoughts from the kingdom of light. God speaks to us and leads us, as is indicated many times in scripture. We are also susceptible to receiving thoughts from the kingdom of darkness. These are the thoughts that can bring a sense of gloom and doom, envy, anxiety, dread and many other things that lead to negative or shamefull feelings. Every thought that we have, has the potential to lead to a feeling, and eventually an attitude, a decision, and an action. Have you ever done something and looked at the results and said, “What the heck was I thinking?” It was generally the thoughts we accepted from the kingdom of darkness that created that slide down the slippery slope!

God’s word is a powerful and active force in our lives. However, to the degree that we believe it, is the degree that it works in our lives.  Ephesians 3:20 reminds us that, “God is able to do exceedingly abundantly above all that we ask or think, according to the power that is at work in us!”  God’s power works according to the level that we agree with Him!  If we believe that we have God’s help and power to catch, challenge, and change our thoughts, then we will do so. If we don’t believe it, we won’t. We are instructed to arrest and take captive the thoughts of darkness that we are presented with. Just because a thought comes to us, doesn't mean we have to dwell on it. We are informed in scripture to die to the flesh, (our fleshly nature).  The Apostle Paul wrote that how he lives free from the flesh is in accordance with how he MINDS (thinks about) the things of the flesh. Sometimes, all it takes is a thought or two to breathe life into that old Adamic nature. Romans chapter twelve instructs us to not be conformed to this world but transformed by the renewing of our minds. This is not talking about scripture memorization. While that’s important, this verse is telling us to renew the way we process thoughts. The mind is part of the soul, which is the combination our mind, will and emotions. This has to do with the way we think, choose, and feel. It all works together. Clearly, God has given us the responsibility as well as the power to control our thought life, which in turn affects the fruit we bear and actions we take. That’s transformation!

When we struggle with anxiety or stress, we can remember that scripture tells us in Isaiah 26:3 “I will keep you in perfect peace, if your minds (imagination) is stayed on me.”  God wants us to trust him in trying times.  Thinking on His promises and speaking His promises help us to transform our lives!

There are promises from God in His word that gives us hope and victory in every situation of life, even Groundhog Day thinking!  We must take responsibility for our thought life.  We can stop the torturing thoughts that run rampant in our lives!  Getting out of these cycles requires discipline, but this work brings transformation with it. With His grace we overcome!

For more personal help or counseling with this topic, please contact me through the information provided on my website, www.ascendchristiancounseling.com

I’d love to help you on your journey, and help you in creating a new way of thinking, believing, and experiencing God’s truth for your life.

Be well!

 Michael

Stress and Significance

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Most of us have experienced some degree of stress, especially during the last year and a half. We’ve known for some time that stress leads to many other physical and emotional ailments if undealt with.

Sometimes stress can serve as an indicator that something or someone significant to us needs attention. It may indicate that something needs managed. ( Not to confuse managing with controlling.) Many times when we are feeling tension, there is a good chance that someone or something needs our time, thoughts, planning, and actions. The things we consider significant deserve, as well as require our management. We can’t consider something meaningful to us if we don’t manage it. Perhaps a personal, family, or business issue needs resolved, or to be put away.

Remember that stress and anxiety only affect us regarding things that are significant or meaningful to us. The Apostle Peter encourages us to “cast all your anxieties, all your worries, all your concerns, once and for all on Him, because He cares about you with deepest affection, and watches over you very carefully”.

You and I truly are significant to God. When we offer ourselves and our stressors to Him, He watches over and manages us with affection and intention. This means we can trust Him for our care and the outcome of life’s events.

There are things in life that we cannot control. In those instances, we can roll those concerns upon Him. Yet, we still are required to manage ourselves and our actions. We still manage our personal sense of significance. (Identity) We can manage the conversation we have with ourselves about ourselves. We also evaluate the things that are significant to us, and manage those areas carefully as the Lord does with us. Ignoring things that are significant to us will eventually add a heaviness and disarray to us mentally and emotionally. So… Make an observation the next time you feel stressed out. Ask yourself this question. “What significant area of my life am I not properly communicating with or managing”? While initially you may feel like giving your energy to “one more thing” will deplete you. It will affect you differently than you think!

Intentionally giving our time, thoughts, planning and actions to a person or thing we consider significant gives us freedom from the weight we are carrying!. Managing areas of significance actually releases stress and anxiety.

Creating A New Emotional State

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Most people go through a typical day experiencing various states of feelings and emotions.  These range from good or positive to harmful or what we might consider negative.  When dealing with a negative mindset, we generally chalk it up to just having a bad day.  While it is true that some days are better (circumstantially) than others, we can intentionally change our feelings and emotions when we realize that we are in a detrimental state of mind. 

Negative thoughts and emotions affect our bodies in many ways.  Stress accounts for approximately 90% of all Doctor visits.  Science continues to reveal how emotional stress affects all systems of the body including the musculoskeletal, respiratory, cardiovascular, endocrine, gastrointestinal, nervous, and reproductive systems.  Our feelings, and the connection between our minds and our bodies is powerful and this manifests in ways we could not imagine.

Highly respected Neuroscientist Dr. Candice Pert who pioneered work in mind body connection explains this in her book, Molecules of Emotions.

 “Emotions are not simply chemicals in the brain. They are electrochemical signals that carry emotional messages throughout the body. These signals, a mixture of peptides, have far reaching effects.  As our feelings change, this mixture of peptides travels throughout your body and your brain. And they’re literally changing the chemistry of every cell in your body – and sending out vibrations to other people.”

 The good news is that positive thoughts and emotions can affect our bodies in a positive way.  While many people cannot see emotional states as something that we can intentionally change, I want to encourage you that we can interrupt our current state of emotion, take control of, and change our emotions and the way we feel.  This blog is about recognizing the pattern or elements that create emotions and using that information to better our emotional health. Consider it reverse engineering.

We are connected in several ways.  First, we are connected within ourselves to our entire tripartite being.  We are a spirit, we possess a soul, and we live in a body.  What affects one area of our lives affects the whole.  But we are also connected to others by the energy we send out and receive – positive or negative.  A single person can change the energetics in an office setting, a church, a team, a family, and so on.  If one’s energy can affect other people on days that one fells down, then energy will work for enhancing our environment on the positive days as well.  Thankfully, we can learn to change our negative emotions with a few physical and mental adjustments.

  
There is a practice that therapists and coaches use to help people create an emotional state.  There are times when it is helpful for therapists to lead a client to create a negative emotion.  This is sometimes referred to as “tuning”, as in Emotional Freedom Technique (Tapping).   This helps to gauge the depth of their emotions and feelings regarding issues in life.  Every emotion we feel is a pattern that runs through our mind, our body, and our nervous system.  Because it is a pattern, we can break down the pattern to help us solve issues and create positive states of emotions.  I first learned about creating and breaking state in a class I took with Graham Nicholls Strategic Coaching and Training. While the class was not considered a Christian or Spiritual class, I began to realize that the pattern presented was a very scriptural and biblically based practice.   Our emotional state and changing our emotional state are created from three areas of what we do and think.

The first part of creating or changing the pattern is called our Physical Association of emotion.  It refers to the "body language" of an emotion.  Our bodies tell us how we are feeling emotionally.   Unlike many other cultures around the world, the western culture does not teach us the value of stopping to examine what our bodies are telling us.   Things like being cognizant of our depth of breath, the beating of our hearts, our posture, and head and neck positioning are a few of the indicators of our mental status. 

 According to Harvard Health Publishing, from Harvard Medical School, “While it is obvious that your feelings can influence your movement, it is not as obvious that your movement can impact your feelings too. For example, when you feel tired and sad, you may move more slowly. When you feel anxious, you may either rush around or become completely paralyzed. But recent studies show that the connection between your brain and your body is a “two-way street” and that means movement can change your brain, too!”

Moving our bodies and being intentional with movement can change the way we feel.  The bible has presented this truth for millenniums.    The book of Isaiah (61:3) encourages God’s people that He has given us the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness (sadness, despair, depression).  God offers us a trade of our sorrows for His gladness.  He gives us the garment, but we must put it on.   What is praise?  It is incorporating physicality into the act of recognizing and honoring God.  In the good times it is easy to have an attitude of gratitude.  Scripture is clear about how we can deal with those not so good times and come through them refreshed.  Habakkuk 3:17-19 Gives an example of how praising God in the bad times can strengthen and help us emotionally. 

“Though the fig tree should not blossom, nor fruit be on the vines, the produce of the olive fail
and the fields yield no food, the flock be cut off from the fold and there be no herd in the stalls, yet I will rejoice in the Lord; I will take joy in the God of my salvation. God, the Lord, is my strength; he makes my feet like the deer's; he makes me tread on my high places.

Despite circumstances, the response of rejoicing and finding joy in God, and not surrendering to the circumstances resulted in gaining strength and the sense of being above the circumstances – not buried by them.

Scripture has many examples of instructions for doing something with our bodies to praise God.  The bible instructs us throughout the book of Psalms to make a joyful noise, to rejoice in God, to sing, to declare, clap our hands, dance, shout, play instruments, raise our hands, bow down, lay prostate, celebrate, and turn our eyes or face upward.  We can quietly worship remaining motionless while communicating with God, but it seems that scriptures indicate that we can only praise God while we are doing something pertaining to physical activity.  Even talking has a positive or negative affect on us. Our words are a physical posture. Words can snare us or free us. Hearing what we say can trigger a response.

Proverbs 6:2 tells us, “You have been trapped by what you said, ensnared by the words of your mouth.”

Changing our physical posture alone helps us to overcome negativity. Exercises like running can release endorphins that trigger a positive feeling in our bodies. Add the intention of praise and the results are even greater. We were created to use our bodies to honor God. Body movements sends a signal to our brain that causes our brain and emotions to change to a positive state.  It changes the neuropeptides and their communication to every cell in our bodies.  God knew this anecdote a long time ago and it still works for us today.


The second element of this pattern has to do with recognizing and changing our focus or attention.  There is a saying, “where focus goes energy flows!”  Whatever we think about grows and what we think about most grows biggest. Changing our focus to God, His ability, His goodness, His strength, His grace - changes us.  We use our imagination every day, practically all day long, and even in our dreams!  We fret, we worry, we stress about what might happen. We picture the worst-case scenario in our minds.  God gave us our imagination to use in healthy, faith building ways.  Isaiah 26:3 tells us,

“I will keep him in perfect peace, whose imagination is kept on me.”

Imagination is the first step of creation.  Ask an artist!  Ask a designer!  Our imaginations are the launchpad of everything that man has created in the physical world – our imagination is part of what creates feelings and emotions we experience.   Several instances in the Old Testament God made it clear that we have a choice regarding how we live our lives.  One example is Deuteronomy 30:19.

“Today I have given you the choice between life and death, between blessings and curses. Now I call on heaven and earth to witness the choice you make. Oh, that you would choose life, so that you and your descendants might live! (NLT)

While we cannot always choose the circumstance we are faced with, God indicates that we choose a mindset of life or death, of blessings or curses.  When we choose to think in a positive manner or a negative manner, we are in a sense choosing a result.  We are choosing a manifestation. 

The artist does not look at the canvas and decide that it is not a masterpiece.  She uses her imagination to begin to see the end product instead of the beginning. 

Jesus would not have told his followers “Don’t take an anxious thought” if it was not within their power to not take the anxious thought.  He would not have said, “Don’t let your hearts be troubled, but believe and trust in God” if there was not a choice on our part.

The apostle Paul beautifully writes encouragement in his final words to the church at Philippi,

“Fix your thoughts on what is true, and honorable, and right, and pure, and lovely, and      admirable.  Think about the things that are excellent and worthy of praise.” 

We can control our thoughts, which will control the way we feel, which will control our attitudes, and direct our decisions.  None of us make good judgments when I am driven by negative feelings.  We have the power to take every thought captive and bring it to the obedience of Christ.  II Corinthians 10:5 empowers us:

“We pull down every proud obstacle that is raised against the knowledge of God; we take every thought captive and make it obey Christ.” (GNT)

 We are not slaves to our thoughts.  Our thoughts should serve us. We can catch, challenge, and change the thoughts we have.   When we do, we break our emotional state and create another. We have the power to direct our thoughts. Our thoughts will direct our feelings and emotions.

The third element of changing our emotions is called Semantics.  Basically, this is the language we use and the questions we ask ourselves.  On a deeper level, it is the language we use and the questions we ask ourselves about ourselves.  This has to do with meaning.  We interpret or judge something that is going on or we interpret someone else’s actions.  Then we ask ourselves, “What does this mean about me?” because meaning is typically internalized as being about “me”.  In our judgments we attempt to assign a meaning for everything that happens.  This judgement comes back to us as one pointed question; what does this (someone’s actions or words, or events going on) mean or say about me?  Unfortunately, we often respond to these questions with the wrong answer about ourselves.   Many times, we have harmful feelings and emotions because we have inserted meaning about ourselves into an equation that is not accurate or even necessary.  

Are the questions we ask ourselves, positive and empowering, or are they negative and belittling?  The way we ask those internal questions can induce positive or negative feelings.  The wrong questions will always lead us to a wrong answer, and if not challenged will lead to a wrong conclusion.  For example, when a negative or harmful event happens, we typically “ask Why”.  This is a legitimate question but is hardly ever the most productive question.   If we come up with a sincere but wrong answer, then we simply end up being sincerely wrong, and misguided about ourselves and our identity.

Our biggest enemy is not the devil.  It is not our past and the bad choices we made.  Even the cruel circumstances we face are not one’s biggest enemy.  If you know the story about Paul and Silas being in jail, then you know that they were facing difficult circumstances.  They had been obedient to their calling and were being punished by the government for doing so.  So, a little side lesson here is, we should not think that negative circumstances are the result of our wrong-doing or bad decisions.  Sometimes they can bring regretful results to our lives but many times the circumstances we face are not a punishment of our past.   In this episode of their lives, they followed this pattern I am describing and guess what happened?  Acts 16:25-26 tells us:

“And at midnight Paul and Silas prayed, and sang praises unto God: and the prisoners heard them.   And suddenly there was a great earthquake, so that the foundations of the prison were shaken: and immediately all the doors were opened, and everyone's bands were loosed.”

Paul and Silas were choosing to praise God during their challenging circumstances.  They were choosing where or who their attention and focus was going.   They were not asking “why me Lord?” regarding their circumstances.   Their incorrect interpretation or judgment would have led them to the wrong conclusion that their current circumstances was the end of the story.  They knew the correct interpretation and meaning of their lives and their situation.  Chances are there have been people in your life who may have dominated you in one or more ways.  Belittling words and actions of the past from parents, siblings, coaches, teachers, employers are never far away.  They tuck themselves into the peripheral of our conscious thoughts lingering like bad perfume.  They sit in the seat of judgment as we look to them as a source of identity and acceptance.  When our internal sense of identity is based and founded in God’s love for us, like Paul’s and Silas’ were, we are less likely to internalize, interpret and accept false meaning to and about ourselves and the events around us.  The actions, the focus, and the internal dialog of Paul and Silas, regarding their situation, caused the bands (shackles) to miraculously be loosed.  We too can be free from the bonds of the past and present false identity placed upon us.   

Our biggest enemy is not an external foe. Our biggest nemesis is the lie(s) we believe about ourselves. Those words that haunt.  The memories that live as strong today as they did years ago.  The self-doubt that robs us of the courage to step out and attempt to see our dreams come true.    Not only can the statements we tell ourselves lead to a downward spiral, but the questions that we internally ask about ourselves have an enormous amount of influence regarding the way we feel.  This internal dialog is indicative of our sense of identity.  There is an inspiring version of the story of our lives.  It does exist and is ready to be lived.  The internal dialog regarding harmful chapters of our lives has seeped into the core beliefs of our hearts, creating an opinion that is based on speculation and fear.   God’s love can change that. Most of us understand that life can often be a struggle.  Negative feelings and emotions can make us feel like we are experiencing the end of the dream, the goal, the vision, the story.

If you are experiencing emotional difficulty, try these three things regarding breaking and creating state.  First, do something physically that is different from what you have been doing.  Do one or more of the things that scripture indicates is praise.  Recognize and honor God with your praise as a statement of faith.  Next, change your attention from the problem to the solution.  God is a good God, and we can ask Him to step into our circumstances and situations.  He is not afraid of our past failures or bad decisions and is not diminished by them.  He is willing and eager to get involved in the parts of our lives that we consider too ugly for a holy God.  Then, challenge the validity of the story you are telling yourself about yourself.  If God thinks good thoughts about us, then we should tell ourselves the same thing. Have you taken the time to check out God’s opinion of you?   You are more than you think you are.  You were created with purpose, value, and significance.  One of my favorite scriptures is found in Jeremiah 29:11.

“For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the Lord, “plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.” (NIV)

God has good plans for you.  These plans are to give you hope and a future.  If God is for you maybe it is time for you to be for yourself as well.

When we put these three parts of this circle of emotion into practice - the physical association of emotion, the mental focus and attention (on God and his goodness), and we change the inner and external dialog to align with God’s word, we will create a new positive emotional state.