Power Exchange: Part 1

Beaver Dam, Rock Spring Nature Trail, Natchez Trace Parkway, North Alabama

I began rebelling against the rules and regulations of diets and food plans years ago.  A lifetime of struggling taught me that the struggle had a way of always winning in the long run, and way too often in the short run.   Binge eating was my way of life I could see no way out.  What a helpless feeling to believe you can’t change!

When we are in the woes and throes of gaining weight, it can be very difficult to follow any of the numerous diet plans available out there.  But we can find ourselves instantly derailed for eating something we consider forbidden or not on the plan.  We then slide so easily into the pattern of the weeks and months, and even decades of eating with abandon.  Why?   Because it’s comfortable. Familiar. Habitual. 

Habitual. There’s the key.  We tend to blame our failures on the lack of our own willpower to do (or not do) whatever the newest diet fad dictates.  I remember over the years asking God, myself, and my mother, “What’s wrong with me?!”  It really felt as if I was controlled by cravings, like I had no power to overcome, and as often and as hard as I prayed, God seemed to be ignoring me. 

How I’d prayed, or rather I begged God fervently for freedom, but now I realize that I didn’t understand freedom at all, and I refused to listen to anything that wasn’t my preconceived idea of freedom, and I would get angry when someone suggested I had choices.  I sure didn’t feel as if I had any choice but to the way I was: bound!   After all, I didn’t choose to be this way, and I sure wouldn’t choose to remain in bondage, right?

Well, not exactly.

I know first-hand the iron grip a binge can have on you.  I know it is so much easier to believe you can’t rather than saying, “Oh, yes I can!”   But if you want out, you must get your head around the truth:  You do have a choice. 

This week, I plan to share a lot about freedom, change, breaking habits, and a complete power exchange…from your (lack of) willpower to God’s will in your life.  If you want to start on the road to freedom, then your assignment today is to believe. You can’t control everything in your day, but when it comes to what goes into your mouth, you are in control, and that’s a fact, no matter what your mind is telling you.  If you binge again all day, do it with your eyes wide open knowing that you have a choice.  Then start telling yourself that you don’t have to live this way:

  • “I don’t have to live this way,” as you gobble down fast food in your car. 
  • “I don’t have to live this way,” as you privately eat all those cookies. 
  • “I don’t have to live this way,” as you polish off two quarts of ice cream. 
  • “I don’t have to live this way,” as you keep eating even though you are so full you are uncomfortable and already feeling guilty. 

And if your find yourself in the store stocking up on carbs for the evening, as you toss those Snickerdoodles in your basket, admit to yourself that it is a choice you are making.  Accept responsibility.  Yes, not eating them would be a whole lot harder, but again, it is a choice, that’s all you need to acknowledge right now:  If you eat it, it is your choice.

I need to be clear on one thing though.   If you are reading this and the main goal you have is losing weight, you may as well stock up on Atkins bars and peanuts.  If, however, you are ready for a closer walk with God, to begin to understand all that was paid for on the Cross of Christ, and to have life and life more abundantly, come visit me again.  I’m not saying I have all the answers, but I know the One who does. 

Rock Spring Nature Trail, Natchez Trace Parkway, North Alabama
(Above and below.)

Read Power Exchange: Part 2

Breaking Good

We all know New Year’s resolutions rarely, if ever, work. We may not realize why, but we have repeatedly experienced the failures of the goals, aims, or changes we planned for a new year or various Mondays throughout the year. Over the past months, I came to realize something important. All of my past Words of the Year didn’t have the success I’d envisioned because I focused on the goal, not myself, not my own bad habits. It is a whole lot easier to give in a bad habit than it is to break it and build a new, better habit.

The word of the year for 2020:
Break

I was in WalMart a few months ago, looking at some sugary delights. I moseyed over to that section because I was sure I heard them calling my name. I reminded myself to only get a small item so when I ate it all without restraint, I wouldn’t have done too bad. I had already figured out that freedom didn’t look like I thought it should.

The truth of freedom is that, as born again Christians, Christ paid the heaviest of costs for our freedom on the cross. All the years I thought I was fighting demons, addiction, or some force I couldn’t name or understand, I was really only fighting myself. Or my self nature, to be more direct. Me…I was fighting ME! As I stood there looking at the table of sweets, I knew I really did have a choice.

If I chose the cookies, I could then choose to have only one of them, but would I? My habit was to mindlessly graze on junk the way home. Or I could walk away. If I take the cookies then I must consider the baggage that comes with it: I would, most likely, be dealing with the urge to eat with abandon the rest of the night if I overdosed on sugar. Did I really want to fight with myself all night long? How many times did I choose my bad habit over my desire to lose weight?

For all the times I times in my life I felt like I had no choice but to continue on in the very way that made me miserable I have to admit I believed a lie. Every time I said “It’s stronger than me.” I believed a lie and forgot the promise:

“I can do all things through Christ
who strengthens me.”

Philippians 4:13

No matter how strong the urge to give in to the very thing you want to avoid (be it sugar, relationships, addiction, spending…or anything else you fight) with Christ, you are stronger than the pull. If you do it anyway, you choose that path. Discipline comes when we begin to tell self “No.” And in the beginning, that’s a really hard thing to do. Break those habits, those chains, those unhealthy patterns. I know I am.

Happy New Year, my friends!
May you find a BREAK!

Don’t open that wormy can…

We can sure find out a lot about others perusing social media. As I scroll through Facebook, I find myself saying, “I don’t believe I would have told that!” way too often. Smart people who have momentary lapses of good judgement and post things they shouldn’t find that once it’s out there, it’s there, even after you delete it. You don’t know who may have taken screenshots…and that can of worms is open!

There are times I am tempted to be more “open,” especially when I’m mad. It’s not that I want to post publicly who or what has made me angry, but I want to send a private message or two telling the person who is wreaking havoc in my family what people really think of them. By “people” I mean me. The evil some people hide so well is scary, and to be totally open with you, forgiveness doesn’t always come easy.

University of North Alabama tulips

What to do with a Christian Voice?

Using our Christian voices can be daunting in a country that is so divided. Biblical truth is becoming more and more offensive, even to some people professing to know Christ. Too many Christians have not read the Bible from Genesis to Revelation, and in an age like today where deception is rampant, it is imperative that we know what the Word says. The devil sure knows.

I have been battling with myself about how to use my voice…or if to use my voice, specifically when it pertains to politics. We are already pummeled with opinions, commentaries, and lie after lie on television and social media. The loudest voices seem to be the most deceived ones. Truth whispers from the sea of deception until we can barely hear it.

So I ask myself, should Christians address some of today’s tough controversial issues from a Biblically sound perspective? If we don’t, are we burying our heads in the sand? Do we need one more political voice in the upcoming election year, and if so, how should that voice be used? I haven’t been able to answer the questions. What do you think?

Lillies (irises, too) found in Killen, Alabama