So far, on my sojourn on earth, I haven't encountered many personal male enemies or nemesis. Maybe it's because I don't interact deeply with men who aren't my hubby, or maybe it has something to do with the male psyche. Hard to say.
But as I read these verses today, several flashbacks assaulted me:
"My enemies say of me in malice, 'When will he die, and his name perish?' And when one comes to see me, he utters empty words, while his heart gathers iniquity; when he goes out, he tells it abroad. All who hate me whisper together about me; they imagine the worst for me" (Psalm 41:5,6, ESV).
It's that last part that gets me. They imagine the worst for me.
I remember some of my deepest girl wounds over the years, and every one of them involves this assumption of negative intent. The first memory I have of this is when I was in the first grade. I'd been kept in for recess to finish something. I can't remember what. I finished quickly, then thought, "Well, I'm here, I may as well help." So I erased the chalkboards really carefully, using those special erasers that make it really shine. I pulled one vertically then horizontally.
I smiled in my seat when the teacher came back in, awaiting her smile. I loved my teacher. Instead, she recoiled, aimed angry eyes my way and yelled at me. "How dare you erase my chalkboards without permission. How could you do such a bad thing?"
I shrunk, as you can imagine. I tried to tell her I thought I was helping, that I did it with pure motive, but she would hear nothing of it.
It's that kind of thing I'm talking about. When someone assigns a bad motive to me when, in actuality, a good motive is there. There's nothing worse than that. In those moments, when scolded, I become that little girl, cowering.
It's happened several times in adulthood. Angry women saying things about me that aren't true. (This does not mean I don't do or say or think naughty things. Of course that happens. And my dear, close friends are bold and loving enough to confront me. It's not that kind of thing I'm talking about here.) It's when girl enemies decide something about me, then forever assign whichever motives they want to me. And there's simply nothing I can do to change that.
Our pastor gave a great illustration at church that really helped me. The four quadrants of conflict. Here it is:

I almost always fell into the capitulation category, where I'm nearly always trying to satisfy the other. So many times I've taken in someone's petty words like a delicacy, feeding on them, digesting them. And then I'll say something like, "Oh, you're right. I was that way."
But that certainly doesn't help. It doesn't help the person who assumed ill intent (because I'm validating unreality), and it numbs me.
I suppose the inevitability of girl enemies is something I should expect, but in that expectation, I need to grow up a bit. Let go of words that aren't true, take to heart the ones that are, and let Jesus sift it all through. And build into the dear women in my life who speak the truth in love, who listen to me when I'm weak and needy, who don't assume the worst about me, who pray for me and give me the privilege of the same.
I doubt we'll solve the girl enemy issue. It's wrapped up in envy and insecurity and the like. But we can change the way we respond. To hear, then give it to Jesus, the One who bore the worst assumptions of others in every way.








3 comments:
Hi Mary, I'm one of those blessed to have been treated with respect throughout my life. That blessing often means I am able to discern whether something is truth or ugliness a little quicker since I don't have to filter it through a lot of junk. I have had many women friends through the years say they love to have me around because I don't let them listen to the junk and I tend to scare those mean girls who know I see through them and won't accept their taunts. I've come to see this as one of my gifts. That God didn't allow me my secure, respectful and logical childhood just so I could be happy. He gave it to me to use to raise up those around me who need someone on their side when they can't filter out the hurtful words.
Sometimes we let our good childhoods keep us from speaking up because people might say we can't understand. Baloney - strength and clearness of purpose is needed when you stand in the gap.
My heart cried out for you when I read this. Perhaps it isn't so much a matter of growing up as it is of receivinghealing. Several years ago I participated is a learning session for Theophostics (God's Light). Going through it, I realized it could be abused and I didn't continue with it--but one concept stayed with me. Isolate the issue and ask God to speak to it. That issue.
The first time I asked God to show me what was wrong with me. That was really too big a topic, but I was learning and He spoke. He told me I was perfect--that He made me just the way He wanted me. Now, an hour earlier, if I had talked to someone about it, I'd have said God made me the way He wanted me. Scripture says so. But hearing His quiet voice in my inner man was different. I've never doubted my value since that day.
The second time He told me it wasn't my fault. I won't go into the details, but I always knew with my mind it wasn't my fault. Hearing Him tell me was different.
You get the idea. I know you hear His voice. Ask Him to speak directly to a specific problem. It isn't that He can't speak to many all at once--just that we can't hear.
Blessings. I know God has healing for you.
I know He has healing for me too, Solveig. great word.
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