"What gives you hope?" It was the question that started it all. Last Thursday I spoke at a venue to women and men who had a passion for working with young adults. I talked about the retreats and workshops I lead, but mainly about creating safe spaces for women to heal from a culture of unrealistic expectations of perfection. By introducing different self-care and contemplative tools, women have awakened to the grace and hope inside of them. Fueled by the Holy Spirit a revolution is beginning in their souls. The gentleman who asked the question sincerely continued, "I mean this problem is so epidemic. If you talk to any woman you meet -- it's everywhere." As I weighed this question in my heart, I began to tear up. Very slowly I started to talk about how it would be so much easier for me to stop talking about the disease of perfection, have a kid, go on a diet and meet the culture's and church's expectations of me as a married woman of four and a half years. My hope is not in the fact that I could live a "nice" life. (Not saying that people who choose that life are bad, that is just not what I am called to). I wanted to explain my story so I was careful to choose my words about my husband's and my choice to question whether or not we want kids. That's our life. I don't force or project this agenda on anyone. So it caught me off guard when a 50-something white male raised his hand in my pausing after I had just started explaining where my hope lies and said, "I have a thought." I sat there for a moment as I pictured the women in my life who have sat in my living room crying over shame and guilt, about broken relationships and promises, about their eating disorders and body issues. I remembered their faces in my mind as they realized that Jesus loves them just as they are when this same man raised his hand a second time. Since I was collecting my thoughts, I said, "Sure, share your thought." "Children heal a lot of brokenness." I didn't have time to process the feeling in my stomach when he said it. I needed to talk about the hope I've found in Jesus -- not this man's projection of a solution for me. I understand that he had "good intentions," but the road to hell is paved with them. I sat there later thinking what if I were trying to get pregnant and it wasn't working? What about if I was struggling with postpartum depression and childbearing made me feel even more broken? What if I had cancer and my uterus was removed? What if I can't have "normal" intercourse with my husband due to a pain disorder that makes sex feel like someone is branding me? That last one is true. This past weekend Cissy Brady Rogers and I held our first Soul and Sexuality Retreat and the conversation continued. I can't tell you what all happened there because it was a moving, healing, sacred experience. However, we did have a Wall of Shame where the women could write down their shame anonymously to voice to one another that we're not alone. They needed to get it out. By the end of the weekend the wall was littered with post-its. Here's a sample:
My hands shake even now as I write those words. Oh the pain, shame and guilt women in our communities are carrying and why? Because someone opened their mouth and word vomited their issues all over them. These women carried years of vileness around with them because people didn't stop to wonder how deep those words would cut into their souls. How deeply it would sever their ties to the God who created them as wise women. So my word vomit tonight is please stop talking. Please start listening to the women around you and not because we are feminazis with agendas but because we are created in the image of God with gifts and abilities that you don't have. We have minds, souls, and bodies that need safe places to share and be restored. Sadly the church has forced them into hiding. We don't need to be told we are princesses or be coddled. We need to be loved and listened to -- that's what Jesus did. He sat in the dirt while everyone else threw stones. He had no stone in hand. He told the woman to go and sin no more -- not to condemn her but to let her know she had a choice. If you live with a woman or if you have a daughter or sister or friend please just this one week make intentional space to sit down and listen to her story -- hear her wisdom -- get in touch with her soul. It's been too long to live with the shame that was supposed to be taken away on a wooden cross over 2,000 years ago. |

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Comments
well done Kris. well written!
passionate, grace giving and thought provoking
what a fabulous experience, one in which I assume was truly life changing for all the women in attendance :]
Thanks Christie! You were missed!
Amen soul sister. Thanks for speaking boldly.
Thank you Cissy! I appreciate you!
Kristin, thank you for bringing this up. I too have worked with a lot of women with shame and guilt. Over the last few years this has predominantly been with women who have been abused, traumatized, or at least disillusioned through the church. Many of them have been hurt by men, and some of them have been in very unhealthy structures where ungodly beliefs about silence, control, and the lording of authority are practiced. I too have been a victim of that and have to deal with the shame of spiritual abuse and disillusionment in regards to my faith.
I love your point that we need to stop talking and start listening. It is so key because not only do they need us to listen, but in order to love them well and truly walk with them we need to know their story and how we can enter into it. Have you learned any keys about what to do and how to respond after they tell their story and after we listen. Listening is key, but at some point the talking stops and then either we turn and both go our separate ways or something else needs to happen to move the relationship on. My pastor and I are hoping to put together some ministries that really touch those who are in guilt, shame, disillusionment, and may even be at their last point before turning away from faith. Anything you have learned would be openly received as we know we have a lot to learn.
This is such an important need in the church and one that can't be ignored any longer. Thank you for taking it on in your church! Great questions too. What I do with women is create small group where there is a common link, a book, cooking, art and then come around that in order to find healing. Channeling the hurt and the anger into something healthy, like a piece of art, can be incredible, but it also needs to be in a safe space with a community.
Another tool is spiritual direction and contemplative prayer. In the protestant church, this is a very unfamiliar practice, but I believe it is coming back into the church now. If you visit my website (www.abeautifulmess.org), there is a spiritual practices link that walks you through different exercises step by step. I have seen immense healing and the Holy Spirit meet people in these exercises in awe-inspiring ways. Again, these should be practiced in a safe community as well. Let me know if that helps and I would love to hear how it goes or what else you find. Blessings to you on your journey!
sometimes,some words to oneself is worthless to listen to guide one to get out of trouble.