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Showing posts with label Just a Thought. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Just a Thought. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

To Be Continued...


I had a twitter discussion recently with a new friend that has moved me to write a post (tentatively) called "Have You Ever Been Deceived?" ...Unfortunately, with all that is going on in my life and lack of time to do the scriptural research, for I don't want the post to be an opinion piece as much as I want it to be a Biblically sound post with Biblical references to support my arguments, the post is not likely to be birthed anytime soon. In the meantime, I'd like to say this, which is my opinion:


As Christians, we can't simply conclude that people simply don't wanna "STOP" their sinning. We should know better than anyone about STRONGHOLDS.

Strongholds of the MIND are fierce & AREN'T easy to shake off. But with our LOVE (& not condemnation) we can help others "shake the devil off”.

Monday, May 9, 2011

The Myth of the Stolen Man/Woman



"S/he stole my man/woman."


The thinking that a wo/man can steal your man/woman is ludicrous to me. Unless kidnapped or, maybe, blackmailed, no wo/man has that much power to make a man/woman leave you. Being that's usually not the case, it's fair to say your man/woman walked away. Without coercion.


Accept that truth & stop trying to blame a third party for the actions of "your man/woman". Your man/woman, although yours, can't be controlled, caged, tucked away safely like your other possessions. Like you, your man/woman have this power to make choices--to change their minds & therefore ... their hearts. [Ouch.] With that said, a man/woman can't be stolen, but they can choose to walk away. No matter the reason for doing so--another wo/man, and no matter the circumstances--s/he knew your man/woman had a lady/wife/man/husband--it was your man/woman's choice to leave you.


You'd think this would not have to be said, but with Mashonda's "woe-is-me-Alicia-Keys-stole my man" sob story being brought back to a dismal life on Vh1's "Love & Hip Hop" and the many statistics regarding relationships being "threatened" by social networks, I just felt a need to make this public service announcement of sorts. ...The way wo/men screen their partner's twitter Timelines, Facebook Recent Activity, Wall posts, Inbox, their cellphone history is quite ridiculous. Sad. And I hate to say it, but pitiful. As if them doing ANY of that stuff is going to keep their man/woman from walking away. All that energy is 1. a poor use of energy, 2. a sign of insecurity--either in yourself and/or your relationship; deal with it head on, not by playing Inspector Gadget or thinking you are powerful enough to manipulate "your" man/woman to stay, and 3. plain ol' foolish. Stop it! ...Your maturity is showing--it's quite little--and, more important, you're doing more harm to yourself (and probably the relationship you're trying so hard to hold onto) than not.


A little insecurity is natural from time-to-time (and, some would say, healthy), but the above actions and thinking is not healthy. Or rational. I mean, do we really believe that adult men & women are being stolen from us? Stolen? Ok, not him/her, but their heart, you say? ...My answer, a man/woman has to let their guard down, put themselves in a vulnerable position in order for their heart to be penetrated in a way of which your love could be replaced, no longer a desire to withhold and for another woman/man's to take shelter in their heart. Again, that's a choice. Your man/woman's choice.


Unfortunate, but true.

Saturday, October 16, 2010

Untitled: Unfortunate Truth


"No man is worth my relationship with God."
That's what we say.
Shoot, that's what I say.
And yet sometimes I find myself jeopardizing the relationship that is ALREADY in need of repair.

I consider dating men who don't confess Christ to be their Lord and Savior...
when I know that once I get emotionally involved I will naturally try to justify our relationship.
Try to make something that's not meant...
meant
because it wasn't God sent nor approved.

Sometimes I get mad at myself when I think,
d*mn near plan the next time I can have sex.
Looking forward to it even.
All while reminding myself that his penis is not stronger than the power and blood of Christ.

Seriously.

I find myself asking myself, "Is this man more powerful than God?"
That's what I might as well be declaring anytime I give in to sex
...even when I'm telling myself "No"
the whole time I'm taking off my clothes.

I wish I could say it was simply about the sex
then it wouldn't be so deep.
I know that my yearning for sex is to feel loved
whether real or make believe.

I feel so empty sometimes.
I feel so guilty.
Not because I desire these things--
love that usually develops into a natural desire to become closer than close, and therefore have sex.
Because when you love someone so much, you naturally want to become one.
In all ways.
So... yeah.  I feel guilty.
Not because I desire these things--love and to express that love in all ways, even sexually--
but because I desire to fulfill this desire out of God's order--I want it now as a single--because I'm so empty,
so impatient, so weak in faith that I decide to do it my way--
have sex with a man just to feel loved for a moment,
yes, even love that I know is make believe.

...Just to find myself depleted afterwards and that I was a fool
for doing it my way and not God's perfect way, no matter how unrealistic it may seem,
because even make believe love doesn't satisfy.
Satisfaction that only love-filled companionship meets.
Satisfaction that can't be met when the one who loves me in make believe
is only concerned with satisfying things that are only skin deep.
They don't care about me beyond the moment I'm untangled from their sheets.

God wants more for me
and yet I struggle with the yearnings of my own flesh
and in essence declare that it's hard to pass up a hard penis
and easy to disobey God's Word, God's guidance.

Thursday, September 30, 2010

Hey Ladies (and Gentlemen)!



To whom it concerns:

Ladies, I think we got it twisted. First, let me say that I think it is great that we have aspirations for who we want for a companion. We should all have a goal in mind however, ladies I have an issue with us having aspirations beyond our means. Let me explain.

As of lately (I guess the weather is getting warm and romance is in the air *smile*), I have heard much talk of ladies saying that they want a man with this and that. Well ladies, how much sense does it make if we want a man with his head on straight when ours is all lopsided? Or if we want a man who is physically fit yet we hate walking? Or how about wanting a man to spend $25 dollars on us when we only have $2.50 to our name?

The question you need to ask yourselves ladies is “Am I my “ideal” Mr. Right’s Ms. Right?” Be completely honest with yourself. If the type of man you want wouldn’t “ideally” want a woman like you then…. You may want to evaluate your wants or (hopefully) evaluate yourself.

I think it’s a shame when a woman expects something from a man that she doesn’t expect from herself. In fairness to men, we expect a lot from them and often times we don’t expect much of ourselves in a relationship. My point is this: it doesn’t make much sense for anyone (male or female) to ask anyone to bring anything to the table that they could not muster to the table themselves.

Clearly, the things I mentioned above are quite arguably minute, like physical fitness and money however it was the best way for me to get my point across. For instance, you can be unequally yoked in more than one way (unfortunately, most that I hear talking are only concerned about one (property)). You can be unequally yoked with possessions (property) and unequally yoked with substance (core or essence). Now someone who is unequally yoked can possibly be compatible because indeed a man with $25 to spend can be equally yoked with a woman with $2.50 (property), but only if that woman is trying (substance) to make the $2.50 into $25 (and vice versa). See, the only way this pair couldn’t be compatible is if the woman never intend to make her $2.50 into $25. That is not a matter of possession, that is a matter of substance. 

Just imagine yourself as an oxen yoked with another. That experience of a walk is indeed affected by the way the other chooses to walk. If you are walking a straight path forward and your partner is clearly not trying to walk forward but instead to the side that walk can be tiring. However, if you are walking straight and your partner is trying to walk straight, but perhaps their footing is a little off that walk can, too, be very tiring, but you may not get frustrated because you see there is an attempt at walking straight. Just in that same way Mr. Right is not going to choose and accept you if you are not Ms. Right it wouldn’t be enjoyable. 

Ladies, all I’m trying to say is that we shouldn’t expect the best if we are not the best (or attempting to be the best).

I’m just saying.

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Sometimes It Just Wasn't Meant... Thank God For That!

Can you ever get over your first love?  ...Heck yeah!  *lol*  Seriously, was he your first love if he had no love for you?  That's my thinking on the matter.  You may have loved them, but they didn't love you, so... I'm not sure if they deserve the title "first love" because it wasn't reciprocated.  The man that reciprocates it will be my "first love".  *smile*

Someone asked me recently if there was still a spark between my ex and I.  [Admittedly, it was an interesting and yet somewhat annoying question since I did break up with him 4 years ago and our interaction is very intermittent.  True, I haven't had a boyfriend since, but it's not because I'm still in love with my ex.]  My answer was "Ummm... not on my end.  ...I would go so far to say we were never meant to be together.  We were meant to just be fellow classmates.  ...I believe we all play a role in other's lives, but I don't believe his role was to be the man of my life."

Sometimes things don't work out because they weren't meant to work out.
Sometimes we try to fulfill a role in someone's life that we aren't meant to fulfill
and are asking them to do the same thing.
I know we don't like to hear this, but...
sometimes the things we desire aren't meant to be obtained,
which is why we can't get a grasp on it.
Sometimes we try to make that acquaintance, neighbor, fellow classmate, co-worker
our friend or lover
when they are meant to play their current position.
Not the one you wish them to play.
Yes, not getting what we want is disappointing,
but I'm sure you can look back and confirm that things you once wanted
you now know were no good for you.
It may have hurt then, not getting what you desired,
but even what causes hurt and pain is beneficial.
Be glad for stepping stones that appear to be pitfalls, downfalls.
They, too, build you up.

Our heartaches are/were a direct result of someone not knowing themselves.  S/He didn't know themselves, their role in our lives (friend, "Hi-Bye" acquaintances, or even that "dude/chick") and we didn't know ourselves enough to know the difference, to know that they weren't meant for us and we weren't meant for them.  [Now, them not being the wo/man you deserve doesn't make them "a bad wo/man" or even "less of a wo/man", it just make them "not the wo/man for YOU".]  Count it as a blessing--it didn't work out because He has something better in mind.  So don't be afraid to get over your 'first love', just be wiser, more connected with God and therefore self, so that when the next guy/girl comes along you will be able to discern whether s/he is wo/man enough for you.  

So, can you ever get over your first love?  Yes, when you realize that they probably don't deserve such significance in your life story.  "First love"?  That's deep.  Again, the man that reciprocates it will be my "first love" (and that man, I believe, will be my last love).  Furthermore, I don't place all blame on my ex for unfortunate woes that I've experienced because I CHOSE to be with him for whatever reasons.  All decisions we make are followed with a consequence.  Sometimes they are good, sometimes they are bad, sometimes they are long- or short-term, sometimes they are irrevocable.  Mine just happened to be a consequence of the heart, but I'm confident that they are revocable, that scars can be healed.

With love there are no regrets.  Just learned lessons.

"Every relationship is an opportunity to grow spiritually.  Take the blame off "them" and take responsibility." (Unknown)

Hope Hurts

Sometimes hope hurts.
There's so much uncertainty with it.

You yearn for something,
   desire something,
      want something so bad
and you only have hope to suffice.
Only problem is sometimes

it doesn't.

Those are the days that hope hurts.
You're just waiting.
Hoping and waiting
to have what you want
and,
hopefully,
many pleasant surprises to come along with it.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Untitled (Expectations, Disappointments & ...Self-Accountability)


Have you ever grown interested in someone and find yourself disappointed because things aren't going as you expected?  Well, I know I have.

Relationships are so complex.  Which is why I understand why people tend to keep their guard up--because to not have it up leaves them susceptible to becoming too comfortable with people who may not be here tomorrow.  Unfortunately, by nature we are very penetrable.  It is easy for us to receive information at face value (especially when there are tender eyes and a lovely smile attached to it)--"Ok, if s/he does that it means this"--in a 1 + 2 = 3 formula.  But what many of us find is that such trust in others' actions may lead to disappointment because we find that things aren't always as they seem.  ...Or, more likely, we find that our expectations aren't met.

And I guess that's what it boils down to--expectations.  It is so easy to expect certain things when we naturally expect 1 + 2 to equal 3... as nature has proven.  Too bad relationships, a thing of nature, are more complex than any mathematical problem you can think of.  There is no formula.  Just hope and discernment.  We all are microcosms of complexity and no two people are the same and therefore no two circumstances are the same.  And although there is plenty of wisdom to be found regarding relationships, there is no guarantee that when applied you will get the same result (answer) as the person from whom you received the advice (formula) as they did when they applied it to someone completely different than who you wish to apply the wisdom.  *whew*  And, for argument's sake, if you do apply the wisdom to the same person as the wise advisor, there is no guarantee that the person whom the wisdom is being applied to will react to it the same way when you do apply it.  You get my drift?  Relationships are complex!  But, it is possible to eliminate some complexities.

Now, let's talk about us and what we can control--ourselves.  I have found from the few times I liked-liked a guy that I sometimes--ok, ... most times--expect things I have no business expecting.  Period.  I know I'm not the only one guilty of this because I have had enough friends and associates--male and female--express the same thing.  They just didn't know it.  *lol*  So I encourage us to be self-accountable.  I find people tend to make themselves victims by placing blame on the other for hurting them--not meeting their expectations.  Truth is we should be accountable for our own disappointments because the other has less control (especially at the "I like him/her" stage of the relationship) of what information (actions or lack thereof) we process or, most important, how we compute it in our self-made equations.  "He's been asking about my day for 28 days, he should have asked me on a date by now."  "She's been laughing at my jokes every time our friends get together, why isn't she accepting my advances?"  We tend to dismiss them with ill thoughts when they don't do things we expect them to do in the time frame we expect them to take place.  And it really is unfair.  (And yes, yes, yes, of course s/he is a 'jerk' for misleading you and of course you can be emotionally affected by your disappointments, but) I would encourage you to put your emotions on the shelf and access the circumstance fairly.  Did they mislead you or did you mislead yourself?  I have decided that, if someone did not vow to be whatever I expected them to be, I have no right to be mad at them for not meeting the expectation.  (Of course it hurts because when you like someone--most of us like them for good reason; they're interesting, they have good energy, they're the type of person you'd like to know--you would like them to have a lasting role in your life.  ...And if you're like me, a romantic, which means that my imagination tends to guide me to thoughts of  future tense, it can feel like a dream has been put to death... again, but the reality is they aren't responsible for my dreams and) They owe me nothing.  Period.  I chose to interact with them.  I accepted their doings and sayings, applied the mathematical formula I believed to be fitting for their actions, and came to the conclusion/theory/answer that resulted in me forming an expectation.

Sometimes, ladies and gentlemen, people are no more than what they are presenting to you--a guy that asks about your day, a girl that finds your jokes funny.  And that's it.  Not the guy that asks about your day and will one day become your future kids' father.  Not the girl that finds your jokes funny and will one day sit on the porch swing with you in old age.  It's possible, but that's not the case today.  So be careful looking so far ahead that your disappointment that things aren't going as expected destroys your chance of having what you didn't expect--a new friend or a new supporter of your dreams.  (Yeah, I know, that's not what you want.  I get it.  But you also don't want to be with someone who doesn't want to be with you romantically either.  You're not a charity case.)  See, sometimes people are only guaranteeing you the here and now (today).  And the future (tomorrow... yeah, literally tomorrow) is still up for consideration.

And sometimes we don't give him or her a chance!  We get so impatient--forgetting that relationships are best slow cooked, not nuked in a microwave--and our expectations get the best of us.  Life, like us, is complex and sometimes life, which consists of time and priorities doesn't allow us to do what we want to do (or at least not the way we prefer to do it).  It's likely that s/he has considered you for the future--they are interested in you and they find you funny--but you are not a priority worthy of their time... right now.  I think the BEST thing an old friend told me once was "Tell me what you know, not what you think" because there have been times that I could have destroyed what is if I had acted upon the conclusions of what I thought was.  We often form conclusions based upon what we feel (think) and not facts (know).  With new relationships, especially, we have to remove our emotions and make conclusions of people's character (and/or actions) based upon facts.  We feel like we're being ignored or we've been forgotten, but the fact is that we haven't heard from him or her in a while. The fact is we don't know why we haven't heard from them in a while.  Maybe they are swamped with work and/or school, maybe they are on vacation, maybe they lost their phone, maybe they are on a mental/spiritual hiatus, maybe they are a clown in the circus, maybe they don't like you.  The point is you don't know, so until that maybe turns into a definite yes or no, don't conclude the worst.  Time will tell.  Trust me.  But if you count them out before time gives you the final answer, you'll never know what could've, should've, or would've been.  Only time will let you know whether you are 'smelling the coffee' or 'jumping to conclusions'.

I remember when I graduated from my alma mater, it just seemed as if none of my best friends... were my friends.  They weren't answering phones call, returning phone calls or any form of communication and I started to feel discarded.  I started to have a pity party and think "Wow.  I thought they were my friends.  I guess not."  But then my ability to think about more than one thing at once kicked in and I was also thinking "Ok, be rational.  Everyone is embarking on a new chapter in their lives.  They might just be busy.  All I know is that they aren't communicating with me, but I don't know why.  I need to check my ego; the world does not revolve around me and I can't possibly expect my friends, who are starting new careers and/or grad school all while juggling boyfriends/husbands (and surely other things), to make me a top priority right now."  ...Let's just say that I found with time that my rational self was right and my emotional self was ALL wrong.  If I had acted on my former thoughts, I could have burnt bridges.  Now, if you're saying to yourself "Well, I don't know what to think.  I can't tell if s/he is playin' with my emotions or not", I say, "Ask him/her."   The truth of the matter is this, if someone REALLY doesn't want to be bothered with you, they won't be bothered, they won't take time to answer your question.  Remember, people do what they want to do.  And eventually they will.  Now, please don't assume they don't want to be bothered, if they don't answer you when you expect them to.  I'll also say, "In the meantime of waiting for the answer live your life."  Don't wait by the phone.  Don't check your email... and your Facebook Inbox ...and his or her Wall every 15 minutes to see if their Recent Activity gives you signs of life.  Because with time you will find the truth and there's no sane reason to make yourself miserable, when indeed you may have been smelling the coffee and just needed time to confirm it OR you had been jumping to conclusions and needed time to confirm that you were giving yourself heartache for 'nothing'.

Being patient when seeking answers is best.  I mean, time doesn't lie.  That's for sure.  It frees your mind from asking yourself a bunch of questions that cannnot be answered unless time passes and you look around and realize s/he never got back to you or you have heard from them.  And, if the latter occurs, it would be much easier to lightheartedly inform them that you thought you would never hear from them again than it is to shamefully explain that you didn't know it was s/he calling because you deleted their phone number from your cellular, that you would like them to accept your Friend Request because you removed them from your Friends List, and that you hope they forgive you for all the poor things you said about them when you dragged their precious name in the mud to anyone who was willing (or held hostage) to listen to your woes.

Sometimes we expect people to act in a capacity that they aren't meant to fulfill, that they don't want to fulfill and it's arrogant of us to take the stance that ultimately states s/he should act in the capacity that we want them to--our lover, our best friend, whatever we desire and expect of them.  "How dare they?", we ask.  But the question is "How dare we conclude that someone in whom we have grown interested should have the same interest in us?  And if they don't, deem something to be wrong with them (or ourselves) because they rejected us?"  Reality is it's simply a case of two people wanting two different things and therefore what you desire is not what's best for you anyways.  Listen, I don't care how great, beautiful, lovely he or she is, if they don't want to be more than friends (or strangers for that matter) that is their prerogative. And it's not fair to question their choice or their character.  If you disagree, I'll tell you what I have had to tell myself, "Get over yourself, learn the lesson (there is one... and it most likely has everything to do with you), and move on."  Rise above despair.  People are not evil people, generally, who interact with others for the sole purpose of abusing them--giving them false impressions, hurting their feelings, and contributing to their mental and emotional distress.  I think sometimes we meet a person, build a relationship of some sort with them, and in the meantime obtain in-/direct messages from them and come to develop a mental list of what and what not this person is capable of doing.  And when they do the unexpected, which tends to disappoints us, we deem the person a 'jerk' (or worse).  When in reality, they are all that they've always been--usually good--we just don't see it to be so because we have limited their goodness to our expectations.

Another good read, A Week Later, that is somewhat related.  If I was a poetic storyteller, I would have said it like this--engaging, funny, short & sweet.

Friday, April 9, 2010

"Trust patience."


There's no coincidence that patience is the first characteristic made in 1 Cor. 13:4, that it's considered such a virtue. In ALL affairs, with patience comes definite answers. Utilize the time to stay true to self & obedient to righteousness & before long clarity of truth will be visible, shining bright before you.

"You're Beautiful."

"There's a difference between looking beautiful and being beautiful. One refers to your outward appearance, the other your nature. I'm more concerned with the latter, so I sure hope when people say "You're beautiful" they are referring to my essence. For outward beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Inner beauty is an undeniable truth."

"Isn't That Beautiful?"

"I think people underestimate the power of honesty and the beauty of testimony. For part of our journey's beauty can be attributed to it's ugly moments, our ability to rise from the bottom. We're not always on the top. But we rise. Isn't that beautiful? And such beauty couldn't manifest without, at some point, being at our lowest. So share the story honestly--it's glorious or will be."

Many people put on the facade that they have it all together--lying about who, and what, and where they are.  All the while they fail to realize that this moment, this current (or past) position and condition has great benefit to their life story. With that said, instead of having... shame and lying about it, use your position and condition as motivation to change, to RISE. And then who you USED to be wouldn't be in vain and will be a GREAT part of your testimony--and testament of the greatness of grace, mercy, and will power!!!

"Never Ask A Man..."


"Never ask a man for his time because a man will always make time to do what he wants to do."--Cedric Wright | Apply this wisdom to all relations, and you’ll have many days of peace. For the question of your significance to them or their consideration of you will be answered. It'll definitely result in less time ...spent wondering, "Why?". Answer's simple; they didn't find you worthy of their time.  When my friend, Cedric, shared this wisdom with me, he was giving me advice regarding a man I was really interested in a few moons ago, but even after that season I remembered his advice and now I apply it to everyone with whom I interact.

I have found that when you really accept the reality of that wisdom, you'll be humbled.  In all fairness, you are one of many things that someone could be concerned with, so get over yourself!  (At least that's the attitude I have come to take.)  And if you find that someone tends to not be able to make time to do something for you or with you, then you may soon get over them. It all falls into place and, by the time it does, you would have already gained some peace from it, as you had everyday you applied the wisdom.

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