To Wound

He only is my rock and my salvation, my stronghold; I shall not be shaken. Psalm 62:6  NASB

Only – Here’s the problem. We all want deeply satisfying relationships, relationships that provide us a sense of worth, a place of safety, someone who knows us for who we really are. That’s the good part.  The bad part is that in order to experience this we need to be vulnerable.  We need to risk who we are in order to be understood for who we are.  There are no deeply satisfying relationship with walls in the middle.  So we have to take down the walls, the very things that protected us from being rejected, being misunderstood, being unsafe.  But vulnerability contains its own downfall.

From the Latin word vulnerare, “to wound,” vulnerability is our susceptibility to be wounded.  The fragility is part of our nature and cannot be escaped.  The best the brain can do is to shut down conscious awareness of it when pain becomes so vast or unbearable that it threatens to overwhelm our capacity to function.  The automatic repression of painful emotion is a helpless child’s prime defense mechanism and can enable a child to endure trauma that would otherwise be catastrophic.[1]

Our emotions are an indispensable part of our sensory apparatus and an essential part of who we are. . . When we flee vulnerability, we lose our full capacity for feeling emotion. . . . A nagging void opens, and we experience it as alienation, as profound ennui, as the sense of deficient emptiness . . .[2]

That’s the emotional see-saw of living.  Risk in order to be seen, experience rejection for being seen.  No wonder we have walls—and addictions to numb the damaging outcome of helplessness, failure and shame.

David seems to have had his fair share of human battering.  Innocently he attempts to serve and please King Saul.  What happens?  For reasons completely opaque to David, Saul tries to kill him.  Of course, first Saul betrays him.  Then he tries to belittle him.  Finally it comes to swords.  Perhaps that’s when David penned this line.  “He only is my rock.”  Yes, YHVH is David’s only trustworthy champion. Except, of course, when He isn’t. YHVH is also disciplinarian, judge, jury, teacher, accuser, counselor and taskmaster.  Everything we could want in someone who never abandons us no matter what we have or haven’t done.  Everything we want and are afraid to get.  Yes, YHVH is my only rock.

But what does that say about all the other relationships that matter so much to us?  Are we to simply acknowledge that they are all flawed, all potential wounds, all probable sources of pain?  Wounding seems to be an essential part of truly living.  Even parents, as hard as they try to be loving, inflict emotional damage on their children.  Perhaps unconsciously, they pass along those traumas they never settled in their own lives. And it’s getting worse.

With the rise of industrial societies came dislocation: the destruction of traditional relationships, extended family, clan, tribe, and village.  Vast economic and social changes tore asunder the ties that formerly connected people to those closest to them and to their communities.  They displaced people from their homes and shredded the value systems that secured people’s sense of belonging in the moral and spiritual universe. The same process is happening around the world as a result of globalization.[3]

Dislocation continues to be an ever-accelerating feature of modern living.  The disruption of family life and the erosion of stable communities afflict many segments of society.  Even the nuclear family is under severe pressure with a high divorce rate and single-parent households or, in many cases, two parents having to work outside the home.  For these endemic cultural and economic reasons many children today who are not abused and who come from loving homes have lost their primary emotional attachment with the nurturing adults in their lives, with results disastrous for their development.[4]

David had clan, tribe, a long cultural heritage, a history of God’s intervention with his people, some semblance of trustworthiness.  What do we have?

In a state of spiritual poverty, we will be seduced by whatever it is that can make us insensate to our dread.  That, ultimately, is the origin of the addiction process, since the very essence of that process is the drive to take in from the outside that which properly arises from within. . . . The sparser the innate joy that springs from being alive, the more fervently we seek joy’s pale substitute, pleasure; the less our inner strength, the greater our craving for power; the feebler our awareness of truth, the more desperate our search for certainty outside of ourselves.  The greater the dread, the more vigorous the gravitational pull of the addiction process.[5]

Ask yourself, “Is God your only rock?”  Is that satisfying?  Perhaps we need to repair all of the other factors we have so easily let slip away in our headlong pursuit for accumulation.  We paid an enormous price.  We are still paying, and so will our children, until we stop chasing and are ready to be wounded.

Topical Index: vulnerability, wound, trustworthy, addict, Psalm 62:6

[1]Gabor Maté, In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts: Close Encounters with Addiction, p. 40.

[2]Ibid., p. 41.

[3]Ibid., p. 275.

[4]Ibid., p. 277.

[5]Ibid.,  p. 414.

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I.M.

Vulnerability is a really challenging subject. In our ministry and friendships, confidentiality is very important. Often people tell my husband and me that they can only share their struggles with us because they know we won’t pass the information on to others and they know we won’t judge them as others do. That’s pretty sad. Why do people have this need to gossip about other peoples’ problems. judge them and put them down? Does it make them feel better about their own struggles? Maybe we need to ask ourselves one more question – not only, “Is God my only rock?” – but also, “Am I a rock to my fellow man?”

Christine Hall

Woke up this morning after facing my ‘wounds’ yesterday and was surprised …TW did it again! ‘Wounding it seems is an essential part of living’. YES! Any time we are vulnerable – no matter what the issue – one is open to pain, misunderstanding incredulity at what’s meeted out. This often leads to rejection. As my good friend Arnella would say…we just have to look at Yeshua as our example.
I cried and cried over my experience these last few months. I only overcame the pain and sadness because I woke and my mind reminded me to cite the Modei Ani ( thankfulness to our Elohenu Avenu Melchanu) before I put my foot to the floor.

I said it in English as my Hebrew is not very good at the moment.

I give thanks to you oh Living Eternal Elohim our King
That you have restored within me my soul/nefesh
That you have given me this day
Great is your Faithfulness
Your mercies are new every morning.

I concur with David………He is my rock….my salvation…my stronghold and I will not be shaken!

The challenge is to maintain the relationships as best one can knowing the gossip will continue – especially over the path you have chosen to take in remaining connected to Yah and his instructions.

I do not regret being vulnerable or being thrown to the Lions because from it comes Life! Real Life!
Thank you Skip for all the research you do and then write from your heart – I’m sure many here like me are amazed that on some days you write directly into the situation we face/faced that day!

Christine

Michael Stanley

Skip You said: “until we stop chasing and are ready to be wounded”. But what of us who are already so wounded that even the slightest slight- a harsh word, a hard glance, opens up new wounds upon open, oozing sores and breaks our hearts even more? Some of us don’t run to vunerability because for us that is the very thing that has wounded us or in some cases, ruined us. And yes, we find it hard to run to YHWH, because He too causes us discomfort and pain. To many of us this mental and spiritual cognitive dissonance is not just confusing and uncomfortable, it is disturbing and unbearable. But thankfully He is able to comfort us while confronting us, heal us while hurting us and love us while scourging us. And I am glad He can run faster to me than I can run away from Him and hold me tighter than my strength is to resist (no one else can, but I am grateful for those few who try). Even if I should miraculously master the art of vulnerability in the few years I hopefully have remaining (I am 67) I doubt I will ever be able to enjoy those “deeply satisfying relationships” you speak of and others seem to walk in so easily, not just because in my world those things appear to be as far as the East is from the West, but because the part of me that was damaged or stolen from me in my childhood makes it so that I could never pay the full asking price.

Laurita Hayes

Michael, you know (I hope) that I love you like a brother from another mother. You are my present-day Neitzsche: you put into words the bottom pathos I can’t even get to. It’s weird; I can relax when you finger the pain. I can only hope it helps you in some small (or great) way to communicate it.

That being said, I hope you know that I am on your side and against the pain that beats you up all the time. I hate whatever hurts you; I can only hope that you hate it, too! Hate it enough to realize that there may be something you can do about it. Have you ever considered that the spiritual forces that interpose in our lives to cause us to feel emotional pain connected to the past are not from God? That includes those that wound us afresh in the present, too.

The word “vulnerability” may also mean “wound” but I want to take variance with the notion that we have to feel wounded just because somebody else wants us to feel that way. I think I am learning that Yeshua took stripes so that I don’t have to, and I can give the hurt to Him. The caveat is that it is no longer ‘my’ hurt, and I cannot ‘profit’ from it; i.e. self pity, self hatred or an excuse to go self medicate. We can become addicted to pain: no, I think it is highly probable that we do become addicted to anything unholy that repeats itself over an over in our lives. When I choose to agree with pain, I am inadvertently giving the enemy an open door to use it to wound me. Deliverance is where I believe that YHVH does not want me wounded. That is not His heart!

I had to learn to repent for agreeing with hell that “there is nothing I can do” (boiler plate victim language). There is something I can do! I can stop thinking I just have to put up with it, and start treating it like the stealer of my life that it is. It felt weird the first time I repented for feeling hurt and asked (trust) for deliverance from it. Hurt was my identity! But I want to dwell on my Father’s right hand, where can only be found “pleasures forever more”. Something is gong to have to be left behind. God does not want us to live in condemnation. Conviction does not bind me like that. I want only conviction these days, but I have to trade for it by rejecting the hurt, condemnation and rejection that are the very signatures of hell’s grip on my life.

Michael, I know I have said it before, but to me you are a walking miracle. That miracle can continue. I am praying for you, and for all those around you who still insist on hugging you. I am a porcupine, too. Part of my recovery is to stand there and let them hug me. One day I will learn how to hug myself. There’s hope for all of us! May our Saviour be glorified in all of us by our learning to walk in that salvation from all that is against us, is my prayer.

Lucille Champion

Spot on Laurita! What’s the next step? How do we get from the gutter to the glory? From frozen (psychology term) to thawed out/warmed up and ready to ‘fight the good fight’? I often get ‘stuck’ in those stinky memories of being the victim. Seems the harder I try (flesh) the weaker I get. It’s like pushing on a string in the air… it moves but doesn’t go anywhere. Am I not trying hard enough? Don’t I have enough faith to move out of the morass I’m in? What gives? Back to the gutter… I’m not good enough or “there’s nothing I can do”. Seems like closing my eyes and pushing the pain down, deep down is the only way to cope. Just turn your back to the chatterboxes of unholy spirits. Is it that simple? They always come back. Why? What am I missing? What’s the ‘secret’ to learning?

Laurita Hayes

You know when you have the right questions because the answer is to be found in them. Good questions! The right question will render the answer a total “duh”, as truth is always plain. The questions open our eyes to the obvious.

“Trying too hard”? Yep. The answer is right there. We who lost trust went into drivenness and performance as a survival mechanism. Trust is where I take back the truth that I am already ‘good enough’ and that I was never designed to engineer my own progress. Giving in, I have learned, is NOT the same as giving up. They may FEEL the same, but that is an indication of unholy hijacks on ‘my’ feelings. I found that I had been handed wrong interpretations of reality that resulted in wrong reactions (emotional supercrunches of what I was believing at the time) to life. Changing my beliefs changes my emotional take on reality. What hurt me yesterday can provide righteous impetus today.

Michael Stanley

Thanks Laurita. Your spirit is kind and gentle and your shalom contagious.

Jerry and Lisa

“…..until we stop chasing and are ready to be wounded”?

Yes, in a sense, that is true. And also…..until we stop chasing and are ready to be HEALED?

Yes, we have to be willing to be “wounded”, in the sense that we need to FEEL AND DEAL with the pain of our wounds….. AND…..because we may already be wounded, we may need to be healed, first, in order to have what it takes to be free from addictions, fear and avoidance of vulnerability, and/or engaging in sick co-dependent relationships, if we are going to have what it takes to fulfill the hope of our relationships becoming more deeply satisfying.

The problem is not so much that we are unwilling to be vulnerable, only, but also that we put too much of our hope in the attempts of risking our vulnerabilities to find more deeply satisfying relationships by looking to others WHILE being in a state of “spiritual poverty” in our relationship with God.

We may need to be somewhat more risky as far as being vulnerable to others in our healing process, but the greater vulnerability we need to risk is trusting God more for what we need from Him for both our healing as well as to be more deeply satisfied in our needs for a deeper relationship.

As Gabor Mate was quoted, “In a state of spiritual poverty, we will be seduced by whatever it is that can make us insensate to our dread.” And sometimes that seduction is to having relationship with others with whom we are not ready to risk being vulnerable because they and we are too wounded to be able to depend upon each other for our deeper needs.

More than risking vulnerability in relationship with others, is our first and primary need to risk vulnerability with God. Not necessarily apart from, but above and beyond looking to others, we must first and foremost go to Him with our wounds and our pain for our healing, as well as for the ongoing satisfying of our deeper relationship needs. If we go about this in reverse, or from the bottom upward, we will just find ourselves in the never ending cycle of unrealistic expectations, disappointments, wounds, and pain, and then looking again to others to be our healers and the ones who will satisfy our souls.

Indeed, “HE only is my rock and my salvation, my stronghold; I shall not be shaken”!

Laurita Hayes

Good point, Jerry and Lisa! Some people are just way too toxic to take on until we are past our own toxicity (I can plead guilty to both charges) – in that place, anyway.

pam wingo

I don’t know if this will help.When I was a child suffering do to circumstances beyond my control . I saw the movie the hiding place and I read Corrie Ten booms books. I learned to pray immediately for all those going through what I was and that God would help relieve their suffering .Pain and suffering can make you live in a vacuum it becomes all about you i just cant get over it.To this day when suffering occurs to me my first instinct is to pray for others first ,that are in the same situation .I know I am not unique. Corrie was not scholarly but nobody has made me see Yeshua more in this 20th century than her. Loving and forgiving was her life and she lived it. We lack the Corrie Ten booms in life. We need to be resilient believers . It helps to study people who have overcome adversity and the big advice they always give is forgiveness without it you dam up love. Being forgiving is truly being vunerable.

Larry Reed

Wow! Feel so favored by God to be a part of this group. Thank you, Laurita, for your words to me yesterday and of course, your words from today. I certainly can relate to Michael, what he is saying, what he has experienced and is experiencing. I’m 69 years old, having recently been dealt a blow by my doctor in regards to my health, I am challenged. I want to live. Why? So I can continue the process of learning who God is for me and wants to be for me. And then out of that to be a blessing to the body of Christ . To use that vulnerability for his glory. I have had to deal with Christian brothers and sisters who rejected me in my most vulnerable places, to this day have judgments against me, who run from me or hide from me so as not to be guilty by association ! How difficult it is for the body of Christ to address real issues. To bear the afflictions and struggles that everyone goes through to a greater or lesser degree. Having been raised in a hell hole, coming to Jesus as a teenager, going to Bible school after high school and then being involved in ministry for 20 years and then going off into the gay lifestyle for 20 years. Thinking I had found my real self. Returning to God in 2007, experiencing his incredible love and acceptance and restoration over the past 11 years. Healing that has had to go back to my childhood! I have come to the point that despite all the pain involved in healing, there is a place of ” fight” that has arisen within me.
The weapons of our warfare are not carnal, but mighty ! Don’t get me wrong, sometimes I’m laying on the floor crying like a little baby. Isn’t it all part of the healing?
So thank you all for being real and making it so much easier to be a part of humanity. To be naked and not ashamed…. now that would be something !

Lucille Champion

Larry, you are a beautiful soul! What an amazing testimony to the healing power of Yeshua. As we head back to the place(s) we were hurt/wounded it’s my experience he’s right there waiting for our return. Stepping out into the ‘unknown’ grabbing hold of his hand is scary but necessary. He calls, we move. Shalom…

Robert lafoy

I also thank you for your testimony and your bravery, I’m praying for you for a long and fruitful life. Shootin’ for 120!

Brian

Larry Reed,

I am burdened for you today. I am grieving, praying, believing, standing, and fighting for you today.

May you hear the ROAR OF LIFE from our beloved Creator!

Rich Pease

I read today in Gal 1:4 about Yeshua who “rescues us from
this present evil age.” As one who has experienced some of
His rescues (and am still in need of many more), I wanted to
share what I’ve learned.
I don’t have a clue as to how or why He shows up when He does.
But He DOES! And when He does, He leaves me undone by His
mercy and grace. Perhaps this scripture much better says what
I could pen: “No eye has seen, no ear has heard, no mind has conceived
what God has planned for those who love Him —but God has revealed it
to us by his Spirit.” 1Cor 2:9-10
So . . . love Him. Let’s absolutely, resolutely and unreservedly love Him!
That’s all I can say.

Allen Maynard

I believe our love for Him is seen in the way we struggle to cultivate the best relationships possible with each other. I can’t hug Him but I can hug you.

Rich Pease

I agree. So does Yeshua. “By this all men will know that you are my disciples,
if you love one another.” Jn 13:35

Luz Lowthorp

Being in the medical field my whole life, I had witnessed many times (more that I want to remember) the fragility of life. When we forget that we are spiritual beings(created at G-d’s image) living in an human dimension, and choose to live satisfying the flesh that responds to the god of this world(Satan) is when we allow our selfs to be wounded.
I believe that if I can control my flesh and emotions, I am aligning myself to the will of Yahweh. That makes me understand the difference between suffering and growing. I choose to grow rather than living complaining for everything that could have happen and did not.
I see my painful experiences as the steps in the ladder I needed to climb to be closer to Yah. Everyday that passes is only a day closer to face my creator. Am I ready for eternity, yes I am. Am I perfect? No I am not but I know that if I live in dailyTeshuva and repentance i know that I am becoming the person Yah wants me to be. Yah is my ONLY rock!

Warren

As is often the case, I’m a few days behind. But reading this entry, Skip, while my camomile tea cools I have to admit, only in theory is Hashem my only rock. In practice I cling to many things. Is it satisfying? Honestly,… no. But perhaps I’m asking too much of my God to replace every relationship I should have, Maybe if I were to focus my efforts on building relationship with the people around me I would be satisfied in a way only they can provide for me. After all, when I’m hungry and thirsty I eat and drink. I don’t (successfully) ask God to take the feelings away. Perhaps the root of my dissatisfaction lies behind me when I face the alter. Fortunately Hashem has blessed me with a wife that enjoys a double portion of His spirit and I follow her places that I would never venture alone. I’m learning from her and you and Mr Maté and Ms Brown that connection is the key to healing the past and building a life that is satisfying, full of joy and Shalom.
Now… I’ve finished my tea. Let’s see if I can go back to sleep 🙂