Don’t Say a Word

 I was mute and silent, I refrained even from good, and my sorrow grew worse.   My heart was hot within me, while I was musing the fire burned;  Psalm 39:2-3a  NASB

Sorrow – We investigated this verse on September 6.  Here it is again, just so we can keep working verse by verse through this psalm.

Listen!  Silence is a good thing, right?  Don’t we long for an escape from the din around us?  The traffic, the elevator music, the indecipherable human clamor of the restaurant crowd, the constant cell phone chiming.  Wouldn’t it be lovely to just go to the beach, the empty beach and hear nothing but the waves? Or the mountains.  The airy whispers of wind in the trees.  The lullaby of a waterfall.  All that noisewe have to endure!  David even writes in another poem, “My soul waits in silence for God only; from Him is my salvation” (Psalm 62:1).

But if this is true, why does David complain that when he was silent his sorrow grew worse?  Perhaps some reflection on David’s vocabulary will help.

“Sorrow” is the Hebrew word kĕʾēb. John Oswalt comments, “It is impossible to separate the mental and physical anguish as far as this word is concerned.”[1]  David notices that his deliberate decision to say nothing and donothing resulted in increased anguish. He found no relief at all by keeping everything inside.  This is not a case of searching for that quiet spot where we can be alone with God and our thoughts.  This is a case of holding our feeling in and doing nothing at all, not even good deeds.  This is a prescription for emotional necrotizing fasciitis.  (I won’t make you look that up.  It’s the flesh-eating disease.)  Our internal state “eats” away the psychological security of life.  We feel “hot,” another way of describing an emotional fever. We’re sick because we have no outlet for how we feel.  This kind of silence kills.

“Habitual repression of emotion leaves a person in a situation of chronic stress, and chronic stress creates an unnatural biochemical milieu in the body.”[2]

“The person who does not feel or express ‘negative’ emotion will be isolated even if surrounded by friends, because his real self is not seen.  The sense of hopelessness follows from the chronic inability to be true to oneself on the deepest level.  And hopelessness leads to helplessness, since nothing one can do is perceived as making any difference.”[3]

Maté’s clinical observation is telling—and frightening:

“Not one of the many adults interviewed for this book could answer in the affirmative when asked the following:  When, as a child, you felt sad, upset or angry, was there anyone you could talk to—even when he or she was the one who had triggered your negative emotions? In a quarter century of clinical practice, including a decade of palliative work, I have never heard anyone with cancer or with any chronic illness or condition say yes to that question.”[4]

A tranquil beach, a mountain stream—yes, great places to get in touch with the God who really knows and loves us. But if we have only these places, the dreamed-for retreats from the world, we will spend most of our lives in the “hot-box,” and that’s a guarantee of deep, emotional distress.  Maté notes, “Emotional intimacy is a psychological and biological necessity.”[5]  We might add that it is also a spiritual essential.  And that raises a critically important question: “Do you have someone to really talk to?”

Topical Index: kĕʾēb, sorrow, silent, emotion, Psalm 39:2-3a

[1]Oswalt, J. N. (1999). 940 כָאַב. R. L. Harris, G. L. Archer Jr., & B. K. Waltke (Eds.), Theological Wordbook of the Old Testament(electronic ed., p. 425). Chicago: Moody Press.

[2]Gabor Maté, When the Body Says NO, p. 92.

[3]Ibid., p. 99.

[4]Ibid., p. 128.

[5]Ibid., p. 198.

Subscribe
Notify of
19 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Laurita Hayes

I think writing this Psalm is already doing the right thing: David is already on the right path. He is owning his distress, which means he has identified the problem. He is already partway through the creek. I suspect most of us very early learn ways to ‘hold it in’ because expression of negative thoughts and emotions is, invariably, HEAVILY punished (in this world, anyway); particularly in the weaker, I think, and children are the most easily squelched of all. I was raised to be seen and not heard: I had to be good and shut up. If I felt bad, nobody wanted to hear about it (probably because nobody was equipped to deal with the reasons for why I was feeling bad because they lacked the tools to do the same with their feelings, too). Therefore, those around me modeled to me how to shoot and deep six the misery without a trial or a chance.

I needed somebody to talk to who wouldn’t melt down worse than me! I’m with you, David!

Richard

Hello everyone

This post really got to me in a number of ways.

Firstly, it struck me as a remarkably accurate and stark description of the “way it is” for untold numbers of people in the modern world.

Secondly, it hit me between the eyes because I went down with “emotional necrotizing fasciitis” when I was only 5 years old and stayed trapped in it for 33 years.

I don’t know how I endured it. However, I do know that having recovered by the grace of God, I am incredibly grateful and do not take life for granted.

I give thanks every day for the miracle of getting my right mind back and do my best to help other people escape from the kind of prison I was in for so long.

The thing I avoid these days, is thinking for too long at any one time about all those who are like I was and don’t see a way out. The magnitude of the total despair and hopelessness involved, is too much for me to process at once.

Gayle

“Do you have someone to really talk to?”

I do now, but for 30+ years, I did not. It was a lack I felt acutely. I hope I never need to pass through that territory again, as it was agonizing and at times, I reacted in very foolish ways. Maybe it is the reason I will listen to anyone who needs to ‘vent.’ I consider that everyone has ‘stuff” they have stuffed, so I see it as a bit of psychic housekeeping. Ignoring another person’s despair is not healthy for anyone, and thankfully, my good friend used to remind us that “This, too, shall pass.”

Rich Pease

We all need a good friend to spill our guts to.
One comes to mind:
“What a friend we have in Jesus,
All my sins and griefs to bear.
What a privilege to carry
Everything to God in prayer.
Oh, what peace we often forfeit,
Oh, what needless pain we bear.
All because we do not carry
Everything to God in prayer.”

Eric E

This is thought provoking for me. Silence can be golden. I didn’t make it to hear you speak in Sarasota. Maybe next time. I bet the beaches are fantastic there. Some wine and sun. And a nice long stretch of beach to enjoy in the daytime. I sure hope you share anything new with us. Blessings and peace!

Jerry and Lisa

I have come to know that God knows, cares about, and even feels what I feel about all of that for which I experience sorrow, sadness, grief and pain in my life, now without me even having to express it. And I know that He is the same with and for everyone. It is now enough for me to know I am understood and cared about and that He will do what needs to be done about it all just as He knows is right and good and best. He knows what He is doing and He is completely adequate to do what needs to be done. That consoles me. Seldom are words even necessary anymore, and now even only very rarely are tears. I definitely cried at my mother’s memorial service this year. It’s not because I don’t feel these emotions anymore, though I don’t as much as I used to. It’s not because I don’t care anymore, though I don’t as much as I used to. The reason is I now know with sufficient assurance that He is my All in all and I have an adequate understanding of and trust that there are good reasons for why He allows all the dark and disappointing things in life. I’m simply more accepting of it all and I know I cannot and do not need to understand it all, and so I don’t try to figure it all out. I also generally know what my responsibilities are and depend upon Him to help me to what I need to do. But I’m simply more accepting of things that I cannot change, no matter how evil or wrong things are. I, therefore, have much less expectation about things in life being the way I would otherwise prefer. Consequently, I am much more at peace with it all and content regardless of the circumstances. Now, if I want to be more intimately connected with others, it has to go two ways, and it is then necessary for them to know my feelings about all of these things in my life. But that is a different reason for not keeping silent. It’s for connection and not so much for consolation.

F J

I have found consoling another ( although it is not me that actually consoles another in reality) but as the witness who does not move away whilst we allow for the other to repackage their load in other ways and dump some things they don’t want to carry anymore is what counts. All of us can contribute in this is carrying another’s burdens, even when there is no physical requirement for assistance. Sometimes it is in the space defined between the two of us that provides a place in time for the figuring process to eventuate & that is the miracle of sharing and the wonder of actually caring for another. Our hurt self and our desired self can be restored. Praise God. Blessings. FJ.

Paul B

There is much to be said for the honest gut-wrenching bearing of one’s soul. It is a healthy purge of our emotions. On the other hand, there are those who use emotional outbursts as a means to control and manipulate others. Some would say these individuals are merely expressing repressed anger or unmet childhood emotional needs. While such individuals bear the soul, they do so in a way that creates trauma in others. If you happen to be on the receiving end of someone with Borderline Personality Disorder or Narcissistic Personality Disorder, please understand that you are NOT dealing with a normal expression of emotion. My best advice is to get help for yourself to deal the mental and emotional abuse.

Laurita Hayes

Amen to that, Paul. That sounds like the voice of experience.

Roslynn

Hi Paul, If you read the characteristics of someone with Narcissistic Personality disorder, you will find they fit just about everyone in the Western world. I am not big on the personality disorder labels, but I think it is used to allow people to get treatment for emotional and mental problems. The diagnosis is used so the person’s insurance will cover therapy. I agree with John Bradshaw. He said those are labels that just add to the trauma of people who have already been abused and traumatized. Paraphrasing. Same thing with kids getting labeled in school. Trauma on top of trauma. If I do have a personality disorder, it is probably Boundary Maintaining Disorder. :0

Paul B

Imagine being in an intimate relationship with Donald Trump. While many might exhibit similar behaviors as the master manipulator himself, I don’t believe almost everyone in the West is an emotional wrecking ball. NPD isn’t simply a label used to get insurance coverage. It is a real and destructive personality disorder.

Jerry and Lisa

Many companies, if not even most or even almost all, do not even cover the cost of services for directly treating Personality Disorders, because they are considered developmental, long-term disorders and without acute symptoms. Also, one who has a Narcissistic Personality Disorder would be quite unlikely to even seek treatment anyways. Furthermore, symptoms of a so-called Boundary Maintaining Disorder would very likely fit one of the already established disorders of Borderline, Histrionic, and/or Dependent Personality Disorders. Also, it should be noted that, like many other medical diagnoses, Personality Disorders are not the fault of the patient. It’s just their responsibility to do something about it, if they are going to get well and not cause significant distress to others as well. A well-trained, experienced, and competent provider will know how to effectively diagnose, educate, and treat the symptoms of one who has a Personality Disorder, if that person is willing to not be in denial and/or just blame-shift their problems onto others. And almost always there is some other acute disorder, such as a Mood and/or Anxiety Disorder, associated with the Personality Disorder, so that the symptoms of the Personality Disorder can also be treated and the costs covered by the patient’s insurance.

Marsha S

Insurance coverage is not very good for any mental diagnosis, but when I was in therapy in 90s, it was better especially if you had good insurance. I will stick with my thoughts on personality disorders. I think there could be a better classification. My psychoanalysis of Trump is he is terrified of his own pending mortality. He is constantly creating drama and conflict out of his fear of death. No amount of money or power can help him with that.

Roslynn

I think classifying mental, psychological and emotional problems/illnesses under a Brain Disease category. Then break those down into more detailed categories. Like my Obsessive Compulsive Disorder is I now believe strictly a problem with my brain’s functioning even IF anxiety initially caused it which I am not so sure I totally believe anymore. The use of words like mental, psychological and emotional create lots of stigma just like personality disorder labels. People make fun and lots of fear created.

Paul B

While we can’t determine a person’s psychological state or motives, we can certainly observe actions and behaviors.

Lesli

I am a little behind and am now just reading this TW… I also have not yet read the comments, but this is EXACTLY-EXACTLY- how I feel!

I have “Habitual repression of emotion” with an unnatural biochemical milieu in the body.”

“The sense of hopelessness follows from the chronic inability to be true to oneself on the deepest level. And hopelessness leads to helplessness, since nothing one can do is perceived as making any difference.”

Maté is way above my head-skills (as are you Beloved Friend Skip). I can understand this. I can relate to this. I can identify with this….. but ….. how to fix it…. THAT IS WHAT I NEED TO KNOW! I am not like most of the contributors here – my views are so different. Different than theirs and so different from when I began this journey. I was so sure about “Jesus”. I can no longer subscribed to that.

Seems I’m alone and above my own heart-skills sometime. Sure would be nice to have someone other than a paid person with which to discuss matters that matter much to me.

Shalom! שלום