Want to discover what is holding you back? Take the limits quiz now.
I’m a recovering perfectionist.
As a teen, no hair could be out of place.
No question could be marked wrong.
No fault could be found—except my eyebrows—or what was left of them.
(Anyone else still recovering from their 90’s over-plucked brows?)
It took years of pain and numerous humbling acts of God to bring me back down to earth.
Yet as a parent, I find myself projecting the same perfectionist tendencies on to my children.
It’s almost as if I’m secretly praying my kids don’t fail.
Yet without the sting of failure…
They’ll take credit for their success rather than believe God is working through them.
My husband claims his family suffers from the curse of being “too capable”. This curse may sound like a blessing, but in actuality, it is the very thing that has prevented him from relying on God for years.
If you’re busting with talent, ingenuity, and competence—why would you need God?
The same is true for our kids—if they don’t fall on their face from time-to-time—they will never cry out to God for help. And if they never call out to God, they may believe the fable that they can manage this life on their own.
“Pride lands you flat on your face; but humility prepares you for honor.” Proverbs 29:23
They’ll fall for the lie that their value is found in their success.
Grades don’t define you. Degrees don’t define you. Job titles don’t define you. A number on a scale does not define you. Your marital status does not define you. Your past does not define you. Your income does not define you. Your appearance does not define you. Your car does not define you. And thank heavens, your social media accounts don’t define you.
While most of us would agree with this list in theory, the world shouts at our children a different message:
Image is everything.
While at the playground today, I watch three 8-year-old girls flop on the ground instead of playing tag with their friends. I thought they were resting until I realized they were glued to a phone and overheard them oohing and awing with comments like this:
“I love her hair. What color is that? I should dye mine. And her eyebrows—how does she do her makeup like that?”
We live in a culture that defines value in terms of likes and follows.How many years will our kids waste trying to measure up to impossible standards set by invisible beings in cyberspace?
In a world that measures value through externals, our kids will obsess about their outsides, while ignoring the deep work God wants to do on the inside.
They’ll never experience unconditional love and amazing grace.
News Flash: God didn’t give us the Ten Commandments for us to KEEP them—but to BREAK them.
Why?
In order for us to come to the revelation that we need him desperately.
I will screw up everything my hands touch without God’s help.
It’s God’s grace that we are able to morph into the person he has called us to be.
And the beautiful thing about God’s love, is it walks with us THROUGH our failures and changes us from the inside out.
Shouldn’t we hope for the same as parents? Shouldn’t we be on the edge of our seats, just waiting for the moment our kids fail?
I used to believe I was a good parent if I prayed for my kids to be successful.
But that kind of love is more about me and less about them.
Now, I realize a good parent focuses less on success and more on loving their kids THROUGH failures.
Because that kind of love is less about me and more about them.