I’m sharing chips and salsa with a friend on a summer evening. Outside the sky is clear blue, but clouds hang over our conversation. She’s in a difficult season, trying to navigate challenges she’s never faced before.
“I’m a failure,” she says. With these words, I watch her hunch over as if she’s curling into a protective ball. She crosses her arms over her chest, a defensive move. She won’t make eye contact with me anymore. Everything her about her body language communicates, I don’t feel safe.
I see no threats in the taco shop. No tigers hiding out behind the stacks of tortillas. No masked men waiting to steal our salsa. My queso is certainly not a source of intimidation. What is happening?
Sitting across from my friend reminded me of one of the biggest aha moments on my own healing journey: The way we talk to and about ourselves can make us feel unsafe.
Dr. Bernard Golden says, “Self-criticism itself is a threat to our emotional and physical well- being…. And just as the brain developed in the context of a relationship with others, the relationship we have with ourselves also has the potential to put us in a state of threat. Self- criticism and the anger associated with it can very much lead us to experience the same ‘fight-flight-freeze’ response we might experience in response to an external threat.”
My friend’s comment of “I’m a failure” triggered a fear response in her just as those words would have coming from someone else. Sometimes the most unsafe place in our lives is our own minds.
I thought of this on a recent evening when I attended a gathering for local artists and writers who create based on Scripture. One passage for the evening came from Acts 10, when God gives Peter a vision of a sheet coming down from heaven with different animals in it that Peter would have seen as unclean.
But God says, “Do not call anything impure that God has made clean” (Acts 10:15 NIV). This vision is a precursor to Peter going to the house of a Gentile named Cornelius. When Peter arrives, he says, “God has shown me that I should no longer think of anyone as impure or unclean” (Acts 10:28 NLT).
As I heard this passage, it seemed God whispered to my heart…
Do not call yourself impure if God has made you clean.
I began to think of all the things we call ourselves, and what God would say He has made us instead.
Do not call yourself a sinner if God has made you forgiven and holy.
Do not call yourself unwanted if God has made you chosen and treasured.
Do not call yourself unworthy if God has made you an honored daughter or son.
Do not call yourself “not good enough” if God has made you in His image.
Do not call yourself unloved if God has made you His beloved.
Our inner critic may have harsh words for us, but the voice of our loving God will always bring us back to our true identity and feeling safe with Him.
I look at my friend who has just said she’s a failure, her shoulders still hunched, her face still downcast. “You’re not a failure,” I tell her, “You’re loved. You’re doing hard things. You’re going to be okay.” She lifts her head and smiles, reaches for the basket in front of us. “Chips and salsa help,” she says. I certainly agree.
My hope for the two of us, and you, is that when we are in the car on the drive home, when we wake up and stare at the ceiling in the night, when we do mess up, that we will be able to say words to ourselves and each other that remind us of our belovedness.
Let’s take a gentle, holy pause to practice this together:
What does God want to speak to your heart today, and what might He want to speak to someone else today through you?
Do not call yourself _____________ if God has made you _____________.



Holly what you said is so true we are all fearfully and wonderfully made in God’s eyes. Psalm 139:14 tell us that. It says “I will praise You (Lord), for I am fearfully and wonderfully made Marvelous are Your Works (Lord) And that my souls know it very well” how true that is. We all can if something especially has happened to us or someone has said something horrible to us think thoes words about us are not true from the Lord. God would not have said them if he didn’t mean them. We have to remember as Women in this world we are Daughter’s of King of Kings that is Jesus. That can be hard to believe if you be through a rough time in your life or bullied at school as child you can carry that with you in your Adult life. As it happened to me. Only my Husband an Good friends of mine said that is of the enemy Satan t make you think that about yourself. She sends me the YouTube Father Love letter. It says it all what our Heavenly Father thinks of us. We have to believe it for ourselves too. Not let the Devil make us think otherwise. Love Dawn Ferguson-Little Enniskillen Co.Fermanagh N.Ireland xx
As we gather for Thanksgiving may we be intentional in speaking what God says about us into the minds & hearts of those around us! And then keep it up year round! Thanks for sharing, Holley! (((0)))
So many wise thoughts. I know I am my harshest critic. I appreciate the reminders. It is a relief to know God’s goodness and mercy and that we are forgiveness when we mess up.
Dear Holley……….For years I used to be my biggest critic when something happened, but due to all the (in)courage devotions over the years, I have been able to know that my thinking was upside down and I prayed for weeks that God would help me and after a short wait, I got my answer and if I do go back to blaming myself, I always remember what God has told me and as I still face fighting this dark season, I know God is with me and Jesus and my Holy Spirit as well. Even though I may be alone with actual people with me, I know I am not alone and I will pray most of the day and remember many years ago when things were so happy and fun with all our relatives together. It was easy to be thankful then as your wise words have said, but when I am here on Thanksgiving by myself, I will tell God that I am so thankful for His being here with me. It’s not to say I won’t have my moments of sadness that day, but they will be brief. Holley….I wish you and your family a blessed Thanksgiving with lots to be thankful for with family, friends and that wonderful dinner. Just as an aside, I am going through the book, “100 days of Strength in any Struggle”. This is the second time I am doing this and I just read one of your story and it is amazing to see what a wrote in the journal a year and a half ago versus what I am writing now. All of the (in)courage devotions help me so much in different ways and have helped my spiritual growth. Love to you as I feel like I know you! Take care………….Betsy B
I so appreciate your devotional today. Right on time for me.
Such a good article! ❤️ Thanks for sharing.
Also, I think I need to work more on my mindset. Sometimes, I feel like I get too stuck on my disability because it does impact my life, mainly my mobility.
However, I need to remember I am strong, beautiful and capable in Him.