Do you put pressure on yourself to be joyful all the time during the holiday season? Here’s what I learned from walking through a season of grief and healing…
I find myself scrolling through a Bible app on a sunny Sunday morning, my heart heavy as a stone dropped into a lake. I’m trying to fix this, to find the lightness and buoyancy I think is required of me. I read verses about happiness. Others about contentment. Even more about joy. Yet all of these feel impossible for me to achieve right now.
Instead, I’m wrestling with a deep weariness, a soul-sadness I just can’t shake. I feel guilty about this. My life is good. I am loved. I should be joyful. I hang my head, disappointed in myself, and pray, “God, please help me to be supernaturally joyful.”
What my heart hears in a silent whisper surprises me: Grief is a sacred emotion too.
I think of an email I recently read by counselor Mazi Robinson about gaslighting, a term often used to describe how women are treated in toxic relationships. She says in her experience as a counselor, women sometimes also gaslight themselves.
What is gaslighting? Gaslighting is a term we hear more and more these days. Gaslighting is a manipulative tool in which someone denies or minimizes your experience, assessment, or memory which results in you questioning how you feel or your reality. Gaslighting can be incredibly damaging to our sense of self, self-confidence, and trust in our own gut. Gaslighting destroys emotional safety in relationships.
We gaslight ourselves when we use perspective to invalidate or minimize our feelings or our reality.
Examples:
– I shouldn’t be so upset. There are so many people who have it much worse than I do
– My situation isn’t that bad compared to what other people are walking through.
– At least I don’t have an illness, and I have clothes on my back and food in my house — what’s wrong with me that I’m depressed?
We gaslight ourselves when we invalidate our emotional experience instead of affirming it. We often do this because we’ve been told things like, “You always need to be joyful!” Then when we aren’t, we feel guilty and as if we’re failing. But is this even possible or God’s expectation for us?
Yes, Paul says, “Always be joyful” (1 Thessalonians 5:16 NLT) but he also says, “My heart is filled with bitter sorrow and unending grief” (Romans 9:2 NLT). Jesus is described as being full of joy and as being a man of sorrows. Proverbs 14:13 NASB tells us, “Even in laughter the heart may be in pain, and the end of joy may be grief.”
When we look at Scripture as a whole, we are not told to exclusively feel positive emotions like joy, happiness, and contentment. We are shown that it is healthy and holy for joy and grief to coexist. During my season of loss, I remember telling my counselor I was worried about myself. Maybe I was depressed (I’d experienced depression in the past).
“Holley,” she said, “you need to let yourself grieve.”
If we cannot let ourselves grieve because we gaslight ourselves into feeling only positive emotions then we will not heal from the hurt we’ve experienced.
It is essential, not sinful, for us to feel sad sometimes.
It is necessary, not a lack of faith, for us to mourn what or who we’ve lost.
It is healthy, not harmful, for us to shed tears as we figure out a new normal we never wanted.
Just because the sun goes behind a cloud doesn’t mean it isn’t still there. Just because our joy can’t be felt for a while, doesn’t mean it isn’t still there. We are not in trouble with God for not being able to force ourselves to be happy all the time. We are human and we are healing — this is hard and holy work.
When we feel grief, we don’t need to be pushed; we need to be embraced. We don’t need to be forced to move past it; we need to compassionately learn to sit with ourselves in it. It is okay if we can’t make ourselves feel the way we want to today.
Grief is a sacred emotion too.
If you or someone you love needs a little extra encouragement this holiday season, Holley created a free Hope for the Holidays mini e-book with twenty-one devotions. Click here to receive it via email for free.
Cathy says
Thank you for the beautiful words of caring. Today is the anniversary of the day my husband suddenly passed away.
Donna says
I am praying for you for comfort today, for the Lord to comfort you as only He can.
Holley Gerth says
Praying for you today, Cathy.
Judyc says
Thank you for this. It has been a week since my Mom went to Glory, and I have bern surprised at how grief and joy are all mixed up together. Grief down here, but an incredible joy over the life she lived and the assurance of her place in heaven.
Holley Gerth says
I can relate to that mix of grief and joy when a loved one goes home, Judy. Praying for you today.
Madeline says
Holley, this was so incredibly helpful to me. This is Christmas number 6 without my husband. Thank you for such wise words.
Linda Sprunt says
Thank you, Holley. The Lord used you this morning to comfort me in my grief about having to downsize and move from our home of nearly 37 years. We raised our four children in this home and now their spouses and our 12 grandchildren have joined in calling it the “Old Homestead”. My heart is breaking and I’ve been berating myself and feeling like I’m disappointing my heavenly Father for being so sad. Reading your devotional has given me a glimpse of hope.
Holley Gerth says
That is a hard transition, Linda, so glad this gave you a bit of hope in the middle of a big change.
Cheyla says
Oh Holley, as always, your post was a blessing to me this morning. “Just because the sun goes behind a cloud doesn’t mean it isn’t still there”, especially spoke to me, thank you! My brother was my joy and he’s been gone 2 years now. Also trying to deal with my new normal of taking care of my parents. It’s been soul crushing. Thank you for the reminder that I will feel joy again at some point.
Holley Gerth says
That is a lot to carry, Cheyla, asking Jesus to be your strength and comfort today.
Kelly says
Holley, such beautiful words. “ We don’t need to be forced to move past it; we need to compassionately learn to sit with ourselves in it.” This is hard as well meaning friends and family try to move us through these times. Thank you.
Donna says
Thank you Holly for your encouraging words. I needed them. I too have suffered with seasons of depression and anxiety and find myself in another one now. I need the Lord’s touch and to hear His sweet voice to my heart again. I am so very lonely. But I am trusting in Jesus, the Author and Finisher of my faith, the Bishop and Shepherd of my soul. I am dreading Christmas, but looking to Jesus, the Prince of Peace. May the Lord bless you all with every blessing from above!
Holley Gerth says
Praying Jesus will surround you with his love today in whatever ways you need most, Donna.
Janet W says
What a powerful message! Thank you Holley. I had no idea the depth of the “gaslighting” meaning. I knew it had to do with “toxic or unhealthy” relationships, but hadn’t realized we can gaslight ourselves. Wow. I can and have done gaslighting to myself.
I’m grateful to have a few “new” answers to treat the self I’m not always kind to \0/
Sharon Earls says
Thank you Holly. I really needed this as I have experienced one of the darkest years of my life. I’ve been recovering from a serious accident and then surrounded by friends and family also dealing with life and death issues. It has just overwhelmed my emotions.
Ashanti Amador says
Oh how my soul needed this.. what a relief
Thank you thank you for writing this
Cammie says
Wow, exactly what I needed to
read this morning. So profound to realize I’ve been gaslighting myself after an unexpected health issue that has changed a lot in my life the past few months, and sinking into anxiety and depression. And feeling guilty about it. Thank you Holley for this encouragement and wisdom!! The Lord is so faithful.