More often than not in life we remember criticisms more than we remember compliments. When someone asks me to recall the last time I received a compliment it takes me at least twice as long to recall than if someone asked me to regurgitate the last insult or criticism thrown my way. Chances are that I can spit back that insult word for word as if you had just said it to me, but I probably canโt remember the last compliment with the same amount of clarity. The voices of dissent, disapproval, and disbelief haunt us.
Iโve found this phenomenon to be true in nearly every facet of life, whether it is with regards to my work, my family life, my writing, or my friends. However, it is even more true when it comes to relationships. The voices of all the suitors gone by are pretty quiet when Iโm single. But it seems that the second a new relationship begins to bud and blossom those voices come back, and they come back with a vengeance. Suddenly and all at once those criticisms and words haunt us with a renewed fervor.
Iโm just not in love with you.
You are too clingy.
You are boring.
You have too much baggageโฆso now Iโll leave you with more.
You arenโt tall enough.
You arenโt smart enough.
You are a whore.
You are such a prude.
You are a liar.
I canโt believe anyone would ever want to be with you.
Who would knowingly want to have children with you?
Youโll never find your future spouse.
Goodness knows the list could go on, and in our heads, it does. Those phrases pop back in and haunt us, threatening to kill this new relationship โ and any hope of a relationship at any point in our lives โ stone dead. What are we to do? We have to learn how to silence the voices.
Easier said than done, right? Trust me, I know. The nay-sayers are everywhere. Iโve learned, however, that we need to listen beyond the voices. Each of those phrases, at least in my head, still sounds like they are coming out of the mouth of the person who said it. None of those people are still in my life, so why would I want to listen to their voices? Why does their opinion matter to me anymore? When Iโm honest with myself I know their opinions hold no weight, and yet their voices, their hurtful words, stay with me. So we listen beyond their voices, we listen to the good voices in our lives. If we donโt have good voices in our life then we listen to God (His voice should be the first one we listen to anyway). What exactly does He tell us?
โYou are all beautiful, my beloved, and there is no blemish in you.โ โ Song of Songs 4:7
โI willโฆspeak to her heart.โ โ Hosea 2:16
โI, the Lord, alone probe the mind and test the heartโฆโ โ Jeremiah 17:10
โGod is loveโ and โlove never fails.โ โ 1 John 4:8 and 1 Corinthians 13:8
โI command you: be firm and steadfast! Do not fear nor be dismayed, for the Lord, your God, is with you wherever you go.โ โ Joshua 1:9
Memorize His words. When the voices start to haunt you, taunt you, or mock you, repeat His words of love over and over. Say them out loud, shout them if you must. As Pocket Full of Rocks sings, โLouder than the voice/ that whispers youโre unworthy/ hear the sound of love/ that tells a different story.โ
He has claimed you and called you as His own. His voice, the voice who created YOU and calls you good, is the voice that drowns out all of the other voices โ if we let it. We can let the voices of our past, the criticisms and insults, haunt us, or we can be washed clean in His love and in His voice. It is His voice that tells a different story โ regardless of where weโve been. His voice knows us, even our deepest wounds, and loves us still. Isnโt that a voice worth listening to?