Ange. Yeshua. xedgex.
I find myself all over the country following God's call to love mankind.

The brightest diamond;

They tell me I'm crazy, but You told me I'm golden.

Let’s get something clear, dating is indeed “discriminatory”. We are choosing and being chosen. No matter what the reason, not getting what we want can be a negative experience. Those negative feelings are made much worse by false assumptions about rejection. If those false assumptions are corrected, then the majority of negative feelings can be avoided.

When rejecting behavior occurs, individuals sometimes are led to believe and think, “I just got rejected. They didn’t like me.” Compounded with harsh rejecting behavior from others, these self-thoughts may even include “I am a no-good, worthless person, etc.”. The result is a very negative experience and perhaps a lasting poor self-image.

To help protect yourself against such negative and undeserved feelings, it can be helpful to counter the unfair cognitive distortions. To do so, keep the following in mind:

1) Each instance (approach, date request, etc.) is unique and different. Whether one or several people have demonstrated rejecting behaviors towards your request, you cannot logically generalize to “everyone” or “always”. Each time, place, and person is distinctive. What is true for one is not true for all. The next person could be different. So, try not to overgeneralize. Stay hopeful. Keep an open mind.

2) Rejection is not your fault. Try not to personalize and take the blame. There are many reasons why someone can be disinterested and very few of them relate to you at all. This is even MORE true, in instances where the other person is needlessly abusive or shaming. That is clearly their issues, which they are trying to push onto you, and you are not responsible for causing. However, do stay open to civil explanations and respectful feedback.

3) Rejection says nothing about you as a person. This is where the phrase “I got rejected” is particularly troubling. “You” did not get rejected. The person saying no doesn’t even know the essential “you”. How could they reject it? You have not downloaded your personal life history into them. So, try not to label yourself based on one superficial interaction (or many). Be vigilant to not give anyone who doesn’t really know you that much influence over your self-image. Certainly a 30 second chat, or even several dates, doesn’t qualify someone as an expert on “you” to judge you.

Their choice is not an indicator of your character or self-worth. Rather, keep in mind that you are a good and worthwhile person, no matter what. 

I’m tired of hearing my christian brothers and sisters calling themselves “wretched sinners”. You aren’t.

Part of our completeness in Christ is that there is no condemnation from God. When God looks at you He sees a righteous, sanctified, redeemed son/daughter – because you are complete in Christ! We show forth this completeness in our day-by-day living when we are thinking the Word, feeling the Word, breathing the Word and acting on the Word. When we believe God we live what He has made us to be in Christ. There never, ever, ever is any condemnation from God toward you! Surely you should not condemn yourself! We are to see ourselves as our Heavenly Father sees us.

God says you are righteous! Is it because of your good works? No. It is by the complete and perfect work of Christ.When it comes to salvation; men’s works are not the issue. Jesus Christ has offered to God the one perfect, complete sacrifice for the sin nature and sins of mankind. 

Do you think that you or I could improve upon that perfection by our good works? To even consider that question is foolish. We are complete in Christ! The right and wise action to take is to accept and believe what God says He has done for us through Jesus Christ.

You are NOT wretched. You are NOT a filthy sinner. You are NOT separated from Christ.  You have accepted him as Savior therefore are beautiful, righteous and complete in him regardless of your “wretched sin”.

We have the infinite capacity to recieve and an infinite capacity to love. All too often we fail to acknowledge the  light that has been instilled in us. When we don’t see our gift, our true self, we become desperate to take love from others in an attempt to satisfy our needs. You and every other person on this planet are inextricably linked, we are all parts of the same body.  Just as you cannot cut off your own hand and spare the rest of your body the repercussions, you cannot withhold your love from one another without affecting the whole of humanity. 

People don’t have to be perfect in order to deserve our love. They don’t have to be faultless or easy to like or get along with. That’s a good thing, because none of us are all those things all the time; none of us are perfect. God doesn’t expect us to be perfect, but He does expect us to show one another love and understanding. “All the law is fulfilled in one word, even in this: ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’”

When people live or work closely together, it’s easy to get negative or judgmental about one another, and that doesn’t make things any better, of course. It becomes a vicious cycle of judging and criticizing and measuring that undermines friendships and working relationships.

But we don’t have to fall prey to that. There is an alternative, a strengthening cycle in which we love each other through our bad days, forgive one another’s mistakes, compensate for one another’s weak areas, and bring out one another’s strengths. Love begets love. It inspires others to give their best, it wins God’s blessing, and it makes us happy.

Often times when we invest ourselves into something and do not see the fruit of our labor, we become disappointed. Why did we work so hard? Why did we care so much? We spent so much time and energy and so many sleepless night to be left empty handed…

This situation can be very depressing until you perceive it in the view of sowing and reaping. In the first century, one man would plant the seeds and a different man would later reap… this is a well known turn of phrase ”one man sows and another reaps”

But what does that really mean? How the heck does that apply to putting in hard work and feeling overlooked?

 The joy was in the reaping, not always in the sowing. The sowers worked hard to prepare the ground and plant the seed, but often did not get to participate in the harvest. Consequently, they missed the celebrations that occurred during that special season of the year. Most people of this period saw this as an inequity that couldn’t be helped. It’s a little like working hard most of your life to amass enough money so you can enjoy the rest of your life in ease only to die unexpectedly and leave it for someone else to enjoy. Sometimes life just doesn’t seem fair! 

 When you become preoccupied with the temporal/material you lose sight of the eternal and fail to realize the potential of reaching others and pursuing excellence