HIMPower Magazine HimPower November/December 2018 | Page 9

I began praying, “God please help me to love like you love.” I recently carried 3 Bible verses, jotted mess- ily in blue ink, in my sweater pocket. Then I laid them next to my computer while I worked, for easy reference. I struggle with resentment. It is an evil little thing, with such a broad influence on my day. I can’t enjoy the Lord the way I usually do, or be fully there for my husband and kids, when I’m so distracted by this weight of angry thoughts. What is resentment? Well, maybe it’s pain gone sour. In a family of imperfect people, we hurt each other. But sometimes, I don’t work through the lingering ache the way I should. I let it soak deep into my heart and mind. It trickles into cracks of unmet needs and broken hopes. Like a leaky faucet, each time I replay the hurtful actions in my mind, there’s a drip drip drip, gradu- ally eroding a hole into my innermost parts. I want to stop thinking about it. But it just keeps coming back, intensifying the level of hurt until I can hardly stand being around the person anymore. A part of me is sick of the sullenness that accompanies resentment, and longs for it to go away. But then again, the person seems unwilling to change, and I’m so worn out of feeling the same unmet need, the same slight, over and over again, that I delight (just a little bit) in the barrage of disparaging words that I imagine myself saying to their face. Therein lies one of the difficulties of fighting resentment. It’s hard to feel motivated to dig in and intention- ally war against it. Now, of course there are times when we can calmly discuss issues with those closest to us and everything can be resolved. But what about those hurts that we have gone over time and time again and there is still no resolution? Maybe it’s pleading with our husband for more help with the kids, discussions about finances, appeals for more romance in the marriage, or even bearing the reproach of a child who is going through rebellion. Over the years, these disappointments seem to inflate, with every new offense releasing more hot air into an ever-expanding balloon. In a fam- ily with each of us struggling with our own selfishness and sin, there is usually someone around who is letting us down. And if we’re honest, our own brokenness is causing its own share of damage as well. Nevertheless, there I was, miserable. Hurting and rehashing someone else’s failures over and over again in my mind. Finally, after wearing myself down with the weight of resentment for days, I came to the point of being serious about fighting against it. I began praying, “God please help me to love like you love.” I changed my prayers for the other person, making them more about their relationship with God being strength- ened, instead of their behavior changing to better meet my needs. And because loving well doesn’t come naturally to me, I put these verses in my pocket as a lifeline when www.himpowermagazine.com  9