And if you don't stand up to it now, one day you may be on the receiving end. And I doubt you'll like it.
Cheetos for Breakfast
Thursday, January 22, 2026
Stoking Fear and Encouraging Violence
Friday, January 2, 2026
A Tidy Life
I’ve always been a bit of a disappointment. A misfit toy. Someone who, more often than not, resided somewhere outside the box.
I haven’t always had the tidiest of lives.
In my younger years, a tidy life meant that you were thought well of by the neighbors and you made your parents proud. Later on in life, as my world revolved around the conservative evangelical church community, a tidy life meant that your theology was right and therefore God wouldn’t be mad at you.
I didn’t fit the mold as a kid. Or as a teenager. Or as a mother. Or as a wife. Or as a realtor. Or as a Christian.
No matter the scenario, tidy and I were like oil and water. For a very long time this was a source of shame.
When you have been on the receiving end of impossible expectations or at least ones that seem impossible for you to meet, you can go one of two ways: you can dish the same out to other people or you can do the opposite and fling your arms wide open.
I’ve come to the understanding that God has never asked me to be tidy. That was a standard set up by other people due to their own discomfort with disorder, mess, and people in all their fragile humanity.
And I’ve come to realize that I don’t want a tidy life.
I want a REAL life.
I want a life where compassion and curiosity and awe and kindness and understanding are more important than what things look like on the outside or whether or not they check some arbitrary box.
I want people to feel the freedom to sit with me and let who they are, who they really are, spill out, knowing that there will be no judgment, no fixing, no disappointment.
I want to understand deeply.
I want to speak truthfully. And graciously.
I want to give generously.
I want to love extravagantly.
That’s the life I want.
Tidy be damned.
Tuesday, December 30, 2025
The Martha Mitchell Effect and Believing Women
Every so often I come across some new story that just rocks my world in a “How am I just hearing about this?” way.
Last week I learned about Martha Mitchell.
Martha Mitchell was the wife of John Mitchell, Richard Nixon’s attorney general.
Martha was a southern lady from Arkansas. She talked a lot and drank perhaps too much. She had a likable, folksy, opinionated way about her.
When she heard some juicy piece of news that she thought the American people needed to know, she would call the press. The press loved her. The American people loved her. Richard Nixon? He did not.
She was “The Martha Problem.”
And she became more of a problem. She was in California when she learned of the Watergate break-in and immediately tried to call the press. She knew that Nixon was in on it. She knew.
Her husband’s security detail caught her, ripped the phone out of the wall, had her tranquilized, and held her against her will for days.
As time went on, as she tried to tell that she knew this was big, even her husband tried to pass her off as off her rocker. She had become unhinged, he said.
Nobody believed her. Until they did. Until the evidence backed her up.
This was the 70s, of course. A time when women weren’t listened to. Weren’t believed. And were written off as unhinged on a regular basis.
In the early 70s Diane Langberg was a fresh young psychologist. She would sit and listen as women began sharing with her stories their stories of sexual abuse. Abuse she had never encountered in her own life. Abuse she had never read about in any literature. Abuse she had never been taught about in her pursuit of 2 graduate degrees. As she remembers, “Often counselors were warned to not get ‘hooked’ into believing hysterical women. I chose not to heed the advice.”
She believed them anyway.
Diane Langberg went on to become perhaps the foremost Christian authority on sexual abuse.
Martha Mitchell died a short few years after the Watergate scandal. Perhaps her most lasting legacy is the phenomena that bears her name: The Martha Mitchell Effect.
According to the National Institutes of Health, “The Martha Mitchell effect describes a paradox in psychiatric evaluation where clinicians mislabel patients’ truthful accounts as delusions because they seem implausible from a clinical perspective, which can result in misdiagnosis and harm.”
What must it have been like to be Martha Mitchell? To be disbelieved? Silenced? Even told you are crazy?
What must it have been like for women in the 70s to have a therapist who, unlike Diane Langberg, chose not to believe your stories of abuse and passed you off as hysterical?
Unfortunately, I think a lot of us know what that’s like. Because we’ve been there.
The sad reality is that not a lot has changed in 50+ years. Women are still written off as too emotional, perhaps unhinged. Our experiences are still disbelieved. Our concerns are still dismissed.
Last fall I was spending the night with my granddaughter when I was awakened in the middle of the night by the sound of gun shots. I considered calling 911 but found myself hesitant. I didn’t want to be accused of making a big deal out of nothing, of making a mountain out of a mole hill. I didn’t want to be another “hysterical woman.” I didn’t call.
The next morning there were 6 bullet casings in front of my daughter’s house.
Years of being dismissed take their toll. We women know this well. We are all too often left to the same fate as Cassandra of Greek mythology, who was cursed with the ability to tell the future but never believed. It crushes the soul.
Something has got to change. But what? How?
Maybe it starts small. With taking each other seriously. Believing each other. Maybe what we all need is a little validation that we aren’t crazy after all.
Martha Mitchell finally got that, if not before her death, then certainly after it.
An anonymous person sent flowers to her burial. White roses spelled out the phrase:
Martha Was Right.
Friday, October 17, 2025
On Leaf Blowers and Perspective
Perspective (according to me): Seeing something from a different angle than before that then changes your opinion or broadens your tolerance or challenges your belief. The more dogmatic your position, the more you may need perspective.
Example: Leaf Blowers
I used to hate, HATE leaf blowers. They are noisy. And while I find nothing quite so peaceful as the rustling of fall leaves in the breeze, all too often that peaceful sound would be interrupted by the obnoxious din of the air blowing monster known as the leaf blower.
Leaf blowers caused noise pollution. Air pollution. They were a menace to society.
I used speak with disdain about people using leaf blowers and then going to the gym for exercise because if they just spent some time raking up a yard full of leaves, they would get all the workout they'd need. After all, I was doing it. So should they.
I was very proud of my position, not to mention my physical prowess with a yard implement.
But then something happened.
It always does.
Perspective rarely changes of its own free will.
Enter the Tarlov cysts. They sit in my sacrum and, when inflamed, leave me feeling like someone has taken a baseball bat to my lower spine, butt, and lady parts. What inflames them? Lifting (anything more than two gallons of milk...some days way less). Pushing. Pulling. Bending repeatedly. All the things I do when I am doing the things I love, like moving furniture, hauling junk to the dump, mowing the lawn, raking leaves.
Raking leaves. Hmmmm. Suddenly, the only way I can do what I normally do is not with a rake and the good old muscles and grit of my prideful youth but with the dad gum leaf blower. The very machine I reviled for much of my adult life.
And now I am thankful for my leaf blower. My beautiful, hardworking leaf blower, that enables me to still, to some extent, be me.
And so, my friends, if you ever encounter a friend who seems to have changed, whether it's their opinion on something as mundane as a leaf blower or their formerly dogmatic belief about much more consequential things, just know that they may have changed because something happened and they see things differently now.
They got perspective.
Tuesday, September 2, 2025
Tone Police
Jemar Tisby wrote yesterday,
"Here's how you knpow someone is 'tone policing' you and what might be going on. People don't comment on the content of your message, but they critique your delivery. You say something hard but true, and they slide in your comments telling you to be more 'gracious,' 'balanced,' or 'loving.' They shift focus from the injustice you're naming to the feelings your words provoke in them. Tone policing isn't about you, it's about them. They support justice intellectually, but emotionally resist the urgency, repitition, or directness that justice requires. Not only do they want to avoid their own discomfort, they want to make themselves superior. By telling you to soften your mesage, they're presenting themselves as 'balanced.' As the calm, rational voice above the fray. By contrast, you are the 'emotional,' 'angry,' 'irrational' one. Justice isn't polite. Discomfort is not an attack. Truth-telling requires a tone that matches the moral weight of the harm."
Monday, August 25, 2025
Souls First
This morning my granddaughter started her first day of eighth grade. She was as dolled up as I have ever seen her, having told me that her goal for today was to look good. I want so badly to let her know, to get through to her hormone rattled, developmentally restructuring teen brain and her tender heart that, as beautiful as she is, she is and always will be, a soul first.
When Preferences Become Mandates
Anybody who is part of the evangelical church or a conservative congregation of other
stripes knows that it is relatively common to encounter someone who has decided that
doing things a certain way is the "biblical" way to do it. Whether it's how you parent, how you
run your family (and who's in it), how you teach your kids, what kind of church you attend
and how that church goes about worship and engaging with the community, all the way to
how you dress or who you vote for or whether you vote. It is not hard to find someone who
has a certain opinion or has made a specific choice and then spells out the case that that is
THE biblical way, and they can often expertly lob diced up chunks of Bible at anybody within
throwing distance just to prove their point.
Years ago there were the Worship Wars, wherein people would sit around and debate,
whether in person or on the interwebs, the value of hymns vs praise songs, traditional
worship vs contemporary. And each side had their talking points, all effectively ignoring
Ephesians 5:19, which mentions "psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs," so it's all included.
But people were very opinionated about these things. They could get testy.
Then there’s schooling. Home school vs Christian school vs public school. There was some
bizarre pecking order to it all, as if this was an intensely spiritual choice (though some had
no choice at all). This issue could ruin friendships and split churches and crush the spirits
of many an overwhelmed mother.
I've done it, too. I've had convictions, or maybe just preferences but I called them
convictions, and decided I was doing something the way God wanted. And then I changed
or grew or something happened to force me out of my bubble or to see things differently or,
at times, I was left with no choice in the matter, and realized that what I really wanted was a
biblical rationalization for what was my preference. I wanted someone to back me up so I
wouldn’t have to fight so hard for what I really wanted.
Because it wasn’t ok to just want something and then go for it.
Maybe it is because people, especially in the more authoritarian churches, families, and
cultures, aren't ever given the freedom to have their own opinions and preferences to begin
with. We learn to do and say as we are told. So what do we do? Our only way to rationalize
our preferences is to say that this is God's preference, no, God's mandate, to do it this way.
When wants are not ok and when children are taught obedience above all else, they don’t get to
develop a sense of agency. Because when parents’ choices and dictates matter most, and
matter above all else, and come with the authority of God, a child doesn’t get to be her own
person with her own wants and desires. When everything is spiritual, then our wants have to be
spiritual, too. Our preferences have to have the spiritual stamp of approval.
So what if all of this pontificating really is just a way of getting validation for a preference
you don't feel you have a right to have outside of some divine ordinance?
What if we gave kids, women, and people of all shapes, sizes, ages, and genders, the agency
to make decisions and like and not like things and use their gifts and or make use of other
people's gifts in the ways that they best see fit without having to wrap everything in spiritual
packaging?
What if we were able to see someone else's choices as just that, choices made based on
their situation and the factors that play in their lives, and not some spiritual failing.
Maybe we should back off with the Divine Mandate Heavy Hammer and let people be
people. Not right. Not wrong. Just people being people, doing things people do.
God gives us the freedom to do that.