Salome
Our Struggle Between Emotion And Reason
Choosing Your Battles
				Sister: every time you go postal, even mildly so, defending 
				yourself, you mark yourself as a child. And this is why men 
				relate to you the way they do. You can only nag someone but so 
				much before they build up a resistance to it, dismissing you as 
				a Nagger and, therefore, ignoring what you have to say. You 
				don’t have to win every battle or even fight every fight. Try 
				and keep paper trails—emails are an invaluable resource. Rather 
				than argue, I tend to send people copies of their own messages, 
				their own words, making the point that they were in the wrong. 
				Recognizing your own post-traumatic behavior—sisters becoming 
				agitated and defensive around black males—is difficult to do. It 
				requires reflection, introspection, rationality and reason. It 
				requires you to disconnect from your ego and allow yourself to 
				be vulnerable. Alone, in front of a mirror, turn off the radio. 
				Get the kids out of the house. Who Am I? Why Do I Get So 
				Defensive? What Am I So Angry About?
				
				Every sister I encounter tells me her story without ever saying 
				a word: she’s been abused, emotionally, physically or sexually, 
				by some black man. It’s a black man because many of these same 
				women, who are such an enormous chore to deal with, are 
				paradoxically kind and outgoing to white males. This may be 
				because white males do not induce their PTSD but black males do. 
				I routinely encounter some level of hostility, even playful 
				hostility, from black women. I have personally observed these 
				same black women being incredibly nice, accessible and open to 
				white males. I encounter virtually no hostility from white 
				women, ever. Thus, without having said a word, sister has told 
				me her secret. I don’t know the specifics, but there is a 
				reflexive loathing, I presume, of black men in general, that 
				suggests something terrible has happened to this woman over her 
				lifetime.
				
				I’d guess most brothers fail to consider her in any prayerful or 
				relevant manner, but instead react to her defensive hostility with 
				defensive hostility of their own. A lot of brothers I know 
				simply and routinely dismiss sisters as serious players in the 
				church or professional careers. I’ve been aghast at how some men 
				condescend to their wives and am even more aghast at the sisters 
				who believe this behavior is biblically appropriate if not 
				mandated, who vacillate between being his child and being his 
				mother. It is not biblical. It is not even reasonable.
				
Testing Your Brain
				When a doctor hits your patella with a hammer, he is testing 
				your reflexes. You try not to move, but your leg reflexively 
				swings forward. The doctor is not testing your knee. He is 
				testing your brain. If your leg does not move, you have brain 
				damage. An impulse is not quite the same as a reflex. We often 
				feel a rush of emotion demanding we either lash out or defend 
				ourselves in some way. Failing to control this impulse limits 
				our ability to communicate and function. Virtually every woman 
				has been damaged in some way by some man over the course of her 
				lifetime, something as mild as a high school boyfriend dumping 
				her to matters much more traumatic. Because women are more 
				hormonal than men, those emotions are easier and quicker to 
				access, her emotions tend to be more on the surface because she 
				is roiling in emotion all day long. It is likely difficult if 
				not impossible for her to turn her emotion chip off. I believe 
				God rewards those who seek Him [Hebrews 11:6], which is to say nothing is 
				impossible for Him. In my lifetime I’ve met precious few women 
				who have admitted they are unreasonable if not irrational and 
				who have confessed that to God and sought more of His grace, of 
				His personality to control their lives. Even the count-to-ten 
				trick taught to me by child psychologists, when I was an angry 
				grade-schooler incapable of dealing with his emotions, is not 
				employed by any women I know. They just go off at will. 
				Sometimes politely, sometimes even playfully, but it is 
				aggression no matter which way you cut it.
				
				Sister: you don’t have to always defend yourself. You don’t 
				always have to be on red alert. A gift, from you back to God, 
				would be granting a certain clemency, a certain number of 
				pardons, to, say, five people every day. By which I mean, just 
				take the hit. Don’t swing at every pitch, don’t get so dug in 
				that the larger objective gets lost in the petty bickering over 
				details. If I could share a wish with many of my Christian 
				sisters, it would be to make a sacrifice of rationality. Lord, I 
				give this one to You. The calmer and more rational you seem, the 
				more seriously you’ll be taken and the more you can accomplish.
				
				Failing that, to at least be mature enough to admit, to yourself 
				and to God, that you lack self-control. That your entire life is 
				a series of turns taken because of your vanity, your neediness, 
				your loneliness. That you have failed to gain traction or follow 
				a throughline life narrative because your focus is routinely 
				hijacked by your passion. That, time and again, you lose the 
				battle between intellect and emotion. God has endowed us with 
				passion, sisters. He doesn’t want us to be slaves to it. It is, 
				functionally, a form of idolatry to make a god of your emotions. 
				Patience, on the other hand, comes form God [Galatians 5]. 
				Self-control. Meekness. Quietness.
				
				Luckily, I’ve discovered a unique truth: even if you’re not 
				terribly mature, pretending to be mature is just as good. 
				Appearing, on the surface, to be confident, rational and 
				reasonable is just as effective as actually being any of those 
				things.
				Christopher J. Priest
				25 September 2011
				editor@praisenet.org
 
				
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