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The Girl Who Got Pulled Around by Her Ponytail

The other day at the bus stop, I saw a woman take her daughter by the ponytail, pull up, and force her to move down the sidewalk. As the girl walked forward, she tried to reach up and pull her mother’s hand away, to no avail. As the little girl cried and begged her mother to stop, a man standing nearby laughed about it, and the mother began laughing, too.

That little girl is going to grow up, and someone is going to try to make her do something she doesn’t want to do. Maybe a college professor will tell her to redo an assignment; maybe her fiancé will insist that she eat Christmas dinner with his family; or maybe a supervisor will write a bad performance review and tell her she has to sign it at the bottom.

If she hasn’t dealt with her legitimate anger and resentment toward her mother, she may fire back in a way that seems over-the-top to others. But what they won’t realize — what she probably won’t even realize — is that she’s not just responding to the circumstances of the present; she’s responding to the powerlessness of her past.

Ray Kane says, “Where there is intensity, there is history.” (Click to Tweet) A lot of us have strange areas of intensity in our lives; circumstances that can bring out our insecurity, anger or helplessness. When it happens, we don’t understand the why behind it; we just know we’re suddenly reacting, and our reaction seems like the only option.

For example, several years ago, my brother Caleb and I were in a car together, and he was telling me about a couple that was having serious marital problems.  After he described the impact on the children, I exploded in anger, raging against the parents for a couple of minutes until I suddenly stopped, took a deep breath, and looked over at Caleb.

“Whoa,” he said.  “I think you may need to work through some issues with our parents’ divorce, Josh.”

I eventually realized he was right — where there is intensity, there is history.

The next time you find yourself blowing a fuse in anger, crumbling into insecurity, or reduced to sadness in a way that baffles the people around you, ask the Holy Spirit to reveal the history behind those emotions. There’s a good chance you’re responding to something more than just the circumstances.

We often hold onto the baggage of the past because we get a sense of identity from it, but the Word calls us to leave it behind as we “strain forward to what lies ahead” (Philippians 3:13). That’s never going to happen until we take our histories — the mom who led us around by our ponytail, the marriage that came apart from under us, the coworkers who mistreated us — and put them in their proper place: on the cross of Christ. It will be a painful death, no doubt. But it’s the only place where we can find freedom from our pasts.

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About the Author

Joshua Rogers

Joshua Rogers is the author of the book Confessions of a Happily Married Man. In addition to writing for Boundless, he has also written for ChristianityToday.com, FOXNews.com, Washington Post, Thriving Family, and Inside Journal. His personal blog is www.joshuarogers.com. You can follow him @MrJoshuaRogers or on his Facebook page.

 

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