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Five Ways We Deceive Ourselves
Traveling with Georgia
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Five Ways We Deceive Ourselves

   
 

  

Have you ever cleaned your house before guests arrive and thrown junk in the back of a closet or stuffed clutter into a drawer? Your house appeared clean and organized as long as your guests didn't look in those areas.

 

We do the same thing with our motivations and behaviors. We tidy them up. We try to hide our imperfections and maintain a good image. The problem is, while I'm busy making excuses to make myself look better, the people closest to me are not deceived.  They know the truth.  I'm usually only deceiving myself. 

 

Whether you make excuses, minimize your bad behaviors, shift the blame, overcompensate for your errors or play the victim, be willing to recognize the many ways you conceal your flaws. 

 

Making excuses

 

 

 

More than once, when late for an appointment, I've tried to make myself look better by saying, "I hit every red light on my way here." It's embarrassing to admit how many different reasons I've given over the years for not arriving on time. My excuse sounded better than admitting I had left home too late.

 

Minimizing bad behaviors

This is one approach you might hear from a teenager.  "Oh Mom!  You're sooo out of touch with reality.  All my friends are doing it."

 

One person in a leadership class I attended said, "My weaknesses aren't so bad, otherwise I'd be motivated to address them." The problem with that logic is that when the weakness does become glaring, this person will probably be facing a crisis or an extremely embarrassing situation.

 

Shifting the blame

 

  

 

Another way we see ourselves in a more favorable light is to shift the blame onto someone else. We might say or think something like this: "It wasn't my fault I got so angry. He shouldn't have said those mean things. What was I supposed to do? Sit there and take it?"

 

Even young children naturally do this when an adult breaks up a fight.  Pointing to his or her playmate we often hear, "I didn't do anything. He started it."     

 

Overcompensating

 In an effort to hide our flaws, we exhaust ourselves trying to earn the approval of God or others by doing good deeds.  Maybe we give generously of our time or money.  But when our motivation is not out of love or a direction from God, no matter how kind, generous, or compassionate we look, pride is what is hiding underneath our shiny veneer. 

 

Playing the victim

 

 

 

When we play the victim, we heap more abuse and insults on ourselves in an effort to cause others to feel pity for us.  One tip-off that you are playing the victim is if you notice yourself speaking in unqualified, broad generalities. You might say something like this: "Well, it's always my fault. I'm always the one that causes all the problems around here. I never do anything right."

 

In some of his final thoughts to Timothy, the Apostle Paul writes, "Pay close attention to your life and your teaching..." (1 Timothy 4:16 ISV).

 

Are you willing to pay close attention to your life?  Are you willing to take the time to notice whether you have a pattern of making excuses, minimizing your poor behaviors, shifting the blame, overcompensating for your mistakes or playing the victim? While there are many ways we are deceived, I find self deception is the worst kind of deception there is.  

 

 

  

 

"Be careful in your life and in your teaching. If you continue to live and teach rightly, you will save both yourself and those who listen to you." 

 1 Timothy 4:16 NCV

 


UPCOMING EVENTS

 

December  8, 2012

Women's Christmas Event

Orchard Hill Church

Wexford, PA 15090

www.orchardhillchurch.com

 

December 30, 2012 to 

January 1, 2013

New Year's Eve Conference for Singles and Single Again

Tuscarora Inn & Conference Center,

Register by phone at

570-897-6000 

& 800-500-8872 

www.tuscarora.org/events

 

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Traveling with Georgia

 

Recently I was in Monterey California for the Books & Such Retreat.  Here is a picture of me with some of my wonderful author friends, Robin Jones Gunn, Debbie Macomber and Gayle Roper.

 

 

 

 

 

Looking for a speaker for your next event?

 

 

 Listen to a recent message on Taking Out Your Emotional Trash 

 

 

OCTOBER BOOK
GIVE AWAY
 

 

 

As a breast cancer survivor, I'm celebrating October as the month for breast cancer awareness. 
 
One of my stories is featured in...
 

Chicken Soup for the Soul:  Hope & Healing for Your Breast Cancer Journey

Released September 2012

 

 

 

A support group from breast cancer diagnosis through treatment to rehabilitation and recovery, this book combines inspiring Chicken Soup for the Soul stories written just for this book and accessible leading-edge medical information from Dr. Julie Silver of Harvard Medical School. Patients and survivors will find comfort, strength and hope.

 

 

Just email your name
and address to: 
Georgia@GeorgiaShaffer.com
by October 29th   
and you will be entered to win one of two copies!
(If you win, your name and state will be listed in our November newsletter)
 

Last Newsletter Winners:

 Judy Taylor from North Carolina  and Maxine Cook from Kansas.

 

 

What's Growing in Georgia's Garden? 
 

    

 

My cosmos somehow survived

 killing frost we had last week.