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The God Who Stoops… And Stands
“Then Jesus stood up again and said to the woman, ‘Where are your accusers? Didn’t even one of them condemn you?’ — ‘No, Lord,’ she said. And Jesus said, ‘Neither do I. Go and sin no more.'” (John 8:10-11 NLT)
Condemnation – the preferred commodity of Satan. He will repeat the adulterous woman scenario as often as you permit him to do so, marching you through the city streets and dragging your name through the mud. He pushes you into the center of the crowd and megaphones your sin:
This person was caught in the act of immorality … stupidity … dishonesty … irresponsibility.
But he will not have the last word. Jesus has acted on your behalf.
He stooped. Low enough to sleep in a manger, work in a carpentry shop, sleep in a fishing boat. Low enough to rub shoulders with crooks and lepers. Low enough to be spat upon, slapped, nailed, and speared. Low. Low enough to be buried.
And then he stood. Up from the slab of death. Upright in Joseph’s tomb and right in Satan’s face. Tall. High. He stood up for the woman and silenced her accusers, and he does the same for you.
He “is in the presence of God at this very moment sticking up for us” (Rom. 8:34 MSG). Let this sink in for a moment. In the presence of God, in defiance of Satan, Jesus Christ rises to your defense. He takes on the role of a priest. “Since we have a great priest over God’s house, let us come near to God with a sincere heart and a sure faith, because we have been made free from a guilty conscience” (Heb. 10:21–22 NCV).
A clean conscience. A clean record. A clean heart. Free from accusation. Free from condemnation. Not just for our past mistakes but also for our future ones.
“Since he will live forever, he will always be there to remind God that he has paid for [our] sins with his blood” (Heb. 7:25 TLB). Christ offers unending intercession on your behalf.
Jesus trumps the devil’s guilt with words of GRACE.
Today’s devotional is drawn from Max Lucado’s Second Chances.
Is My Spouse Really Narcissistic? How People Are Commonly Overpathologized
Originally posted at: https://drlorischade.wordpress.com/2016/07/18/how-spouses-are-commonly-overpathologized/
“How much do you know about Narcissism?” asked yet another female client, on the same day that a male client asked, “How much do you know about Borderline Personality Disorder?” It seems like therapists I supervise or I am asked a version of these questions at least weekly. I can confidently state that I likely know more about both of them than most of my clients do. I believe that these labels are used prematurely and inaccurately in short, because they simplify complex problems for people who are desperately trying to make sense out of the seemingly nonsensical. Here are some reasons why they are incorrectly overused:
Narcissistic Personality Disorder (NPD) and Borderline Personality Disorder (BDD) are labels that describe sets of behaviors and internal states identified in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM). This is a tome published by the American Psychiatric Association for the purpose of categorizing and typifying groups of mental health disorders in order to conceptualize diagnoses and treatment options for various clinical presentations. The book is the best we have for making sense out of mental health disorders. As a collaborative clinician for the most recent issuance (5th edition), I have respect for the amount of study and diligence that goes into refining the descriptors as an attempt at treatment accuracy. The problem is that the taxonomy is clumsy, largely subjective, politically influenced, and always controversial among mental health and medical professionals.
For example, one of the identifying specifiers for NPD is “Requires excessive admiration,” (p. 669). What? Who decides how much is “excessive?” Another feature is, “Shows arrogant, haughty behaviors or attitudes,” (p. 670). Do you see the problem? What exactly is “arrogant or haughty?” What is the context for such behavior? Many of the remaining identifiers are equally ambiguous. The lack of precision throughout the DSM is an enormous problem because it is so subjective and can vary tremendously from clinician to clinician.
Let’s look at BPD. The first listed criterion is, “Frantic efforts to avoid real or imagined abandonment,” (p. 663). So, what, exactly, is “Frantic?” Does that mean if a spouse is threatening to divorce and walks out the door, the panicky reaction of a partner is “BPD?” The 7th identifier is “chronic feelings of emptiness.” Huh? How empty? Does “emptiness” mean the same thing to different people? How about “Inappropriate, intense anger or difficulty controlling anger?” I have seen plenty of that in partners who experienced betrayal, or a number of other emotionally-laden events. This does not mean the individual has BPD.
Hopefully, most clinicians are very careful in using these labels. Unfortunately, I see way too many who are not. Many clinicians use the labels as a way to dismiss clients when they are overwhelmed with the behaviors, particularly in couple cases where the emotion is notoriously high, and the dynamics exceed the therapist’s competence and skill level. Personality disorders are by nature considered durable and nearly unchangeable. If a client has a legitimate personality disorder, in a sense, the clinician can just write off the case as untreatable. Many do. To be honest, sometimes I think it’s laziness at best and negligence at worst. This is a particularly egregious practice when a therapist has diagnosed a spouse based on the report of their client, without ever actually meeting that individual (and yes, this happens, not infrequently). I’m not a DSM expert, but as a licensed clinician with DSM training, I believe the actual prevalence of these cases in a population is far lower than they are diagnosed by mental health professionals, at least informally, behind closed doors.
Among the client population, the overpathologizing might be more pervasive. Currently, the ability to easily research anything on the internet has provided fertile ground for spouses to gain just enough information to be dangerous. Most of us are guided by confirmatory bias, meaning that we have a tendency to give more credence to information that supports what we already believe. If I think I’m married to a narcissist (or an autistic or a bipolar individual or…) then I will find all kinds of information supporting my viewpoint. Ditto for borderlines. Then, if I read that it is not very treatable, I might prematurely give up on the relationship.
Much of the highly emotional behavior observed in panicky, anxious pursuing partners (often wives who get labeled “Borderline”), is exacerbated by, if not a direct result of, the withdrawing or stonewalling behavior by spouses who are flooded. Likewise, the withdrawing husband who numbs himself because he doesn’t ever feel like he can calm down his wife’s emotions, may appear incapable of empathizing (Aha! Narcissism!), when the apparent lack of empathy is really a conditioned response generated from years of feeling helpless to impact a partner’s emotional reactions. The pattern becomes cyclical, more pronounced, and anticipatory until partners can and do appear to be Narcisstic and Borderline. In short, protective behaviors of stonewalling and withdrawal that make sense in an intense situation are incorrectly labeled, and desperate, clingy, panicky emotional behaviors that come as a result of not knowing what else to do to save a relationship are prematurely pathologized. Various trauma responses based on previous client history can also be prematurely lumped into a personality disorder.
I have no illusions about my self-indulgent blog post changing anything in general. That would require a readership larger than three people. However, I want to be on record somewhere articulating and highlighting this problem because it is endemic with therapists who don’t place behavior in a highly emotional couple context, and it is a problem with spouses who are desperately trying to make sense out of painful marriages they feel powerless to change.
Don’t get me wrong. I have seen clients who I believe meet criteria for both of these disorders. However, far more often, I see people who are very reactive to each other after years of feeling rejected, and their behaviors look like some of the personality disorder specifiers. In other words, I see more instances which are treatable than those which aren’t. If you think your spouse has a personality disorder, you could be right, but it is more likely that you are incorrectly labeling contextual, reactive behavior. Be very careful in your unofficial diagnosis.
Now it’s time to return to my real life of being mom to 7 children, or, as I like to call it, my “Acute Stress Disorder,” or my “Circadian Rhythm Sleep-Wake Disorder,” for which the recognized treatment is “birth control.” Oops….too late! Happy diagnosing!
Reference: Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 5th edition (2013), American Psychiatric Association: Arlington, Virginia.
Recovery is Hard
One Simple Thing You Can do to Protect Your Marriage
Originally posted at: https://drlorischade.wordpress.com/2016/07/22/one-simple-thing-you-can-do-to-protect-your-marriage/
I was on a hike with another couple a few nights ago, and the husband asked me to identify the number one thing I would tell people to keep their marriages strong. I’m not usually asked to reduce marital tips down to one dimension, but I was intrigued by the challenge. I thought for a minute and realized I had a definite answer, informed by the cases I have had over the last 5 years.
“I would say,” I replied, “To realize that when you are texting someone, you are in essence entering a private room with that person.” I’m expanding on the image here. The room has no windows. The social response is in real time, so it is as if you are right next to the person having an actual conversation. If you text daily, you are entering that room daily. If you text on and off all day long, you are in that room most of the day. Everyday.
I see a lot of infidelity cases. One hundred percent of them in the last few years have all developed through texting. In most cases, a romantic interest did not precede the texting relationship. Most of them started in a benign way between co-workers, church members working together on projects, neighbors and best friends of the couple. Here’s the typical developmental course (IMHO):
- Begin texting to communicate practical information.
- Increase frequency of texting, still to communicate practical information.
- Add a joke to your text, making it more conversational in nature.
- Get a response to your joke, and continue the playful banter.
- Feel a positive chemical boost after a text exchange.
- Find yourself checking your phone to see if the person texted.
- Realize that you are starting to look forward to getting texts from that person.
- Tell yourself that since you aren’t seeing that person face-to-face, you are fine and not being disloyal to your spouse.
- Increase casual and playful texting.
- Shift from playful banter to deeper emotional disclosures.
- Experience an increase in the euphoric chemical boost.
- Find yourself hiding your phone from your spouse, because you don’t want the texts to be “misinterpreted.” (ALERT: Tipping Point)
- Continue to tell yourself that nothing is going to happen, because you still aren’t in this person’s physical presence, so you are still in control.
- Realize you have an emotional yearning for this individual.
- As you increase the need to hide your texts, begin to see your spouse as the enemy.
- Find yourself disconnecting from your spouse to find a place to text this person more often and privately.
- Hide more.
- Declare your deepest feelings and yearnings for this person and plan to meet in a private location.
- Engage in physical affection.
- Bam!
- Feel as if you have “fallen,” in love with this person and want him/her more than your spouse.
- Tell yourself this is your true love connection…otherwise you wouldn’t have “fallen,” in love, and you wouldn’t have these feelings.
- See your spouse as the one thing standing between you and true love and happiness.
- Destabilize your family.
- Make an appointment with [a therapist].
This may sound harsh to some readers…definitely to those who see themselves somewhere on this continuum. I’m not changing my story. If you would not repeatedly enter a private room with someone without a window where someone can see in, frequently enough that you start to share feelings with someone that you wouldn’t share with your spouse, don’t do it on a cell phone.
Here’s one more thing that should not surprise you: If your texting partner is an old boyfriend or girlfriend, you can expect to immediately resurrect the same emotions you felt when you were dating that person. You will exaggerate all the good memories you had and minimize the negative memories you had from that relationship. That’s not unique. Your texting affair is not unique, and the effect is as if you are on drugs. I’ve written this before, and I stand by it.
Lastly, realize that no matter how great you think your marriage is, this can happen to you. It is the failure to be watchful and set boundaries that gets people into trouble. If you think you could never end up having an affair, you’re kidding yourself—FWIW.

