Relationships are like brussels spouts. They are good for you, but sometimes they stink. [F’real. This is some real talk, right here.]

I’ve been married for 24 years [that’s dog years but whatever] and I’ve been dumb enough to make a gazillion mistakes, but smart enough to try to learn from them. I’ve had the same best friends since I was fourteen years old and we’ve gotten into some massive arguments. And anyone who has a sibling [or in my case, four siblings] knows that being in relationship with people you’re connected through by blood can get messy.

Since we weren’t designed to be hermits or live in isolation, we must figure out what it means to be in relationship with those in our community. Not just your next door neighbor, but your class mate, coworker, spouse, and sibling. If we’re honest with ourselves, it’s hard. It’s hard to continuously invest in relationships that may or may not bring pain, joy, tension, or acceptance. Or all of it.

But we move forward. We pursue community. We have to. Yes, there is an emotional risk when we enter into community. But with every risk, there is a reward.

Every work of art caused some level of commitment to complete. Every book written required some level of pain. Every plate of brussels sprouts worth eating required some time to make delicious.Β Great relationships are usually born from great sacrifice, not the result of selfishness.Β 

Last week at church, I was honored to be able to teach during our Beautiful Mess series on relationships, sex, and marriage. Though the barometer for sacrificial relationships I used was marriage, I truly believe the topic bridges the gap between expectations and behaviors in all forms of relationship and community.

I debated posting the message here because honestly, I don’t know how to manage expectations in relationships AT ALL. And me talking about marriage is like Barbara Walters talking about being black… it just doesn’t work, man. But feel free to tune in as a stumble and stammer through the message “Mind the Gap” in this beautiful mess we call life. You can download or listen to it here.

Shout out to the crew from Mariners Church who allows me to be part of the teaching team [Sandy, you’re the best], Kalee who helped me process this message [#FreeTherapy], and Anneliese and Lauren [friends and blog readers who came out to support]. Te amo mucho, amigas! πŸ™‚

As always, the table is set for conversation. If you have questions, comments, stones to throw, feel free to speak freely. XO

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