Category: Writing

  • Is Burnout Beating You?

    I’ve been in the process of adding some helpful stuff to the 5th Anniversary Expanded Edition of my first book, Mad Church Disease which launches next month (woot!)

    In that journey, I realized people were needing something NOW. Something to help NOW.

    The emails I get daily show me that burnout is still epidemic in ministry and in the church world and if anything has become more taboo in the last five years, which breaks my heart.

    Over Christmas, I sat down and wrote Beating Burnout: A 30 Day Guide to Hope and Health that covers

    • rest
    • spiritual health
    • emotional health
    • relational health
    • physical health
    • and prayer.

    Rinse and repeat for five weeks and you’ve got yourself a 70-something page book.

    Beating Burnout Mad Church Disease Anne Marie Miller

    Beating Burnout: A 30 Day Guide to Hope and Health releases as an eBook this week! (The print will follow shortly!)

    Each day has

    • scripture
    • a short and meaningful reflection
    • and a section for practical application and a page for notes.

    It reads fast because I know you don’t have much time, but I pray it takes you directly to the heart of our Father with no fluff, only grace, and gives you enough action when, after thirty days are over, you find yourself in a healthier and more intentional place than you are now.

    Can you do me a favor?

    If this book sounds like something you need, can you give me your email address so I can ping you when it comes out? I won’t bother you for anything else. And, if you’d like to spread the word ahead of time, I’ve made some tweets to help you do that!

    You can sign up for the email notification here!

    Share about it below!

    [Tweet “Burned out? THIS > @girlnamedanne’s “Beating Burnout: A 30 Day Guide to Hope & Health” #BeatingBurnout”]

    [Tweet “Had enough? > @girlnamedanne’s”Beating Burnout: A 30 Day Guide to Hope & Health” #BeatingBurnout”]

    [Tweet “2014 = HEALTH! @girlnamedanne’s “Beating Burnout: A 30 Day Guide to Hope & Health” #BeatingBurnout”]

    I am SO GRATEFUL for your support and I truly pray this devotional can help you find hope and health!

     

  • When God Isn’t In Control

    Late last week, I had conversations with two of my unofficial spiritual/career mentors. They’re unofficial because I’ve never asked them, but when we meet, their advice to me always weighs heavy on my decision-making.

    One was over coffee at downtown Franklin’s famous Meridee’s. I voiced my current struggles of feeling disjointed in my work: too many voices to manage (“Church Anne” … “Porn Fighting Anne” … “Community Anne”) and my poor decisions to jump into too many things at once. Oh, and the ever-present fears of being self-employed and helping contribute financially to the dreams and plans Tim and I feel God giving us.

    [Tweet “I feel afraid even though God’s never failed us. Not once. He has always provided.”]

    My mentor honestly called out the truth behind my insecurities, gave me clear direction, and left me inspired and encouraged to move forward.

    Then I went to sleep.

    Then I woke up with a combination of anxiety and peace (which, of course, I tweeted to the world).

    I texted a friend of mine asking her for prayer. Her kind words back to me glowed with Christ and His providence.

    Yesterday, as I sat around in my pajamas, slightly fuzzy-headed from flu medication, I caught myself worrying. I was looking at the realities of releasing two book projects this year and an internet platform that looks entirely different than it did five years ago, when I first started writing. How can I expect to earn a living doing this anymore?

    I count the stats, the numbers, and I inject them into a vein of self-worth.  Does it boost my spirits? No. It begins atrophying.

    And maybe it was because of the flu meds that my inhibitions were down and the brave me wasn’t afraid to speak. She came to the front of my mind’s conversation and said,

    [Tweet “”Hey, wait. None of your circumstances matter. This is all in God’s hands. Leave it there.””]

    For some reason, I did. And this morning, it’s still there…even though I’m still a little afraid. That’s the part of me who thinks God isn’t in control.

    [Tweet “We must remember truth in its completeness: God is always in control. Always.”]

    Over coffee at Meridee’s, my unofficial mentor said two things to me that are sustaining my disbelief. Maybe they’ll help you, too.

    If you’re feeling ill-equipped to do something because of your experience, remember this: Jesus and Paul spoke a lot about marriage, but neither one of them were married. And if you’re afraid to take that next step, to invest your time or money into something that God’s leading you to, remember this: the only person who didn’t see a return on his investment was the one who buried his treasure.

    Continue moving forward in whatever God has placed in your path. Maybe you need to be brave and rest. Or maybe it’s time to say, “God, I’m all in.” Perhaps the next right step is just you trusting God – completely.

    Whatever it is, know you’re not alone. There’s a girl in Tennessee who’s fighting to hear truth through all the jumbled up voices in her head right alongside you.

  • Vote on my New Book Cover!

    Sign up for the list here.

    Vote on your favorite cover here (it will take you less than a minute!)

    ***

    Well, it’s not really my new book cover (that’s over here!) but early in 2014, I’ll be re-releasing a revised and expanded edition of my first book, Mad Church Disease: Healing from Ministry Burnout. It will release on its fifth birthday (happy birthday, book!) and it’s insane to think each and every week, I hear from pastors or church leaders and volunteers who are still giving this book out and sharing what it has meant to them. I’m was asked to keynote the Shelby Conference on this topic next June!

    Since this book was listed out of print by the publisher and all the rights were reverted back to me, I’m so glad I get to add some content, update some more, and provide not only a book, but study guides, custom health plans, and more.

    Mad Church Disease

    We are working on the final pieces of it, including the cover. I had a design contest at 99Designs and have narrowed it down to eight finalists. Your vote and comments will help so much. Please hop over to the voting page, cast your vote, and make sure you sign up for the email list that will notify you when Mad Church Disease is available to purchase again. (Hint, if you sign up for the list, you’re gonna get some crazy pre-sell offers and freebies exclusive only to that list!)

    ***

    Sign up for the list here.

    Vote on your favorite cover here (it will take you less than a minute!)

     

     

     

  • I Lied to My Husband

    For three months, I’ve lied to my husband.

    I told him I had a speaking engagement in Georgia, and I didn’t.

    But we drove anyway.

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    And we arrived at one of my favorite places in the world; a farm where I mourned the loss of a dear friend, have been loved and have loved. Where I wrote a big chunk of my next book and burned a few of my demons, committing their ashes to the bottom of a lake.

    Sometimes, lying is okay.

    Sometimes, taking a break is too.

    Be back Friday.

    ptRCZPUw_I7AQKA_TDfVzcEymdgYHEQm0JItYvaqUJQ

     

  • Monsters Like You and Me

    He was a Monster, but you wouldn’t know it by looking at him: muddy, kind eyes and a soft and sparse grey beard. He was the one who brought the turkey out to the table at Thanksgiving and it was always perfect and with just enough crispy skin and the family devoured it over memories and laughter and the sense of familiarity.

    Yes, this was Thanksgiving and it happened the same way every year since any of them could remember.

    To any passerby, it looked no different than something you’d see at the house next door or the house on the television, but most of them knew – especially her – what pain this man with the kind eyes and the soft beard delivered.

    Every year would pass and nothing would change; she wouldn’t say anything about the Monster…what was the point? In hushed conversations and secret phone calls, her observations were confirmed. The shell of the man she knew didn’t change much but his insides did. First his heart, then his mind, and now, she wondered, his spirit? One by one pieces of him broke away and fell like a man of ice walking in the sun for the first time, dripping, cracking, breaking – and completely see through.

    She talked to a man named Gary about the Monster and how even when she wasn’t with him, he stayed with her. Was he following her? Was he out to hurt them all? He wanted full control and she wasn’t sure at what cost. She said unspeakable things about him, things someone with the same molecules and atoms and blood should never say, but it was as if she wasn’t talking about him. He was gone, she determined.

    Gary sat, plump and attentive, in an old recliner across from where she sat. He let her say her peace and then talked about the monster.

    Yes, what the Monster did and what the monster does is inexcusable. The pain from the past, the scars seen and not seen, the anger that rises in her when he is far away or when he is in her own living room sitting right next to her, and even closer, when she carries him around in her heart – it is all justified.

    “But,” Gary said, “but.” He shifted forward in his chair and reached into the pocket of his brown pants, retrieving a pair of glasses. “I want you to wear these from now on. You say you want to know what the Monster will do; these glasses will show you. You’ll see everything: who he is, why he is the Monster, and what you can do about it.”

    She held the glasses loose in her hand, her wrist ever so slightly bent like the weight of the glasses were too much for her small hand, and like Gary’s simple explanation wasn’t enough.

    “Do you trust me?” he said, seeing her reaction.

    “I have no other choice,” she said, clasping the pair of tortoiseshell frames and walking out of the room. If her family was to be safe, she knew she had to be the one with the clearest view of the Monster. She had to protect everyone quietly. He could not hurt them anymore.

    Shaken by what could be, she set out to find the Monster and figure him out, why he was the way he was. But she could not put on the glasses. She knew it wasn’t time.

    But about the monster, she was right. The Monster was following her, waiting outside her house until she came home and because she never locked the door, he’d follow her in. She made dinner; he was there. She took her dogs for a walk; he was there. People would ask about him, how he was these days, and he was right there. Yet they couldn’t see him. The only power the Monster had was to make himself invisible to everyone else but her and disappear right into her very heart.

    These were the worst times for her because her heart felt like the Monster took over and she didn’t have a chance. Almost instantly the anger and evil he had transferred into her and if she wasn’t careful, she could become a monster too.

    mirror

    Once when she had enough, when she didn’t allow the Monster in – she screamed at him to go away, far away, forever, and slammed her front door, and she ran into the den where the glasses Gary gave her were tucked away in a drawer. She pulled them out and put them on. She checked herself in the mirror to see how they looked and instantly threw them off her face and frantically brushed her arms off, tearing her sweater, stripping down to almost nothing.

    She was a monster, too.

    Never before had she seen herself like that; demons and evil covering her every inch, doing anything to break her and take over her. For the most part, she knew she was always fighting something dark, but she assumed it was the Monster, not the demons inside and around her. She fell to her knees, weeping, praying that each one would let her be: fear, jealousy, anger, self-righteousness.  Her past, her pain, her anxiety. With heavy wings, each one flew away, leaving her light but weak. She pulled herself up, got dressed, and went out to find the Monster. She circled back to the den, make sure she put the glasses back on.

    It took her a while to find the Monster, walking through the chill of the autumn air. Her last encounter with him must have pushed him far, far away. In a barren land she found him hiding in a small cave. He didn’t see her right away, but this was best. Because now that she had the glasses on, she was able to see man she thought was a Monster really wasn’t.

    He was just like her.

    Those muddy eyes were friendly, but full of pain and tears. Years of crying covered his grey beard in salt, like an ocean leaving its traces behind. He sat slumped in the corner because the weight of the demons he was carrying with him. She thought back to how she looked with all those demons on her and looked at the Monster. He had so many more…hundreds, maybe thousands.

    This is what it must be like to see like God sees,  she thought, not placing her view as divine, but only seeing what invisible things people carry with them and fight. She walked over to the Monster, ignoring the threats and hissing the demons on him made as she reached in to rest her hand on his shoulder.

    He was startled; so startled that the Monster yelled at her, screaming in a voice that wasn’t his, “Get away! Get away!” He hissed at her too, clearly either unaware or resigned to the demons that weighed on him and changed him.

    “Get away,” he said to her quietly, with a huff of resignation.

    In a great story, she probably should have pulled out a sword to fight or maybe brought an army in, but in this story, she did what the Monster asked and walked away. She no longer saw the Monster as a monster anymore, but saw him for the darkness that covered him, that he was to weak to fight off. She could fight from a distance, offering prayers on his behalf and fighting off her own demons so she could keep a clear mind, but she was not afraid anymore. She was not angry any more. The man she knew that she thought was a Monster was still a man, a broken man who didn’t know any better.

    And she would not give up on him, now that she could see that truth.

  • That Thing You Just Can’t Shake

    Sometimes there is a thing you just can’t shake.

    I don’t mean a bad habit, but a stirring, an awakening, a longing that is deep and far inside your spirit.

    I have one of these things right now. It’s been around for about a month. It’s not something I need to do, to plan, or to make happen; it’s a door with a tiny peep hole, and I sense God moving in, opening up, and letting me have just a tiny glimpse into what happens when the door fully opens.

    Starring .... Magnolia

    Normally, I write these things off as emotional whims, having too many assumptions and the wrong hopes, maybe even hormones.

    But sometimes things just stick.

    Do you have a thing you can’t shake from your heart?

    I’m learning to walk in it with joy, and hope, and gratefulness, moment by moment.

    Anticipation.

    Faithfulness.

    Our God is so, so good, isn’t he?

  • Protecting our Women: A Challenge to Any Man for Any Woman

    Yesterday I wrote about how women need to fight for our men, whether they are our spouses, dads, brothers, uncles, neighbors, friends. Today, I’m taking the Y chromosome out of the picture and adding back in an X.

    When I was twelve years old, my dad was away at school in another town and my mom was out getting groceries a few miles down a lonely, west Texas road. A storm was pushing across the plains (which was nothing abnormal for early summer in west Texas) as I kept my ears to the weather radio and my eyes on my little brother, I knew we needed to take shelter. A tornado was moving our way.

    As my mom pulled into the driveway, the tornado was moments away. We escaped to safety with moments to spare, baseball-sized hailstones pounding at us as we ran.

    Tornado that went past my apartment

    The next morning, the San Angelo Standard Times featured our property on the front page of the paper. We lost most of the windows in our house, a decent sized storage building, my dad’s library, a considerable part of the roof, and the oddest casualty was the satellite dish.

    Our yard was a perfect square with 3 rows of 3 trees each. The dish from our satellite was covering one tree and a across the yard, the pole was pulled out of the concrete, thrown several yards away, and wrapped like a twist tie around the tree.

    I was twelve when that happened, and every week or so until I was almost 31 years old, I had nightmares where a tornado was coming and I had to save the people in my dream. Thankfully, with some counseling, the nightmares have stopped, but the message of I have to protect myself stayed with me (and still hangs around) for the rest of my life.

    My heart shattered when I went through my divorce, and the walls around my heart doubled in size. There were only a couple of people – and even fewer men – I felt I could trust; that I felt had my best interest in mind.

    What does protecting women look like? Do women even need it? Is that a husbands’ job? Or any man’s job?

    First, for me, I took the verse Proverbs 4:23 as my shield: above all else guard your heart…

    What I didn’t realize is that God was my ultimate protector. As I lived life with that in place, I found it easier to let men enter my life (in appropriate ways) who truly wanted to protect me: spiritually, emotionally, and even physically.

    Once when we had a crazy snow storm in Nashville, my dear friend Brian drove me to a Starbucks. Brian is one of my closest friends. We both needed some hangout time and he knew there was no way in the world I’d be able to safely drive in the bad weather. He drove across town to get me, and we sat outside Starbucks in the cold, simply with each other. Even when I moved miles away, Brian was a safe person.

    Women aren’t always the best at receiving protection and love from men. I sat in a classroom at Hope College last year and we were always one desk short. A guy and girl walked in at the same time, and the girl sat on the floor. The guy insisted she take the desk. She refused. The professor looked at him and said,

    “I understand. It’s tough being a gentlemen these days.”

    Because of the culture shift I wrote about yesterday, it’s hard for you guys to love us like sisters in Christ. But please, don’t give up. Don’t be afraid to show us you are watching out for us. It doesn’t matter if you’re married or single, if the girl is your wife or your mother. My brother bought my mom flowers randomly a few months ago. Why? Because there aren’t many girls in this world that don’t like getting flowers.

    bouquet

    Show us that you’re trustworthy. Follow through with us. Keep your promises. Watch out for us in the physical realm by taking the side of the sidewalk closest to the road, getting the door for us. No, we aren’t helpless creatures, but at least in my experience, these tiny gestures help us open our hearts.

    All this may sound old fashioned, and maybe that’s partially due to the fact that I’m wired in an old fashioned way. I thought I didn’t need a man (whether a husband or not) to make it in life, but in the last few years of opening my heart to the men who were stepping in and protecting it in a variety of ways, I realize just how much I did need their protection. Fatherly advice. Friendly support. And eventually, a husband, Tim, who protects me fiercely and graciously.

    I really do believe if women take to heart how to believe the best about men (who sometimes feel like boys) and if men can take on the challenge of protecting women (who sometimes feel like they’re all alone), we can live holy, beautiful, generous lives enjoying who we are in Christ, male and female, brother and sister.

     

     

  • The Fear of Starting Over Again

    For the longest time, I didn’t even have a desk. What I placed my computer on from the time I was 19 until the time I was 30 was a cheap, round two-seater kitchen table. And I use the words kitchen table lightly, as it looked to be something that belonged more on the patio of my grandmother.

    Those were the days before social media as we know it now; they were the days that my biggest distraction was spam IMs from my AOL messenger. But oh, how I would write and write and write until my wrists hurt from the weird angle from which I hoisted my hands over my keys. I woke up in the morning, went to work at my job as a bookstore manager, or non-profit budget coordinator, or marketing associate, or youth pastor, or director of communication, or graphic designer, or project manager, or whatever-my-job-was-those-days, and given any free moment from my duties, it was back to writing. There was not enough time to contain those words.

    Now, I write for a living. I write books. Or, well, I’ve written three (1, 2, 3). I’ve written a bunch of articles for a bunch of places. I write messages for talks I give. Sometimes it’s a joy, sometimes it’s an obligation. Sometimes I put it aside and watch a season of Frasier on Netflix. Now, the challenge of blogging – of not being paid to do something and just doing it because of my love for it, well, I’m a little scared.

    I’m scared I won’t have the tenacity to follow through, and do this – yikes – every day, except on the weekends.

    I’m scared I’ll get disappointed in those darn numbers and say it’s not worth my time.

    I’m scared I’ll…

    Wow, this one’s hard to say.

    I’m scared I’ll run out of good words.

    There is a fear we must face when we do what we truly believe we are called to do: what if I try and fail?

    Then who am I?

    Oh, please remind me that I am a child of the King. A daughter of the One who sees me clothed in righteousness, not mistakes and sin and mud. Let me lean into You, my Father, when I break my own heart by filling it up with the chards of lies and not your soft truth.

  • Slaying My Gods of Blogging of Ego

    Maybe it’s just vocabulary, and maybe I’ve always been “a blogger” (I did have my own AOL member page when I was sixteen, and purchased my first domain where I journaled in 1998). I officially resigned from blogging in 2010 (but kept a website for essays and poetry). Then, when I needed to work on healing the wounds from my divorce, I went dark everywhere – no Facebook, Twitter, website. All the words I wrote were in journals and scraps of paper in my car when the right word or a picture would capture me. I started writing online again this year, but not with any consistency or purpose.

    This weekend, I went to the blogging conference Allume. Not because I wanted to learn about blogging, but because I had the chance to represent one of my favorite organizations, Blood:Water Mission, and in the process, catch up with a lot of friends I haven’t seen in a long, long time. The speakers were phenomenal and didn’t talk much about blogging; instead, they carved out the space around our blogs in which we find the reason and meaning: worship. Writing as a form of art and gratefulness (and therapy)…not how many stats, shares, or likes.

    I was reminded over and over again that is why I started blogging.

    Not because I had a book deal, or wanted one.

    Not because I wanted to build a platform or find people to affirm me or debate me.

    Because I love to write about what God has done and is doing in my life.

    Have any of the opportunities that emerged from writing online helped me find my purpose in life or quench the red fires that burn inside my soul?

    No.

    And at times, I gave blogging too much weight, allowing it to define me or brand me or market me. I’ve let those numbers determine how good I feel about myself or why I do what I do.

    Blogging was the god I prayed to: What should I write? What do I say to please you?

    Instead, it should have been the overflow of my prayers to the One True God: Open my eyes, show me truth. May my words only voice edification, wonder, mystery, love, hope, healing, joy.

    “Remember what it was like in the old days?” an old blogging friend asked. “When we wrote about the things that gave us pain and joy. When we were raw because nobody else was, and nobody else cared?”

    I do remember those days and how being raw is a norm and I am so proud of and grateful for those who speak from vulnerable places and illuminate into dark corners. I ask myself why…why now? Why speak when everyone else speaks and it feels like nobody will hear?

    Because it doesn’t matter who will hear. It only matters that I listen. That I obey. And that I write.

    So, here is to another new season. A season where it is not “Anne Marie Miller” (or “Anne Jackson” or “FlowerDust” or whatever moniker you may have known me by at some point in the last ten years).

    This is a season to write, to create, and to process here…regardless. To trust that God will move His mighty hand in whatever way He likes, as He always has, and He always will.