We are an Easter People

Irene Rowland MS, NCC, LPC

We are an Easter people!!


We are an Easter people!!
Just as Jesus experienced resurrection after much suffering, so can we become a new creation. He is the way to our having the resurrection to eternal life with God the Father. He can also be the way, in the here and now, to our resurrection from all the ways we suffer. We can be pulled down because of life circumstances and sometimes the sufferings are of our own making. God will never let go of our hand, but sometimes we let go of His. On the cross, His outstretched hands are inviting us once again to see Him, hear Him and to take His hand if we’ve let go of it. He can give us both the beautiful eternal life that He’s prepared for us, but also the new life of redemption here where we can understand Him to be our trustworthy companion in the journey of life. We will still have irritations, inconveniences, confusing situations, troubling times and even heartaches. Relying on His friendship can give us peace in turbulent times. He is faithful and steadfast.


God is able to reach us in many ways.
Sometimes, He helps us to lead a deeper, more fulfilling life through working with a kind and competent therapist. Let’s face it, addictions, heartaches, marital discord and many other troubles are often much bigger than we can handle alone. God can allow others to be His hands and feet in order to minister to us in a visible, tangible way. At times, it just helps to hear an audible voice reassuring us that we’re on the right path or challenging us to go deeper. Others can speak life into a situation by asking the right questions. Often, we have had the answers deep within ourselves all along. It can be very affirming to see ourselves through someone else’s eyes who see us as valuable and made in God’s image. They can be a mirror of truth.

Counseling can be challenging work but well worth the investment of time and energy for your own well-being and also the positive ripple effect on the others in your life. Growth is worth pursuing. A fulfilling life is what God wants for each of us and He uses many ways to help us to get there. Consider the options set before you, pray, and decide what you’d like your answer to be to the call of using this particular avenue. What a joy to become who you were created to be, free from the old struggles that hold you back! He can bring healing as you discover how to become more open to receive the great love that He has for you. There is hope. There is redemption waiting for you.

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W e’ve all been there. You’re standing in front of the mirror, maybe trying to psych yourself up for a big presentation or a first date, and that little voice in your head—let's call him "Lloyd"—decides to pipe up. "Are we really wearing that shirt?" Lloyd asks. "And by the way, remember that time in third grade when you called your teacher 'Mom'? Yeah. You're still that person." Lloyd is a jerk (no offense to any Lloyd’s reading this, I know you’re awesome). But Lloyd is also a symptom of a much larger, much noisier cultural problem: the confusion between self-esteem and self-worth . Our culture is obsessed with "hacking" our confidence. We have 15-step skincare routines to make us feel pretty, LinkedIn badges to make us feel smart, and enough positive affirmation mugs to fill a small warehouse. But here’s the kicker: you can have sky-high self-esteem because you just got a promotion and your hair looks great, and still have zero self-worth when the lights go out. The Great Value Mix-Up Let’s get nerdy for a second. In therapy-speak, self-esteem is often transactional. It’s how you feel about yourself based on your performance, your looks, or how many people liked your last social media post. It’s a roller coaster. You win? High esteem. You trip over a flat surface in public? Low esteem. Side note: This one is personal for me. Self-worth , on the other hand, is your intrinsic value. It’s the baseline. It’s the belief that even if you lose your job, your gym goals fail, and you accidentally reply-all to a company-wide email with a meme of a cat eating spaghetti, you are still fundamentally valuable. A Little Help from Upstairs Even if you aren’t hitting the pews every Sunday, there’s some serious psychological gold in the Catholic perspective on this. The Church teaches that you are Imago Dei —made in the image and likeness of God. Before you roll your eyes, think about the clinical implication of that. If your value is "given" to you by a Creator, it means you didn't earn it. And if you didn't earn it, you can’t lose it. In the Catholic view, we often get caught in the "guilt trip" stereotype. But true humility isn't thinking less of yourself; it's thinking of yourself less . It’s realizing that you don't have to be the CEO of the Universe to be worthy of love. You’re a beloved child, which is basically the ultimate spiritual tenure; you can’t be fired from being you. How to Actually Cultivate Self-Worth (Without the Fluff) If you’re tired of Lloyd’s commentary, here are a few ways to start building a foundation that doesn't crumble when life gets messy: 1. Fire the "Performance Review" Judge Most of us run our lives like we’re constantly under a 24/7 performance review. Stop asking, "Did I do enough today to deserve to feel good?" and start asking, "How did I honor my inherent dignity today?" Did you rest when you were tired? Did you say no to a toxic request? Those are acts of self-worth. 2. Embrace the "Messy Stable" There’s a beautiful irony in the Nativity story—God showing up in a literal barn. It’s a reminder that holiness and worth don’t require a pristine environment. Your life can be a bit of a dumpster fire right now, and you are still a masterpiece in progress. You don’t have to "clean up" before you’re allowed to value yourself. 3. Practice "Radical Acceptance" This is a favorite in the therapy world. It doesn't mean you like your flaws; it means you stop fighting the reality of them. “Yes, I am someone who struggles with anxiety. And yes, I am still worthy of a seat at the table.” When you stop wasting energy hating your shadow self, you have more energy to actually grow. Finding Your Way Home: Holy Family Counseling Center Sometimes, Lloyd’s voice is just too loud to handle on your own. If you find that your sense of worth is consistently tied to your "to-do" list or that old wounds are keeping you from believing you’re enough, you don’t have to navigate that desert alone. At Holy Family Counseling Center , we specialize in this exact intersection of psychological expertise and spiritual depth. Our clinicians help you peel back the layers of "performance-based identity" to find the resilient, God-given worth underneath. Whether you are dealing with depression, anxiety, or just the heavy weight of expectations, we offer a space where your faith is respected as a part of your healing. You can find us at www .holyfamilycounselingcenter.com to start a conversation that’s about healing, not just "fixing."