Woman Evolve with Sarah Jakes Roberts - Presence of Restrictions w/ Nona Jones
Episode Date: September 7, 2022There’s something to be said about a woman that restricts her focus on the Lord. Ya know? Drinking her water & minding her business—real bad! This week catch SJR ‘killing comparison’ with aut...hor, preacher, & business leader Nona Jones. Our co-host described herself in five words and it gave TOP TIER favor! As a trauma survivor, Nona shares how a fractured identity from early childhood misguided her definition of success. That was 'til the Holy Spirit chin checked her real quick! Sis, what are you securing your identity to? 'Cause if it ain't in Christ, then it ain't it! Swing by KillingComparison.com to pre-order a copy today! Then, guard your heart, stay in your lane, and hear how W.E. helped a Sista out during the advice segment. FREE, confidential, 24/7 support is available for anyone who has been sexually assaulted at 1-800-656-4673 or RAINN.org + for anyone in suicidal crisis at 9-8-8 or 988Lifeline.org. This podcast is sponsored by Zocdoc, BetterHelp, & Abide.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
God can't bless you for tend to be or who you compare yourself to.
He can only bless you and the lane that was created for you.
I feel that for somebody.
You don't need no itch, it's a unique boundary.
What?
I don't need your lights, I don't need your elevation.
All I need is a God fighting for me that's there for all things.
All things, all things.
Try.
One of the many things that I love about this podcast is being able to connect with woman
from all walks of life.
Some are familiar to us and others were just meeting for the first time.
Our guest today is a woman you want to get to know. Her name is Nona Jones and she's a multi-high-finated
social media and ministry maven filled with so much wisdom. And the very first
question she literally took my breath away with her story. I know a lot about
her success. I did not know a lot about the journey that led to her success.
I believe that you are going to be deeply enriched
by the journey of this woman who was learned
to kill comparison.
Let's fit it all in one episode if we can.
Okay, so listen, let me tell you something.
Noona Jones, you have just taken over,
I feel like this lane of like faith
and climbing the corporate ladder
and being an influencer, like can you just help me understand
like your journey, your story.
I feel like I started hearing about you
before I even had an opportunity to meet you. And they're like like there's this black woman at Facebook and she's all about faith and she's just merging at this intersection
And it feels so powerful. Who are you? What is your story break it down for me?
Oh my goodness. So first of all, thank you so much for having me
I really really appreciate just who you are and how you show up at the intersection of so many ecosystems in life is on and we just assume that's the whole story
But I am a
Statistically improbable product of grace and what I mean is there's an assessment
called the adverse childhood experiences assessment and
It's given to children who have experienced trauma in an effort to determine the probability
that they will have poor outcomes in life.
So that's drug addiction, premature death, delinquency, etc.
The assessment is on a scale of one to ten.
And if you have a three, you are considered high risk for adverse outcomes.
I took the survey and I sport eight.
I grew up in a home defined by physical, verbal,
and sexual abuse.
I'm an only child.
My mother, when I was seven years old,
I told her her boyfriend was sexually abusing me.
She had him arrested, but on the day of his release
from jail, she took me with her to pick him up
and brought him back home, where the abuse resumed again.
And at the age of 11, I tried to end my life.
I didn't grow up in the church.
I didn't know anything about hope, Jesus, the Bible, God, none of that.
I just knew that whatever was on the other side of death had to be better than what I was
experiencing. And God blocked my attempt
into my life because there was purpose on my life. And so, you know, the woman I am today
is truly a result of grace. I went to college on a full scholarship. My mother has a third
grade education. She couldn't even help me in school, but God surrounded me with teachers
and people who believed in my potential. Graduated from college, went into corporate America,
and what's funny is I got married at 21. So a month out of college, I got married, and people thought
I was either crazy or pregnant. Like literally, they were like, oh, she probably prayed. But it wasn't that. It was that I found
my husband and he was my rock. And we've been married 18 years at this point. Got married
right out of college, got into corporate America, and the Lord just favored me. Like seriously,
people in high level positions saw something on me. And at the age of 23, I was asked to step into an executive
role for a fortune 100 company. I think I was too young, if I'm honest, like there was some experience,
I didn't have, but through the mistakes that I was allowed to make, I am where I am today. So
I thank God for for his goodness and his faithfulness. Okay, so you're not just gonna drop this lifetime movie of a story on this.
And just end it with a prayer and think that we're not
gonna break this thing down.
We have questions about what you just said.
Okay, listen, oh my goodness, there are so many different
areas of connection and community that I feel like we are resonating
within hearing your story.
I want to go back to you as a little girl and I just want to understand for you, for those listening
and from you, like the experiences that you had with your mother, with sexual abuse, for so many women that defines them,
that defines their potential,
that defines their worth, their ability,
how were you able to have those experiences,
or did they in some ways define you?
Do you feel like part of your motivation to succeed
was getting out of here?
What was the connection between your highlight reel versus your pain?
Okay, I love this question so much because I recently spoke at a business conference.
And I share my story very vulnerable and transparently regardless of the audience, because what I have found to be true is that more of us
have been through this than haven't.
And so I was speaking to a group of about a thousand executives
and I was sharing my story.
And afterwards, women, men, I'm talking about college presidents,
superintendents of school districts, men, I'm talking about college presidents, superintendents of school districts, CEOs, came up to me in tears talking about how they had
experiences saying thing. And I say that because what I believe to be true, this
is not something that I've studied empirically, but this is what I believe to be true,
is that success can happen in one of two ways. Success can happen because you're running toward your future,
like your ambition is fueled by a vision for your future,
or it can happen because you are running from your past,
where your ambition is fueled by a sense of,
if I get this position, if I get this title,
if I make this much money,
if I get the vacation home, if I this title, if I make this much money, if I get the vacation home,
if I get married, then I will finally matter.
And for me, that's really what my story was.
And really writing my first book, Successfully Inside Out,
was about exploring the arc of that,
which was, I found myself at a White House dinner.
This was when President Obama was in office.
He was at a White House dinner,
and I'm looking around the room,
and there's all these like famous people
and dignitaries and world leaders.
And I was like, I don't know, 33, 34.
And in my mind, I was thinking,
I should really feel like I've made it.
Like I should feel good, but I felt so empty.
I felt so empty.
And I think that's what really kind of catalyzed
what I call my like self-inquisition, which was, okay, what is it that led me to pursue all of these
things? And I still feel empty on the other side of achieving them. And so for me, I think the sexual
abuse, the verbal abuse, just to give you a concrete example, the sexual abuse, the verbal abuse,
just to give you a concrete example,
the sexual abuse started when I was like five
and it didn't end till I was maybe 10 or 11.
But I remember one time, tell my mom, I was like,
mom, we gotta talk about what happened in my childhood.
I think I was maybe 22, 23.
My mother said to me, there's nothing to discuss
because it wouldn't have happened
if you would have just kept your legs closed.
Now, talk about identity crisis, right? It's like, wait a minute. So you mean to tell me that if I had just kept my legs closed at 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 that I would not have been a victim. But that's the type of stuff I carried into my career.
It's just this belief that, man, maybe I am defective
and the only way to fix my being defective
is to achieve more.
But the thing about success is,
there's nothing you can accumulate around you
that will fill the deficit within you.
And I had a deficit on the inside of me.
How do you repair yourself from the wounds of your mother not showing up for you in the way that most would assume that you needed, but I guess God made provision for.
Yeah, I mean, I went through the full arc of emotions. And I think sometimes
we hold ourselves accountable to being healed when healing is a journey. You know, we say things
like, oh, I'm over it. That was so long ago. Oh, yeah, I'm over it. But the reality is, you're
never over it. You learn how to live with it. And so I think what I had to do was a few things.
One, my mother has never apologized ever for what she allowed to happen. And part of my healing
process was taking her where she was. And what I mean by that is I had to realize that the reason why
my mother could not repent for what she did
is because the weight of the guilt
was so heavy on her that she couldn't even process it.
And her only defense mechanism
was to try to shift the blame to me.
And I think that was part of my healing was realizing,
you know what, she's not even capable of giving me
what I need.
And so the only solution is, I'm gonna have to forgive her.
I'm gonna have to release her from this debt of an apology.
Because apology's having no power.
Like somebody can apologize and earnest.
And if we don't accept it, we're still gonna be bitter.
And so that was a huge part of my journey was just realizing she's not even capable of repenting.
So I have to forgive her so that I can really release
my future from the power of my past
and begin to move forward.
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Okay, so this is gonna be a little bit
of a convoluted question because I can hear it in my hand,
but I don't know how to make it make sense outside of my mouth,
but we're gonna go go, and we're going to flow. How has who you are as a woman been shaped or defined by you comparing
who you do or do not want to be as a result of your first definition, first experience with
womanhood, not necessarily being in that capacity, something that you want to aspire to.
Oh my goodness. I think for many years,
I had this ideal me that unfortunately wasn't real,
because I was basically pulling bits and pieces
of what I thought was ideal from other people's lives.
And the problem with that is I never had their experience.
I didn't grow up in their household.
I didn't have their educational experience,
but I would look at them and I would be like,
man, why can't I be more like her?
Or, in my case, because I know that insecurity
is something that was kind of birthed within me
because of my past, I would be very, very sensitive to critique and criticism.
Which you need to grow. Like here's the thing, especially professionally. You need somebody to tell you where you're not like achieving your full potential to get better.
But I couldn't handle it because in my mind, I saw where the other person was who I was comparing myself to, and that critique, it just, it made the chasm
between me and her or me and him so clear.
And I was like, I can never be that.
And I think my experience, especially the things
my mother spoke over me, it created this like fractured
identity to where I never felt I measured up,
no matter what I achieved.
And I remember, Pastor Sarah, I remember getting awards,
like national awards.
And people would be like, oh my gosh, you're like
the first black person to do this.
You're the first black woman to do that.
And I didn't feel like it mattered because in my mind, yeah,
but look at what she's doing over there, right?
So I could never embrace who I was becoming
because I was comparing myself to who somebody else
already was.
And that's not necessarily who I was called B,
but it was my past that was constantly making me think,
you don't measure up, you're never gonna measure up.
It doesn't matter what you achieve,
it doesn't matter what your title is,
you're never gonna be enough.
And so I think that definitely shaped my understanding
of who I was as a woman.
It's just not enough no matter what I did.
Okay.
So like now I'm like in my own process because this is therapy because I'm thinking
about the many ways in which comparison confirmed my deficit.
Like, and I think that I learned to just seek out how do you compare here?
How do you compare there as confirmation of me not measuring
up.
So in order to kill comparison, which is what your new book
is about, do I have to one first stop comparing
or do I have to stop seeing my deficit?
Like what is the first step?
Oh, this is so good.
Well, I think the first step to any change is just acknowledgement.
That's something's not working. Something's not working. One of the things I talk about in the
book is I think I have my aha moment. This was early in the pandemic. I had like a full year of
speaking engagement, you know, things that canceled and postponed and all that. Well, there was this
like really large women's conference
that moved online.
And I remember I was checking Instagram one day.
And all of my friends were posting about this conference
they were speaking at.
I know the host, I was like,
why don't you mind me?
It's like she invited everybody in my circle,
except for me.
And what it did is it triggered something in me
that didn't feel good.
Like it just felt ugly, it felt toxic.
And I had all these why questions run into my mind.
You know, why wasn't I picked?
Why wasn't I selected?
And the Holy Spirit asked me
at an entirely different question.
The Holy Spirit said, why doesn't matter?
Ooh, why doesn't matter? Oh, why doesn't matter that you weren't invited
to do this thing?
Why doesn't matter that your friends were picked
and you weren't?
And I was like, what do you mean why doesn't matter?
Like because this is huge, he meant,
not my gonna be there.
And the Holy Spirit was like,
let me make sure I understand.
You think your value is only so much as your speaking engagements.
I was like, well, no, I know that, you know,
I'm fearfully and wonderfully made.
I know all that.
And the Holy Spirit said, you know that in your head.
Wow.
But you don't believe it in your heart.
And because you don't believe it in your heart,
you're insecure.
Oh, and I was like, I'm not insecure, Lord.
But that honestly, that step one is allowing that feeling of like, I just, I don't measure
up to take you on the journey of figuring out why does it matter?
Like, why does being left out, why does not have in the title, why does not being at the top of the lit,
what, why does that matter?
And once you understand that,
I think the second thing is,
comparison can take two forms.
I think sometimes we think of comparison as it's toxic.
Comparison can also be good,
if it's healthy because it can lead to inspiration.
The word inspiration actually means to breathe. When we inhale, breath in our lungs,
that's life. So when somebody inspires you because of comparison, that's life. But when you
exhale, that's what leads to death. So exploration is what happens when it's toxic comparison.
And when you start to feel yourself expired, that's when you know it's time to do some work.
So I think acknowledgement is step one and then being willing to do the work, that's step
two.
Okay.
Inspiration versus exploration.
It's a bomb.
I love that so much because to your point, it is a fine line.
I was going to ask you, like, how do I navigate this reality
that I am on social media?
There are people who inspire me.
There are people who expose me, especially from women
who are maybe listening and they're thinking to themselves,
like, I have a goal, I have this vision
that I've never seen modeled, I've never seen demonstrated before.
And so I am watching how someone else
conducts themselves in other rooms and I am watching how someone else conducts themselves in other rooms.
And I am watching how you speak in different atmospheres
and comparing how I show up so that I can grow.
But what is that fine line?
And I think that that inspiration versus exploration
begins to help us understand how we even show up
on social media.
What do you say to the person who's like,
you know what, I've compared myself
and I'm never gonna measure up
and I just don't think that I can even be inspired anymore.
Like, comparison has become completely toxic.
Well, let me first say that I think,
social media gets blamed for so much.
And talk about it.
Talk about it, give me it. Give me together.
Give me together.
This is how work in this space.
I know.
And I see the data.
Like I see the data.
So it gets blamed for so much.
But what I often encourage people to realize
is just because social media exposes insecurity,
that doesn't mean it's the source of the insecurity.
Because if you think about it, before Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok,
there was still insecurity,
but it was in our local community,
like the person we went to school with
or the woman we saw teach in Sunday school.
Our insecurity was triggered by those people.
Now what social media has done
is it's just given us a front row seat
to the fiction of other people's life and please hear me. The fiction you said it earlier,
everybody's posting the highlight reel. Like we post the day that we got the new car but we don't
post the day it got repossessed. Right? That's not an old by the way side. And so I think for someone who feels like number one, I can never measure up.
First of all, don't speak in absolutes.
Because the question becomes, what measuring stick
are you using?
When you say I can never measure up, measure up to what?
Because the reality is God didn't die for us
when we were at our best.
Jesus didn't lay down his life when we were at our best. He laid down his life when we were at our best. Jesus didn't lay down his life when we were at our best.
He laid down his life when we were at our worst.
So when we say we don't measure up,
we're not saying we don't measure up to the love of God.
What we're saying is we don't measure up
to the standards and expectations of men.
And those things are fickle and fleeting and changing.
And so my encouragement to any woman who's struggling
with this is first to realize insecurity
is the result of securing your identity to an insecure foundation.
And you have to figure out, one of my securing my identity too is it my relationship status,
my financial status, my job title, my academic credentials, all of these things that are
unstable, they're fickle, like these things that are unstable, they're
fickle, like people like them one day, they don't like them the next.
If you're securing your identity to those things, step one is we have to begin to detach
our identity from those things.
You are more than your job title, you're more than your bank account balance, you're more
than your speaking engagements.
You were designed with purpose that cannot be negated,
no matter what you do or do not achieve,
because God approved of you at the point
that he decided you were necessary for creation.
Okay, so I hate to interrupt all of this good conversation,
but I wanted you to know that I want to talk to you too.
I want to hear your story, I want to hear your thoughts
and opinions. You can send hear your story. I want to hear your thoughts and opinions.
You can send me your application, your video,
to be a co-host to podcastatwomenevolved.com.
Let me know what it is you want to talk about.
Why it's important to you that you be on the podcast.
Maybe you like girl, I am not going to be on anybody's podcast.
I don't do talking to people.
First of all, this is a sign overcome yourself.
But if not, you can send me an advice question podcast at
woman evolve.com. Okay, let's get back to the podcast. I love what you're saying
about securing your identity to an insecure foundation. You shared so much
about your story. How do we overcome when our nuclear family, the family that we've
been raised in, was the insecure foundation.
Like we didn't have a choice, but that was the foundation that we've been given.
And now I'm having to re-anker myself, or my identity is just secured at this pain.
It is secure to this trauma that I experienced.
And for me, I don't know, you know,
maybe someone's listening like me.
There was almost this comfort
and my identity being secured to my trauma
because it was at least what I knew
and it required too much faith for my identity
to be secured to the love of God.
I didn't think that I would be able to live up to it.
I didn't think that I would be able to perform
in a way that earned it.
And so I would rather be secured to this identity of she's a man. She's out of control.
She's the one that no one's counting on. Then to be held accountable to a standard
that felt out of reach for me. Oh my gosh. So first of all, yes, that is, I think that's problem
number one, is that some of us have allowed our trauma
to become our identity.
It's so much so that if we, like healing
is almost a threat to our identity.
Yeah, yeah.
It's like, yeah.
Yeah, so we say things like, oh, I want to be delivered,
but in reality, we don't, because deliverance
is unfamiliar terrain.
And so then we would have to create a new identity and that scares us.
I think back on the story of Saul and David, you know, everybody knows about how, you know,
Saul was jealous of David.
But it's interesting because people often think that David triggered Saul's insecurity,
but that's not true.
If you go back and you look at the story, you'll notice that when Samuel approached Saul
and told him that the whole attention of Israel
has been turned to him and his family,
Saul was like, why would you say such a thing to me?
Like, do you know where I come from basically?
He was like, we are the smallest tribe
and why are you even looking at it?
And the reality is Saul saw himself as small,
even though his father was a man of standing.
And so sometimes it's the way that we see ourselves,
not the reality, it's the way we see ourselves.
And I think it's important that we have the power
to change how we see ourselves.
You can make a decision right now to walk in your power.
You can make that decision, but it's gonna be scary.
If you only have known trauma,
if you've only known victimization,
it's gonna be scary to walk in power.
And some people will even try to keep you in your trauma
because they don't recognize this new you.
But you have to make a decision.
It's like, I don't want my future to be defined by my past.
I want my future to be defined by what God is calling me to do.
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I want to break that down a little bit.
This is walking in your power because I, one, wholeheartedly, 100%, I'm behind you, I
get it.
I think that one of the things that I want to break down though is that when we talk about
walking in power, it seems powerful.
But if you are going to have to release your identity that has been connected to your
trauma and we talk about identity being connected to trauma, it may mean that you are just
angry all the time.
It may mean that you don't let people in. Like your identity is rooted to your trauma because of the barriers or restrictions that
you created in order to protect yourself from experiencing another trauma.
But walking in your power may not necessarily make you feel powerful to lose out of your
mind this notion of, I'm not going to compare myself anymore.
Means that I am going to have to walk blindly into my future with trust that who
I am becoming has never been seen before.
Who I'm becoming has nothing to do with who is beside me.
And there is a vulnerability connected to that that is powerful, but that doesn't always
feel powerful.
Does that make sense to my, am I saying anything?
That makes perfect sense.
And actually, so I brought my Bible to that point
at some point we would get into the words.
Throughout the book, I used the story of Saul and David,
but I focus on Jonathan.
And the reason I focused on Jonathan
is because number one, a lot of people don't talk about Jonathan.
But when Saul said that David,
people are gonna praise him and what else is he gonna have
at the kingdom, Saul was worried about how David
was going to impact his legacy, which was Jonathan.
And he literally said to Jonathan,
the son of Jesse is going to take the kingdom from you.
And yet Jonathan somehow, some way,
didn't feel threatened by
David. As a matter of fact, he gave him his royal garments. He gave him his
weapons. And he was like, go forth, brother. And it was curious to me. I was like,
how is it that he wasn't threatened by the one who was really his threat? Well,
if you look at the book of first Samuel, I believe it's in, yes, chapter 14. I
want to read just a quick
verse to kind of set this up. So basically, you know, Jonathan had attacked the Philistines
and the Philistines were, they were arranging themselves to go to battle with Israel. Israel
had no weapons because the Philistines had made it such that there were no blacksmiths available
to them. The only people who had a weapon, a saw and Jonathan,
saw was in this place called Nickmash.
He had 600 soldiers with him.
He was under a pomegranate tree, chilling.
Jonathan was like, no, no, no,
we're gonna go and fight some Philistines.
So he goes by himself with his armor bear
to this outpost of Philistines
and he says something very powerful. So this is in verse 6,
Jonathan says to his young armor bear, come let's go over to the outpost of those uncircumcised men.
Perhaps the Lord will act in our behalf. Nothing can hinder the Lord from saving,
whether by many or by feet. To hit on your point about power. Power isn't always about having resources.
It's about having access to the source. And that is that is the father. Jonathan knew that it
wasn't the weapons that we're going to win the war. It was the favor of God. And so if you have
the favor of God in your life, you don't have to compare yourself to other people. Because your lane is your lane.
And the father of the universe is for you.
And I think when we internalize that,
that becomes our power,
is trusting in the power of the father.
Mm-hmm.
Can you tell me,
what did you ever have like an aha moment?
You told me that from the time you graduated
that you were just favored,
placed in executive positions, maybe a little too early, but still there. Did you ever have a moment
when you recognized that the favor that you had experienced, the protection, and spite of the
trauma that you experienced, what was like your aha moment that you went from the little girl who
was trying to kill herself, not because she felt like Jesus was on the other side.
She had no idea of faith
to like having this radical encounter with faith
that changed the way you saw everything
that happened in your life.
You know what?
It actually wasn't that long ago.
I would say it was probably four years ago,
and I'll tell you exactly what happened.
So I have felt like an imposter throughout my whole career because I was always like half the age
of the people at the courtroom table. I was usually the only
person of color, many times the only woman. And so I often
felt like an imposter. But after I was recruited to Facebook,
I'll never forget, I was talking to a pastor about the work that I was doing.
And I was just head down doing the work. And he said, No, no, he said, do you not realize how
strategically God has placed you? Like, he has placed you in a leadership role in the world's
largest social network. Because I was telling him about some meetings I was in. And I was like,
I mean, not really. I'm just kind of doing the work.
But he said, no, no, no, no.
God has placed you there out of all the people.
You say it yourself.
You're not qualified to be there, but God placed you there.
It was in that moment that my eyes were open.
And I began to think about the arc of my life.
And how every position I ever held
was always created out of thin air. How I was never, ever qualified for anything.
I was ever called to do.
And I realized, you know what?
It is so true.
God does not call the qualified.
He qualifies the call because I am not qualified.
And I thank God every day for what he's called me to.
But that was the moment.
It's having someone pointed out.
Like you, you're occupying a space
and you didn't even realize what God has entrusted you with.
That was powerful for me.
So when you walk into these positions
that are created out of thin air,
or just any new endeavor at all,
do you have to coach yourself about not comparing? Like do you have to
like kind of start back at chapter one? Like what are you up against right now in your life where
you were having to kill comparison in order to just receive whatever favorite positioning
is connected to your current vision, your current reach, your current projects?
Oh my gosh. Well, I will tell you it's it's very difficult and I'll kind of split it out into the professional sector in the
ministry.
And the professional side of it is very difficult.
Comparison is difficult because I work in a very intense
environment. So to give you an example, I would say like 99%
of the people that work at our company
graduated from an Ivy League school.
So my colleagues, Harvard Yale, Princeton, Stanford, Cornell, like that's the general mix,
I went to the University of Florida, which is not a bad school, but it's not Harvard.
And so we get into conversations about educational background, it's easy to be like,
oh, man, I don't really measure up to these people, but then I have to remember, I didn't
go to that school and yet God still placed me on this table.
And so there is something on the inside of me that deserves to be here.
And that's on the professional side.
In the ministry side, I have found this to be so interesting.
It's funny because I've talked to several people who they said, I just want to, you know, I want to be like a big
printer and, you know, I just want to do all these things. I'm like, why? And most of the time, it's because
their identity is fractured. And they feel like if I just have more followers, a bigger platform, then I'll finally matter.
I think in the ministry side, comparison can be huge
because we're looking at followers,
we're looking at platforms, we're looking at who's on TV
and this, that, and the other.
What I've had to learn to do is literally turn it off
and turn it down.
I don't know what half of my friends are doing,
because I don't follow what half of my friends are doing. Mm-hmm. Because I don't follow what they're doing
because I don't ever want to get to a place
where it's like, oh my gosh, why am I not doing that?
Why is she doing this?
Why is he doing this?
I have to guard my heart every single day
so that I can maintain a posture
of celebrating success versus feeling like,
oh, I have to compete.
But that's the human frailty.
Is this idea that I only matter to the degree
that I'm on this stage or I have this many followers?
And we have to guard our hearts against that.
I love that guarding your heart, I think, is, you know,
so paramount to really navigating a place of wholeness,
a place of peace.
Like, I think a lot of times we talk about wanting to access
that peace, the confidence, the joy that we know is available
to us, but it doesn't happen without restriction.
And what I hear you saying is like, I restrict what I take in,
I restrict what I allow to come out, I take them thoughts
and move them out of the way.
And from that place, you're able to be anchored and rooted.
And a way that allows you to continue to maximize your potential.
I won't even say be successful.
I'll just say continue to maximize your potential, which is what we're experiencing
you do through your life.
Amen.
Amen.
And I think we have to like, we have to guard our eyes to guard our heart.
Because our eyes truly are the window to the
soul.
And so what we see can influence how we feel about ourselves, what we think about our
potential, because again, we're comparing ourselves to somebody else.
And so I do think it's important for us to be vigilant about that because the enemy
he loves to strike up an adequacy in us.
Because what I do think is an adequacy,
believing we're an adequate,
it has a way of making us take ourselves out of the game
before we even get eliminated, right?
I'm not gonna try because I can't do that.
So that's who?
Well, because I just see how she's doing it.
I don't do it like that.
And?
Yeah. There are many different ways to do it.
I love that.
Starting my day with prayer and meditation
has honestly changed my life.
It allows me space to clearly hear from God
and to set intentions for my day.
I've even found myself using the abide
app in the middle of the day when it starts feeling
like anything other than what I'd hoped for.
Whether an unexpected issue arises at work, my kids start to stress me out, or I'm simply
feeling a bit off, meditating has helped me recenter and mentally get my day back on track.
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Okay, so we have an advice question that I want to get into because I know that you are going to help a sister out. Okay, so here we go.
What are some things that you're thinking about that helps you find your way in this season
as you navigate experiencing your own personal revelations as you go deeper with God, leading
others deeper professionally and in all other relationships on a regular basis and growing
your business,
which is also deeply tied in ministry.
I tried to make that make sense,
but also that's what I'm asking for help with.
How do you make sense of it all?
Well, I think I got the general just of the question.
And I think it's so important to have like a regular practice
of prayer and repentance before God, regular
practice daily.
I don't make any decision without going before God and really seeking His wisdom and His
counsel.
I think that's how I'm able to just navigate the, oh my gosh, there's so many changes happening
on my job right now. I was just meeting with my team. They came in from all over the world and
we just had a bunch of re-orges and a whole bunch of things happening. But through prayer,
I was able to hear God's wisdom on how to navigate it. And so I think it's important to have that
regular prayer practice. And not necessarily rely on other people to be your intermediary
to the father.
You know, sometimes we'll say, will you pray for me?
Yeah.
Pray for yourself.
Pray for yourself.
Because it's spending time with God that enables you to hear his voice.
Like if I don't spend time with somebody, how will I know their voice?
Yeah.
You have to spend time with God to hear his voice.
And that's what keeps me grounded.
Whether it's in business, in marriage, ministry, et cetera,
is spending that time with God and not letting life
interfere with it, which is easy to do.
You know, children, mom, I need this, mom, I need that.
I've got to have my time with God in order
to make sure that I'm hearing from him
and doing what he's calling me to do.
Can you define what practice every sentence looks like for you?
Oh yeah. So one of the things that I do is I take the Lord's prayer and I try to personalize it
because I think that provides such a great roadmap for how to go before God. You know,
map for how to go before God. You know, our father who is in heaven, you are my heavenly father, you see all, you know all. But then when you get to the place of, you know, forgive me my
transgressions as I forgive my transgressors, it's then the opportunity for me to go before God
is the more I ask you forgiveness specifically for how I responded to that email.
Yeah.
I ask you for forgiveness, Lord,
for how I showed up for my husband,
I ask you for forgiveness for the pride in my heart,
thinking I know better than you
and doing it on a daily basis.
It's important because I think repentance
is really the training ground for humility.
Yeah.
And we know this, you know, God resists the proud,
but he gives grace to the humble.
Yeah.
You're not going to be humble without a regular practice
of repentance because you will see how frail you are
before God.
And you'll learn to be sympathetic to other people
when they fail you.
I think that that is exactly how I would respond
to this question. I think it does is exactly how I would respond to this question.
I think it does come down to humility.
Sometimes we can become so burdened by our responsibilities that we think we are in control
of the outcomes that we are in control of how the day flows.
And so it begins like, how do I balance all of this?
How do I stay in control?
How do I feel like I'm ahead of the game?
How do I make sure I'm pouring into everyone
and feeding into everyone?
But humility allows us to remember
like that is not my job.
My job is to stay low.
My job is to make sure that I can clear the channel
and that I can listen.
And so the question isn't,
how can I be there for everyone else?
But how can I be so in tune with what God is developing within myself that I'm able to share it to the world around me?
And how can I be clear enough to hear when God is challenging me through my relationships and my connections with an opportunity to grow?
But I think it's less about how do I be the captain of this ship?
But more so, like how can I be a really good passenger while we're all on this ship called life?
Unshore where we're all on this ship called life, unsure of where we're going,
unsure of the turbulence, but certain that there is a destination ahead of us that's going to
allow us to experience God's favor. That, to me, it relieves pressure because there's pressure
and trying to be there for everyone. Yes, there is and a lot of times what happens is in trying to be there for everyone.
We end up so empty and so deleted and we end up not only missing our purpose because we're
so busy trying to help everybody on theirs.
We end up missing our purpose but we end up feeling unfulfilled because we're giving
so much to other people.
So I just I love how you said that and I pray that we internalize it because we have to take care of ourselves.
Okay, so taking care of ourselves
also means killing compares.
And where do we get the book going and tell us?
How do we find it?
How do we kill slay this giant
and become more like Johnathan?
Yeah, so it's available wherever books are sold,
you can also go to nonajones.com
to find the book as well as killing comparisid.com.
I'm posting about it regularly on my Instagram.
All my handles are the same.
At Nona, not Nora.
I get called Nora Jones all the time, but I am not her.
Never heard of it.
The internet has given me her net worth, but Bank of America doesn't recognize. But, make up America needs to fix whatever glitch they're having to fix up.
And, no, then thank you so much for your time, for your heart, for your story, for your
lessons, for your light.
It's been such a joy to learn from you and blame for me today.
So much love, much light to you.
Oh, thank you.
My sister, I appreciate you, much love and much light to you and all that you my sister I appreciate you much love and
much light to you and all that you're doing it got a larger territory. Thank you take care.
God bless. Bye. I try not to be and I told you so kind of person but listen. I
told you so I knew that no one was someone you should know. Listen I'm just a
messenger out here doing the Lord's work to the best of my ability.
Chances are you're more than able to join in these efforts. I want to be a messenger for your story. I want to hear about what you've gone through, how you are growing and evolving and bringing others along for the ride.
others along for the ride. You know, as a co-host, that's how I want to learn.
I want you to send me a one to two minute video
about yourself to podcast at waman evolved.com.
And let's make this thing happen.
Okay, you can also drop your advice questions
in that inbox too.
If you want to know my two cents on anything
happening in your world, I'll talk to you next week. you