Woman Evolve with Sarah Jakes Roberts - The Gift of Rejection
Episode Date: October 3, 2024Alright, sis, get ready because this episode is about to hit different! Pastor Sarah Jakes Roberts is chopping it up with none other than Nona Jones, and trust me—you’re gonna want to lean all the... way in for this one. Nona’s got a new book coming out called The Gift of Rejection, and they’re talking about how rejection—yep, the thing that stings—can actually be a blessing in disguise. They’re getting real about the times life said 'no' and how those moments actually pushed them toward a bigger purpose. You’ll learn how to flip rejection on its head, build resilience, and see that closed doors are really just God’s redirection. Grab your journal, sis—you’re gonna want to take notes on this one!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The Holy Spirit said, Nona, you've been looking at rejection all wrong
because you're so focused on the pain of it that you miss the purpose of it.
And that's when he said rejection is actually a gift in my hands.
I realized that in every single situation, pain was its wrapping paper.
But there was a lesson on the inside of it.
That's where it came from, was just recognizing that God can use it
for your good and his glory, even when it hurts.
What's up, y'all?
It's your girl, Kayla Wannake, stepping in for our girl, SJR.
Now I know some of you are wondering,
where's Pastor Sarah?
Don't worry, she's taking some well-deserved rest
after that incredible conference we just had.
Sis poured out her heart and soul on that stage
and now it's time for her to recharge.
And we love that for her, right?
Now, speaking of conference, baby,
if you were there, you already know
it was an experience like no other.
God didn't just show up,
He showed out every single night.
I'm still trying to process it all. I didn't just show up, he showed out every single night.
I'm still trying to process it all.
I had so many favorite moments,
whether it was Dr. Anita's mother wounds
or when Pastor Sarah just laid out that surrender moment,
Pastor Cheryl Brady, Pastor T. Renee Glenn,
laying me out, my edges, my makeup.
Listen, Spanx came down.
It was just so much.
The worship was off the chain.
And for me personally, you know that Pajama Panel has a special place in my heart.
And I'm sure many of you had your own moments that really were life changing.
Now, we're going to take a moment and hear from one of our incredible voices
that we had at conference, Nona Jones.
Sis brought that fire,
and what you're about to hear is a powerful conversation
between Nona and Pastor Sarah
diving into something we all know too well,
which is rejection.
But listen, they're about to flip the script
and show us how rejection is actually a gift.
So lean in, get your notepads,
and let's get into this wisdom.
Why would you try to make us believe
that rejection is a gift?
Like, what is wrong with you?
Let's get right into the nitty
gritty. Like, I'm going to ask you the questions they're not going to ask you on Good Morning
America. I'm a professional. Why would you try to make us believe that rejection is a gift when all
it does is make us nervous, insecure, anxious. Now we're people pleasing because I don't want
to experience rejection. And here you come with your book telling me that rejection is actually a gift.
It doesn't make sense.
No, it doesn't make sense.
And when God gave me the revelation, I was so confused, but I'm going to tell you the
story that led to the revelation.
So when I was in high school, first of all, I was like, I was the chunky girl for most
of my childhood, right?
So I was never the girl that guys wanted.
But when I got into high school, I lost some weight
and this guy who I really liked, he liked me too.
And so he asked me to be his girlfriend
and I was just over the moon.
So anyway, he was smart, he was handsome,
he was all the things.
And one summer he went away to do an internship
at a state senator's office about five hours away.
And he called me and was like,
hey, I'm coming back in a week.
I want to take it to the movies.
And I was so excited.
I got my hair done, my nails done.
Like I was ready, okay?
But an hour before we were supposed to go,
he was supposed to pick me up.
He called me and was just like,
hey, I had a family emergency.
I'm going to have to reschedule.
And I was just like, what?
Of course I was bummed, but I was like, look, it's a family emergency.
What are you going to do?
So anyway, I called some of my friends and I was like, hey, y'all,
y'all want to go to the movies.
And so they were like, sure.
So we go to this movie theater and I'm standing in line and I look over
and I see my boyfriend holding hands with another girl.
Now, at the moment that I saw him, he looked back and saw me and like the color drain from his face, right?
So, as you can imagine, I was so crushed.
It's like I felt abandoned. I felt discarded. I felt humiliated.
Like my friends knew I was in this relationship.
And so, you know, the guy the next day,
he was calling me, trying to apologize.
I wouldn't take his call.
I said, forget it.
So anyway, fast forward, this is maybe 15 years.
I'm working at Meta,
well, the company formerly known as Facebook.
And a pastor friend of mine reached out to me
and was like, hey, I need your help with something.
And I said, sure, what's up?
He said, I need you to help me take down
one of my mentees Facebook pages,
which was crazy to me because I was like,
I've had people ask me to help them get their page back up
after it was taken down.
I've never had anyone ask me to take it down.
So I was like, I don't know if I can help you with that.
That's really weird what's going on.
He said, look, this is one of my sons in the ministry.
People are saying really mean things on his page.
I need you to help me take it down.
And I said, well, I don't know if I can help with that,
but send me the link and I'll see what I can do.
I'll escalate it.
So I click on the link that he texts me.
Staring back at me is a picture of my ex-boyfriend.
And I scroll down on the page
and I see comments from people basically being
like, you know, cheaters get what they deserve. You know, this is this was he had it coming.
You know, I hope his wife is okay. All this stuff, right? And I'm like, what happened?
Well, so I don't normally watch television. I'm just not a big television watcher. So I apparently missed the news that he was murdered
by his mistress who also tried to kill his wife. And knowing it, this is not the direction that I
thought the story was going. Listen, listen, I, so I go, I click on news articles, right?
Cause I'm like, this can't, this can't be real.
I click on news articles.
It is absolutely true.
Not only was he murdered by his mistress,
but he had been cheating on his wife with many women
who came out of the woodworks after the fact.
His wife is the woman he was at the movie theater with
that night.
And so in that moment, it's like Twilight Zone, right?
Like the way you feel right now,
like multiply it times like 50.
I wasn't a Twilight Zone because what I realized was
I had thought he was cheating on me with her.
Maybe he was cheating on her with me.
And I could have ended up on either side of that situation.
And so when I prayed about it, I was like,
Lord, thank you for protecting me.
Because those 15 years there, I had been angry, bitter.
I was so upset by what he did to me.
But in that moment, the Holy Spirit said,
Nona, you've been looking at rejection all wrong
because you're so focused on the pain of it
that you miss the purpose of it.
And that's when he said, rejection is actually a gift in my hands.
And I said, whoa.
But I started to actually think about all of the rejection experiences I had experienced in my life.
And I realized that in every single situation, pain was its wrapping paper,
but there was a lesson on the inside of it
that either shaped my character or propelled me into purpose.
There was something in it that ended up being a gift.
And so that's where it came from,
was just recognizing that God can use
it for your good and his glory, even when it hurts.
You said pain was its wrapping paper. I feel like that is worth marinating, Lauren, because
some of us don't get past the wrapping paper. I've never had a gift that I thought was so
beautiful that I don't want to open it. But I have had some
issues in my life that felt so painful that it felt like there was nothing that could come from
the inside of it. But the paradigm of pain being wrapping paper, and as daring to do the work to
navigate the pain to figure out what's inside of it feels like a journey that each of us should be willing to take. But tearing that wrapping paper over open is almost more painful than the incident itself.
How do you get to a space where you're willing to say, okay, if pain is a wrapping paper,
how do I carefully, my husband always when he opens presents, he never rips it open because
when he was growing up, they reuse wrapping paper.
And so like he opens it very carefully so that he can preserve the wrapping paper.
I feel like that is kind of how we're going to have to navigate pain being the wrapping
paper.
How do we gently begin to tear open that pain so that we can figure out the purpose connected
to it?
I think it starts with, I mean, honestly, the reason why I wrote the book is because
just the awareness that rejection is a gift in and of itself is a paradigm shift. Because
what that does is it puts you in a different posture from where at first you would see
yourself as I'm a victim, this thing happened to me, I'll never get through it, I'll never
get over it. But now that you recognize, oh wait, there's a gift in this.
It places you in the posture of a student, which is, okay, what can this teach me about
myself?
What can this teach me about other people?
What is it that God may want to work through this situation for my good?
I believe that rejection is a gift
that will make you better if you open it
or bitter if you don't.
And many people are walking around bitter
because like you said, we stop at the wrapping paper.
And I think having that just thought like, okay,
this hurts and there's also something
that I need to learn from this.
What is the lesson?
That's how you start to slowly peel it back
and begin to explore what it wants to teach you.
Okay, so I have a question for you
because I think when we think about rejection,
we're generally thinking about us being
on the receiving end of rejection.
But I wanna talk a little bit about the reality
that in order for us to have boundaries,
in order for us to lead,
in order for us to have self-care, for us to lead, in order for us to have self-care,
we have to reject certain people, certain things.
That to me is another gift of rejection, is what you get to hang on to when you dare to
reject other people's expectations, other people's needs in an effort to protect yourself.
Has this paradigm changed the way that you handle the reality of rejecting other people?
Do you think it's fair to say that when we set boundaries,
we're rejecting other people?
Let me start there.
I think that's actually a really important insight,
which is yes.
Rejection is ultimately what we do when we say no
to the demand that somebody placed on us.
And sometimes rejection is necessary. It's a gift to us, but it's also a gift to the demand that somebody placed on us. And sometimes rejection is necessary.
It's a gift to us,
but it's also a gift to the other person.
And I'll frame it this way.
I'm sure you understand this.
There are people who see your success, my success,
somebody else's success as an opportunity
to build their empire on what God has built through you.
Now, once you become aware of that,
it is important that you place a boundary
between you and that person,
because otherwise that person will actually
kind of absorb the glory that God has for your life
for their self,
and that will actually damage their character.
And I think as leaders,
one of the responsibilities that we have
is to help people grow in character.
So if somebody is like,
I believe that I'm more qualified than you know they are,
it's important to say no,
because there's some learning and growth
and development they have to do.
Now for the other person who's experiencing that,
of course that's painful, right?
Like it's painful to have somebody close a door for you,
but they're closing the door because they know
that there's more growth needed.
And so there's a gift in that rejection
for you as an individual to have somebody close a door
because you're not ready to walk through it yet.
There's a gift in that.
And so again, having that as like the thought paradigm,
it becomes a learning opportunity
on both sides of the experience.
Man, okay. So this makes me think about all of the ways that I have betrayed myself in
order to avoid rejecting someone else. What do you think we have to do as people who are in relationships, parenting, friendships,
in order to reconcile the, or normalizing,
I'm gonna use the word normalizing rejection.
Because I do feel like if you've gone through trauma,
if you've had some insecurities,
rejection feels like a re-triggering.
But do you think that we have to normalize rejection
in order to both understand
it, reconcile it for ourselves, but also to be okay with rejecting other people? Or does it,
it feels like a wound every time? Of course, because in order to even experience rejection,
we have to first have had the hope that we were accepted. So like, you don't feel rejected because
you didn't get a job that you didn't apply for. And you don't feel rejected because somebody you're not interested in isn't interested
in you. As a matter of fact, you're like, thank you. You know, like you don't feel rejected
because somebody else's parents don't view you as their child. No, you feel rejected
because you applied for the job and didn't get it because you gave the best years of
your life to someone and they walked away because your mother or your father,
they abandoned you.
And so when we experience rejection,
it doesn't just injure our pride,
it actually shatters our hope, which breaks our heart.
That's what makes it hurtful is because you have to have
first had the hope of acceptance to experience rejection.
That said, it's important to know that when rejection
happens, it can teach you so much about yourself
or about other people.
As an example, growing up in my career professionally,
one of the things that used to hurt me so much,
because I've been an executive since I was 23.
So I would be, my colleagues would be in their 40s
and their 50s, and they would get together
and have all types of social gatherings.
And I would find out about it after the fact, right?
Like I would find out that I wasn't invited.
And that became a very primitive rejection wound for me professionally.
But the lesson in that that I had to learn later is that's not my tribe.
And I want to sit with that for a minute because I think some of us,
we've been left out, we've been overlooked,
we haven't been included, and we take that so personally,
like something's wrong with me, when in fact,
all that's revealing is that's not your tribe.
Don't take it personally, just recognize
those aren't your people, so that you can actually move on
and not become a perpetrator of the hurt that you experience.
And I think that's why a lot of times people become what they experience.
You become the bully.
You become the one who leaves people out because you're trying to get back at people for a
pain that you haven't addressed yet.
Okay, so like I have so many light bulbs going off right now.
First of all, the only way that we experience rejection is if we first had the hope for
acceptance is like, that's chef's kiss.
That's a beautiful realization because I think we focus so much on the rejection that we
don't do the work of recognizing like there was some hope connected to this.
I think that as you were talking, because I've definitely experienced like the rejection
from tribes and I feel like sometimes I feel like kind of like an island in my own little space in
my own little world, because I never really found like the group, the groups, like everyone's
got these little groups. And I like have my business. And me and my business are my group.
My family and all of the business that the delegation lets me mind, that is my tribe.
But I do feel like what I have come to learn about myself is that my hope for acceptance
into some of those groups were also hopes that it would some way increase my value or
address an insecurity.
And so the hope for acceptance was even rooted in something toxic.
Cause like, if I'm one of them,
then that will make me smart.
If I'm one of them,
then that will make me beautiful or intelligent
or spiritual or whatever it is.
And so that hope is actually rooted in an insecurity.
And so recognizing like, where does that hope come from?
So that I can acknowledge whether or not
I should have even had that hope in the first place.
Like maybe that hope needed to be broken.
Maybe my heart needed to be broken in that way so that I could address that this hope
was rooted in something that wasn't sustainable.
What you said gets to really the root of the message, which is rejection is often what
we experience when our hope is misplaced.
Because here's the thing, when your hope is rooted in Jesus, when your hope is rooted
in who he says you are without qualification, like I often think about how we use Jeremiah
chapter one and five to talk about the sanctity of life, right?
We say life begins at conception and it's like, no, Jeremiah one and five said, before I formed you in the womb,ity of life, right? We would say life begins at conception. And it's like, no, Jeremiah 1 and 5 said,
before I formed you in the womb, I knew you, right?
Before the sperm met the egg, I set you apart.
Before your mother knew your father, I called you.
And so the God of the universe decided you were necessary.
And because of that, it really doesn't matter
if we're accepted or included by man,
because God decided that you were necessary.
And so when we place our hope
in that fundamental unchanging truth,
it's like, okay, yeah, I wasn't invited to the thing.
I wasn't included in the thing.
It hurts because it hurts my humanity,
but it doesn't affect my hope
because my hope is in Jesus and what he says.
Oh, I feel like that's to bless so many people right there.
So can you tell me a little bit like in the book, like, what is the journey we go on?
Like, where do you meet us and where do you leave us?
Yeah. So I start with a really formative rejection experience.
And I I'm a vulnerable, vulnerable person anyway, because vulnerability is my ministry.
But one of the things I talk about
is my formative mother wound.
I'm an only child.
I was born to a mom who did not wanna have children.
And so her live-in boyfriend started abusing me
at the age of five.
And I told my mom what he was doing to me.
I told her around the age of seven.
She had him arrested and I thought it was over.
But on the day of his release from jail,
she took me with her to pick him up
and brought him back home.
And the abuse resumed from that point
and she became physically and verbally abusive.
And my childhood was marked by incredible trauma
and dysfunction and pain.
I tried to end my life at the ages of nine and 11.
And I share this with people because I think
when you walk into the chapter that my life is on right now,
you might assume, oh my gosh, her story must be great.
She had a loving family she came from.
It's like, no, like I am a statistically improbable product
of God's grace.
And so I share that because I do believe
that so much of the rejection that we experience a statistically improbable product of God's grace. And so I share that because I do believe
that so much of the rejection that we experience
in our adult years is because our identity
is resting on a foundation that was cracked
in our formative years.
So I talk about that because one of the things
that happened to me that was really, really,
I think damaging is when I got older,
I tried to have a conversation with my mom about what
happened in my childhood, because I actually wanted us to have a healthy relationship. We've
never had a healthy relationship. And what she said to me, and she said, well, it wouldn't have
happened if you would have just kept your legs closed. And so that's how she explained everything.
And so it's rejection after rejection layered with all types of rejection
that I carried into relationships.
I carried into my profession.
I have a chapter where I talk about
the expressions of rejection.
And one of the ways that rejection gets expressed
is what I call explosion into ambition.
And that was my experience.
It's like, I need to matter.
I need to get the awards.
I need to be the best. I need to, I remember there's not a student organization
I was a part of that I wasn't president of.
I was captain of the dance team, captain of the track team,
captain of the tennis team.
Like I had to be the best and the first and the youngest
because I was trying to fill a rejection black hole.
I didn't have language for it, but that's what it was.
And so I helped readers through this story really see, number one, I don't care what
it looks like.
I am quite literally just a product of God's grace.
But number two, all the insights that I received when God helped me to unpack my own rejection
experiences, I'm just hoping will help people see it from a new light because God can truly
use that pain to propel your purpose.
So our theme for We 24 is surrender.
And that's not just conference,
like literally it is our theme for the year.
I am wondering in order to get to a place
where your hope was rooted in Jesus,
where your identity was no longer connected
to those series of rejections,
what did you have to surrender in order to get there?
Oh man, this is going to sound trite, but it's true.
Like I had to surrender the pain of my rejection
because I did not realize,
I literally did not realize until I started to do the work,
I didn't realize how much it has shaped me,
how much my personality was a derivative of the pain.
Like I didn't know that so much of who I am today
is because of the pain I experienced in the past.
So I literally had to take all of that
and lay it at the foot of the cross
and just say, God, I'm going to believe what you have said about me. I'm no longer going to
strive. It's funny. I don't normally have a word for the year, but in December of last year,
the Lord gave me the word surrender for this year. That is my word for the year.
And what happened was I was at the chief executive level at U-Version, which is the word for the year. And what happened was I was, you know, at the chief executive level at YouVersion,
which is the maker of the Bible app,
loved what I was doing.
And the Lord said that the assignment was over.
He said, I've called you to be a light in dark places.
This is a light in lit places.
And I was like, but I like what I'm doing.
I like what I'm doing.
He said, no, you're going to have to surrender this
because your rejection has caused you to seek your identity
in roles and titles.
So I literally had to surrender that pain to God
and be like, you know what, Lord, I'm giving this up.
And so now I've been in full-time ministry,
full-time consulting, just doing what God's called me to do.
And I remember when God
told me to step away from that role, the first question that popped in my mind was, but if I'm
not an executive, what am I? Wow. You know, so I had to surrender that and just trust that God
can do something powerful with and through it. I love what you said about like, I had to be willing
to lay that pain of rejection down and truly believe. A lot of times when people are
like I don't know how to surrender and I pray I'm praying we're recording this
before conference but I'm pretty sure it's airing after conference but one of
my prayers for We24 is that I will be able to advocate for surrender being an exchange of beliefs.
Yes.
That's it.
It is.
It's an exchange.
It's a belief system that you have to be willing to let go of that my life needs to look this
way, that I should have had this, I should have had that, I should be here, I should
be there, and to surrender to receive the acceptance of like, this is what my life
is, and this is all my life needs to be.
Like to accept that not from a place of like grief and reluctance and giving up and resignation,
but hope that where I am and what I have is all that I need.
Like that is my greatest prayer.
I love that I need. Like that is my greatest prayer. I love that so much. And even when I learned about the theme of the conference, what struck
me is when we surrender, we surrender under one of two circumstances. We either surrender
in fear because there's something that's more powerful than us and it's threatening us that if you don't surrender,
I'm going to harm you.
Or we surrender in faith, which is,
I trust that you have my best interest in heart.
And I trust that where you lead me
will be better than where I lead myself.
And I think we have to come to that fork in the road,
which is which type of surrender?
Because when I think about even like marriage, right?
When I said those vows with my husband,
I wasn't surrendering in fear.
I was surrendering in faith that I believe
that what we're gonna build together is better
than what I could build on my own.
And so, yeah, you're right.
There's so many of us that are protecting parts of us
because that's all we know.
But when you know that God is for you,
you can surrender everything to him
because you know he has your best interest at heart
and he'll always love you better than you can love yourself.
Man, I feel like that's the greatest opportunity
that we have right now as leaders, as women
in ministry, is to express the love of God to others, not just women, but to others in
such a way that they can trust again.
I feel like life has been so scary and unpredictable and uncertain that it's difficult to believe
this whole God's in control
and everything's going to be good.
Like, trying to express that you're going to be okay,
that good is not a situation,
that good is not in a bank account,
good is in my soul.
I can find a way to good no matter what
because I can find the presence of God
and he'll lead me and he'll talk with me
and he'll guide me and he'll comfort me.
I'm going to be good. Like, I feel like that's just the greatest opportunity. And I think to the point of
the book is how we be able to begin to see rejection as a gift. We had Viola Davis' book
for conference this year and then she had something change with her production schedule
and she couldn't come. And my immediate response was like, that's OK. We want what God wants for conference.
Like, like, and then about three weeks later, I was like, it's not OK.
Actually, let me tell you what's so funny about that.
So there's so many reasons why I'm grateful for you.
But one of them, I will say, is as I'm releasing a book about rejection,
I have been experiencing so much.
I bet it has been.
And it's funny because I remember saying to God, I was like, Lord,
I walked this message out to write it.
Yeah. Why am I walking it out again to release it?
Like, I think it makes sense.
Listen, but what was funny was one day in particular, I had got some news about something that I
really had my heart set on and it wasn't going to work out.
And I remember just being like, I was so hurt by the whole thing.
So I went and I like ugly cried, right?
I was like, and I'm ugly cry.
But after I got done crying and just telling God just how hopeless I felt and how hurt I felt,
and I just kind of, you know, I sniffled and I felt better because I released it.
No lie, about an hour and a half later, you sent me a voice memo.
No lie. And you were like, girl, we can all get you on this podcast. It was just, it was,
it was one of those things where I felt like I felt God wink at me.
And he was like, you have to understand, I hold it all in my hands.
I hold it all in my hands.
And so just trust me, I am a good father.
And it was just so encouraging to me to know that even in what may seem like a small thing,
God sees and he hears. And
so that's part of surrender is knowing who God is. And yeah, that whole thing with valid
is I know he was like, Oh Lord, yes, father, what? And sometimes we, we, we're so spiritual.
We'd be like, well, Lord, whatever you allow. But at the end of the day, you'd be like,
wait a minute, Jesus now, but even that, he hears and he honors.
He honors our disappointments and our discouragements
and the things that we had our hearts set on
because he's a good father.
And that is who we surrender to, not our circumstance.
We don't like the circumstance,
but I surrender to the God who controls the circumstance.
Yeah, I have a feeling too,
because I don't know what's going to happen this year,
but I have a feeling that I'm going to be
standing in the moment and I'm going to be like everyone who's supposed to be here is
here and everything that was supposed to happen has happened and my plan was better than your
plan and this would not have happened had your plan.
Like I just, that's what I trust about God is that like though I am discouraged and maybe
disappointed right now and I'm willing to tell you that I am discouraged and maybe disappointed right now, and I'm
willing to tell you that I am also waiting with much anticipation and expectation for
the moment where I see that it had to be this way.
That's I think that part of experiencing God's faithfulness is staying in the tension of
disappointment so that you get to the other side and realize that what I was calling disappointment
was actually the setup.
It was actually construction.
It was actually how I was being built to experience
the greatest version of myself
and to experience a new wave of God's glory.
I do believe that like wholeheartedly.
Well, because God sees,
like one of the through lines in the book,
I was reading in 1 Samuel chapter 16,
this was like a year and a half ago,
and I was going through a really painful
rejection experience, but I was reading it,
and I saw in the text how, you know,
after David was anointed the next king,
how it says that the spirit of the Lord
departed from Saul, and it says it was replaced
by a tormenting spirit.
And the text then said that Saul was being tormented.
So his attendants were like,
hey, we should find somebody who can play the liar.
They'll play and it'll soothe you.
And whenever the evil spirit comes on you,
you'll feel more calm.
And the king was like, okay, cool, like who?
And it said that a servant in the king's court said,
I have seen the son of Jesse of Bethlehem.
He plays the liar, he's fine looking and God is with him.
And Saul was like, okay, bring him to me.
What caught me in that text when I read it
is of course the son is named David.
David wasn't in the room.
Saul didn't know who David was,
but a servant who was in the king's court
knew who David was and placed David's name in the room.
And the reason why I bring that up
is so many times we feel discouraged
because the king, the person with the platform,
they didn't choose us, right?
But God will use a servant in the king's court
to place your name in rooms
that you don't even have access to.
This is the God that we serve,
the one who's like,
I know that door closed in your face.
I know that window slammed shut
and you had your heart set on it.
But he's like, I've set up a servant to be in the room
who's gonna place your name in it.
And you can take your courage from that.
Like God, he's just faithful.
And so that's where I take my courage from.
When things don't work out, I'm like, okay, God, I know you're faithful.
I won't believe that you're faithful because if you can do it for David, you can do it
for me.
How has embracing this gift of rejection changed the way that you pursue your dreams?
Because don't you think that so many more of us
would be fearless in the pursuit of our purpose and dreams
if we weren't looking for the hope of acceptance?
Like, wouldn't we be more obedient
if we weren't hoping to also be accepted in our obedience?
Listen, when I say you hit the nail on the head,
so much of what we don't do is because of a fear,
a preemptive fear of being rejected.
I know people right now who have business ideas,
book ideas, people who want to leave relationships
that are no longer serving them,
but they don't do what they need to do
because they're afraid of what somebody will say.
They're afraid of being discarded. They're afraid of not being chosen. And it's like,
if you can just recognize that whatever happens, if rejection happens, there's a gift in it.
If you can recognize that, yes, you will literally take the breaks off because it's like, what's the
worst that can happen? I get rejected? Yeah can happen I get rejected. Yeah, okay
Moving on yeah, absolutely. Oh man. That is so good to me I feel like you're I know your book is already gonna help so many people because didn't you preach a message that kind of went
crazy viral
Yes, yeah, it's um
Yeah, it's it's amazing. I've actually had people like of other faiths see the message and convert to Christianity because of the message.
And what's funny though is I remember when we uploaded
the gift of rejection message about a year and a half ago,
we just uploaded it.
I didn't think anything about it at all.
And I remember people started to text me,
like just random people that I haven't talked to in years
were like, I just saw this message.
Oh my gosh, it blessed my life.
And I was like, really?
And so I went to YouTube and I saw, I was like,
how have a few hundred thousand people seen this thing
in like a week?
How, how, how YouTube?
But God has been using it to heal people.
And that's what let me know,
okay, I need to write this in a book
because you can only say so much in a 40 minute message.
But there's so many layers to it that I decided then, okay, this is the message I think God
wants me to write.
What do you think you're most proud of as it relates to the book?
And I am most proud of my honesty in the book, because you know, there's a temptation
to curate yourself, right?
And like, yeah.
To like present yourself in the best light.
But I'm really proud of my honesty
because as people have started to read
even like the manuscript and the sample chapters,
they have already said,
this has set me free from things I didn't even know I was still wrestling with.
This has given me language for pain
that I could not even articulate.
And I mean, look, you cannot address a pain
that you can't name, you just can't.
So once you have the language for it,
now we can address it.
So yeah, the vulnerability.
And I've done a few interviews.
One of the stories I tell in the book,
I won't go into it in too detail now,
but years ago I had a procedure done
because, let me describe it this way.
My father had a flat chest and a booty.
My mom had the breasts, but she had no booty.
I got my dad's chest and my mom's booty.
So just flat.
Flat.
Okay.
And you know.
The jeans were like, nevermind.
As a black woman, I got made fun of so bad because I didn't have a booty.
So some years ago, I decided to get that procedure to try to get me a booty and that mug burned
off in six months.
It was gone. What do you that mug burned off in six months, it was gone.
What do you mean it burned off?
Listen, so it's a fat transfer procedure, okay?
Yeah, so they take fat from one place or multiple places
and they put in your booty.
Well, I work out a lot and the doctor told me,
he said, look, after you get this procedure,
you cannot work out as hard as you do
because you'll burn the fat.
I was like, I'm not gonna have a booty and be unhealthy.
So I started working out and in six months it was gone.
And through that experience,
I learned a lot about insecurity,
but I share that because I've done some interviews
about that procedure and I've had people be like,
I can't believe she's telling people that she's supposed to be a woman of God.
How could she say?
And I smile when that happens because I'm like, well, this message isn't for you.
Because I've had other women reach out to me and say, I was planning to get that procedure.
And after hearing your story, I'm canceling it.
Wow.
And so that is what I'm proud of.
It's just the honesty so that it could be a mechanism of awareness and insight for people.
So I know, okay, just remind us when it comes out, all of the things, like, are there any
other ways that we can connect with you while you're sharing this message?
I know people are probably going to go and watch the message for sure that went viral
on YouTube, but how else can we get connected with the book?
Sure. that went viral on YouTube. But how else can we get connected with the book? Sure, so it comes out October the 1st
and it's available on all the online platforms.
You can connect with me on all my social media.
I'm on Instagram, Facebook and YouTube at Nona Not Nora.
You can connect with me there, but yeah,
I'm just, I'm excited for people to get the message
and whatever God decides to do with it,
I will rejoice because I know that for people to get the message and whatever God decides to do with it. I will
Rejoice because I know that he's gonna get the glory. Amen. Thank you Thank you so much for sitting down and chatting with me. Thank you for having me. I appreciate you my pleasure