You Can’t Fix What You Won’t Face.
One of the most dangerous habits in life isn’t laziness or even selfishness—it’s avoiding the truth.
🪞 Let me tell you a story:
A few years ago, a client shared something I’ve never forgotten.
He was part of a small business—co-owned with a man about ten years older. The company had once been the pride of their community, but over time, things started to slide. Nothing dramatic at first—just five straight years of slow decline. Fewer clients. Smaller profits. Tightening margins.
He brought the numbers to his partner. Again. They needed to change something—now.
But the partner didn’t seem concerned. He listened, nodded… and then shrugged.
So the client tried again, this time with a story:
“Every day when I drive home, I pass Tom’s house. You know Tom—he inherited a business just like ours. It held steady for a while, but it started to decline. Slowly. He didn’t change. Now he lives in a rundown house, drives beat-up cars, and can’t afford to retire.”
Then he said,
“This business will fund your retirement just fine. But I’m ten years younger. And every time I pass Tom’s house, I realize: that’s my future if we don’t change.”
The older partner paused, looked him straight in the eye, and said…
“Can’t you just take another way home?”
He meant it.
And honestly?
That’s how most people treat truth.
🙈 We don’t want to look at what’s real.
We want to feel good. We want to avoid discomfort.
So we rationalize. Delay. Deny. Pretend it’s not that bad.
But when we do that—when we ignore the truth—we’re not avoiding pain.
We’re just delaying it until it’s too big to hide and too late to fix.
Let’s be blunt:
- Marriages fall apart because spouses won’t talk about what’s really going on.
- Addictions spiral because no one calls it what it is.
- Leaders ignore data, signs, and feedback—and their organizations collapse.
- Even entire nations suffer when truth is denied, delayed, or distorted.
Truth isn’t just important. It’s essential.
But it’s rarely comfortable.
✝️ Jesus didn’t just teach truth—He is truth.
“I am the way, the truth, and the life.” (John 14:6)
Truth isn’t a concept—it’s a person.
And to follow Jesus is to walk in truth.
He never softened it for popularity.
Never avoided it to stay safe.
He embraced it—even when it led to the cross.
🔍 Truth is about more than what’s broken.
It also reveals what’s beautiful:
- The gifts you’ve been given.
- The ways you’re equipped to serve.
- The people you’re meant to bless.
- The potential you haven’t fully stepped into.
Embracing truth means seeing clearly—and living boldly.
📋 Try this today:
- List 3 areas in your life where you may be avoiding the truth.
- Choose the one with the biggest impact—on you or someone else.
- Ask yourself:
- What truth have I been denying?
- What will it cost me if I keep avoiding it?
- What would it look like to embrace it—today?
🧠 Final thought:
Truth is rarely easy, but it’s always essential.
Embrace it—and let it change you.
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