Success Without Surrendering Your Soul
In my experience, maintaining a successful career while carrying the effects of childhood abuse and depression requires more than determination. It requires structure, self-awareness, wise boundaries, supportive relationships, appropriate professional care, and a biblical understanding of stewardship. For many years, work gave me something childhood had not given me: order. I worked in construction, where schedules, budgets, subcontractors, deadlines, inspections, and countless moving parts had to be managed. I excelled in that environment because it was structured. The work felt controllable in a way my childhood never had. That ability helped me succeed, but beneath it was also a wounded child who had learned that acceptance depended on performance. I had been taught that I needed to be better than everyone around me or risk rejection. I was threatened with being sent away if I failed to meet expectations. Even when I worked hard, earned good grades, and tried to behave correctly, abuse still occurred. That created a powerful but unhealthy belief:
If I Perform Perfectly, Perhaps I Will Finally Be Safe, Accepted, And Valued.
That belief can produce impressive results in a career. It can also produce exhaustion, anxiety, perfectionism, overwork, difficulty trusting others, and the constant need to remain in control.
Childhood Survival Patterns Often Enter The Workplace
The effects of childhood abuse do not disappear simply because we become adults, build careers, and learn professional skills.
They often reappear as:
· fear of failure;
· perfectionism;
· people-pleasing;
· difficulty trusting others;
· overworking;
· sensitivity to criticism;
· a need to control outcomes;
· anxiety when responsibilities feel uncertain;
· and the belief that our worth depends on achievement.
These patterns are understandable. They may have developed as survival responses. A child who never knew when rejection, punishment, or abuse might come often learns to watch everything, anticipate danger, and work harder than everyone else. That alertness may later look like leadership, organization, and ambition. Sometimes it is all three. But unless the pain beneath it is addressed, success can become another form of bondage. We can build a career while still trying to prove that we deserve to exist.
Redefining Career Success
The world usually defines career success by income, status, influence, title, recognition, or advancement. Scripture gives us a different standard. Colossians 3:23–24 says: “And whatever you do, do it heartily, as to the Lord and not to men, knowing that from the Lord you will receive the reward of the inheritance; for you serve the Lord Christ.”
Biblical success is faithfulness.
It is doing our work with integrity, diligence, humility, and concern for others because we ultimately serve Christ. First Corinthians 4:2 says: “Moreover it is required in stewards that one be found faithful.” That word—steward—changed the way I understood leadership. I once owned a business with approximately fifteen employees. At the time, I viewed them primarily as people working for me and helping make my business successful. Later, I worked for a Christian employer who gave me a very different picture. He told me that the people in the company did not merely work for him; they worked with him. He understood that every employee had a family, bills, responsibilities, and people depending on them. He saw himself as a steward of what God had placed in his care. That corrected something in me.
Leadership Was Not Ownership. It Was Stewardship.
People were not tools for my advancement. They were human beings entrusted to my care. A successful career, biblically understood, is not simply about how much I build, earn, own, or control. It is about whether I handle people, responsibilities, resources, opportunities, and influence in a way that honors God.
Our work is not our identity
Those of us who grew up under harsh expectations can easily connect our value to our performance. A successful day means we are worthy. A mistake means we are failures. Praise means we are accepted. Criticism feels like rejection. But my identity is not my job title, productivity, income, reputation, or ability to outperform someone else.
My identity is in Christ.
Galatians 1:10 asks whether we seek to please people or God. Second Corinthians 5:9 says: “Therefore we make it our aim, whether present or absent, to be well pleasing to Him.” That gives work its proper place. My career matters, but it is not my master. It is one area of stewardship under the lordship of Christ. One day, every title will be laid down. Every building will age. Every business will change hands. Every professional achievement will become part of history. James 4:14 says our life is “a vapor that appears for a little time and then vanishes away.” Jesus asked:“For what will it profit a man if he gains the whole world, and loses his own soul?” (Mark 8:36). The most important question is not whether I impressed an employer, built a large business, or maintained control over every outcome. It is whether I knew Christ, served Him faithfully, and treated what He entrusted to me with integrity.
Depression Can Make Ordinary Work Feel Heavy
Depression can affect motivation, energy, concentration, confidence, memory, decision-making, and the ability to complete ordinary responsibilities. Later in life, I have felt more clearly how the body and mind absorb years of stress. I now live with physical limitations, chronic pain, migraines, high blood pressure, anxiety, and concerns about short-term memory. A back injury forced me into retirement earlier than I would have chosen. Looking back, I can see that if I had continued working at the same pace, I might have worked myself into a medical crisis. Forced retirement was difficult because work had become closely connected to my sense of usefulness. Even now, I can struggle to relax without feeling that I should be accomplishing something. That is where I have had to learn a new form of faithfulness.
Faithfulness is not always doing more.
Sometimes it is resting. Sometimes it is accepting help. Sometimes it is stepping back. Sometimes it is allowing the next generation to carry responsibility. Sometimes it is acknowledging that my body has limits. Proverbs 23:4 says: “Do not overwork to be rich; Because of your own understanding, cease!” Healthy perseverance keeps us faithful. Unhealthy striving ignores the warnings of the body, mind, family, and wise counsel.
Do What Is Next
One principle that continues to help me is simple:
Do what is next.
When depression makes life feel overwhelming, I do not need to solve the rest of my life in one day. I need to recognize the responsibility directly in front of me.
The next step may be:
· praying;
· reading Scripture;
· keeping a medical appointment;
· completing one work assignment;
· resting;
· returning a phone call;
· helping a friend;
· spending time with my wife;
· watching a soccer game with my children;
· or writing something that strengthens and encourages another person.
Ecclesiastes 9:10 says: “Whatever your hand finds to do, do it with your might.” That does not mean exhausting ourselves. It means giving faithful attention to what God has actually placed before us rather than being crushed by everything that might happen tomorrow. Proverbs 16:9 says: “A man’s heart plans his way, but the LORD directs his steps.” I can plan wisely while recognizing that God directs the outcome.
Boundaries Are Part Of Stewardship
People shaped by abuse and perfectionism often struggle to set boundaries. We may believe saying no means disappointing someone, losing approval, or proving we are weak. But boundaries are not laziness. They are part of recognizing that we are stewards, not owners, of our bodies and time. My wife has known me for more than forty years. She can often see when I am preparing to take on more than my health can bear. Sometimes she gently reminds me that if I give myself entirely to something outside the home, I may have nothing left for what God has already entrusted to me inside the home. That is wisdom.
First Timothy 5:8 emphasizes responsibility toward our household. Philippians 2:4 says we should look not only to our own interests but also to the interests of others. A career should not consume the very people we claim we are working to provide for.
Boundaries may include:
· limiting excessive hours;
· refusing responsibilities that exceed our health;
· taking scheduled rest;
· asking for assistance;
· protecting family time;
· declining unnecessary conflict;
· and seeking reasonable workplace accommodations when appropriate.
Success that destroys our health, marriage, family, faith, or integrity is not success.
When Workplace Situations Activate Old Wounds
Criticism, controlling authority, conflict, rejection, and workplace pressure can awaken emotional reactions connected to childhood abuse. A present disagreement may feel much larger because it resembles an earlier threat. A supervisor’s correction may feel like complete rejection. A missed deadline may feel like proof that we are worthless. The first step is learning to recognize the difference between what is happening now and what happened then. That may require pausing before reacting, asking clarifying questions, writing down the facts, praying, speaking with a trusted person, or consulting a counselor who understands trauma. Proverbs 3:5–6 says: “Trust in the LORD with all your heart, And lean not on your own understanding; In all your ways acknowledge Him, And He shall direct your paths.” Our emotions matter, but they do not always give a complete interpretation of the present situation. A wise response does not deny the emotion. It examines it.
Structure Can Reduce Mental Overload
People dealing with depression, anxiety, trauma, or memory concerns often benefit from practical structure. Planning is not unspiritual. Proverbs 21:5 says: “The plans of the diligent lead surely to plenty.”
Helpful habits can include:
· using one calendar or task system;
· preparing for the next day in advance;
· breaking large projects into smaller steps;
· focusing on one major task at a time;
· writing down commitments immediately;
· allowing extra time before deadlines;
· scheduling rest;
· and reviewing priorities with someone trustworthy.
Structure reduces the number of decisions the mind must hold at once. It can interrupt the cycle in which forgetfulness produces shame, shame deepens depression, and depression further weakens concentration. The goal is not to become flawless. It is to create support around areas where we know we are vulnerable.
Work Should Not Become An Escape From Pain
For some of us, busyness becomes a way to avoid painful emotions. We stay constantly occupied because stillness feels dangerous. We accomplish more because achievement briefly quiets shame. We lead everything because depending on others feels unsafe. But ignored pain does not disappear. It often returns through anxiety, anger, exhaustion, health problems, relationship conflict, compulsive behavior, or depression.
A Successful Career Cannot Substitute For Healing.
Sometimes we must face the painful truth that work helped us survive but also helped us avoid what needed attention. Psalm 62:8 says: “Pour out your heart before Him; God is a refuge for us.” Healing may involve prayer, lament, counseling, medical treatment, trusted relationships, appropriate medication, rest, boundaries, and learning to speak honestly about what happened. None of that is weakness.
Seeking Help Is Not A Lack Of Faith
God can heal supernaturally, and He also works through ordinary means. We see doctors when our bodies are injured. We take appropriate medicine when it is needed. We receive treatment for heart disease, migraines, high blood pressure, or back injuries. Mental and emotional wounds also deserve wise care. Counseling, trauma-informed therapy, medical evaluation, medication, rest, and support do not automatically reveal weak faith. They may be part of responsible stewardship.
We Should Not Shame Someone For Seeking Help.
The wise person listens to counsel. Proverbs repeatedly associates wisdom with receiving instruction. Trusted friends, pastors, counselors, doctors, mentors, and coworkers can offer insight that we may not be able to see on our own. They do not remove our responsibility. They help us carry it wisely.
Be Careful About Workplace Disclosure
Not every coworker or supervisor needs to know the full story of our childhood. Disclosure should be measured according to trust, purpose, and necessity. A trusted friend or coworker may need to know enough to understand a limitation, support a boundary, or help arrange an accommodation. But personal history should not be shared merely because someone is curious or because we feel pressured to explain ourselves. Trust should be established before vulnerability is extended.
A Good Question Is:
What does this person need to know to respond wisely, and have they shown themselves safe enough to receive it? Measured honesty protects dignity without forcing secrecy.
Pain Can Deepen Leadership
God has used painful experiences to teach me compassion, patience, and a better understanding of leadership. Earlier in life, I could be demanding. I expected much from myself and others. Today, I better understand that people are not machines and that no one should be treated as merely useful for accomplishing a task. First Peter 4:10 says: “As each one has received a gift, minister it to one another, as good stewards of the manifold grace of God.” God does not need me. He chooses to use me. That keeps leadership humble. The saying is often repeated that God does not call the equipped but equips those He calls. Whatever ability we possess ultimately came from Him. Our role is not to control everything but to serve faithfully with what He supplies.
Jesus said: “Whoever desires to become great among you, let him be your servant” (Matt. 20:26). Pain does not automatically make someone compassionate. But surrendered pain can. God can use what wounded us to help us recognize the wounds of others.
Measure Progress With Humility
The world often tells us to become better than we were yesterday or better than the person beside us. I no longer want comparison to be my primary standard. If I compare myself with Christ, I will always see how far I fall short. That does not have to produce condemnation. It can produce humility and dependence. Romans 12:3 warns us not to think more highly of ourselves than we ought.
Progress may look like:
· responding more calmly than before;
· asking for help sooner;
· resting before collapse;
· receiving correction without treating it as rejection;
· finishing one task instead of being overwhelmed by ten;
· setting one healthy boundary;
· recognizing one distorted belief;
· or serving someone without seeking recognition.
A difficult day does not erase every step of growth. Depression may explain certain limitations, but it does not have to become our entire identity.
Ownership Or Stewardship
The contrast that has become clearest to me is the difference between ownership and stewardship.
Ownership says: “This is mine. These people work for me. My success proves my worth. I control the outcome.”
Stewardship says: “This belongs to God. These people are entrusted to my care. My worth comes from Christ. I am responsible to be faithful, but God controls the outcome.” Luke 12:15 says: “One’s life does not consist in the abundance of the things he possesses.” First Timothy 6:7 reminds us: “For we brought nothing into this world, and it is certain we can carry nothing out.”
All of life is stewardship.
Our bodies, careers, families, gifts, influence, possessions, time, and next breath are entrusted to us for a season. Therefore, maintaining a successful career while healing from childhood abuse and depression does not mean pretending the pain is gone. It means learning to work faithfully without allowing fear, shame, perfectionism, or achievement to become our master.
It means:
· redefining success as faithfulness;
· separating identity from performance;
· accepting wise limits;
· seeking help;
· building practical structure;
· setting boundaries;
· serving people rather than using them;
· and entrusting the outcome to God.
Colossians 3:23–24 says we work heartily as unto the Lord. First Corinthians 10:31 says whatever we do should be done to the glory of God. First Corinthians 4:2 says a steward must be found faithful. That is the career success worth pursuing. Not perfection. Not applause. Not control. Faithfulness.
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Book: I Cannot Give You What I Do Not Have: Finding Unconditional Love in Christ
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GQB4MJYW
Study Guide: I Cannot Give You What I Do Not Have: Companion Study Guide: Healing Generational Wounds Through 40 Devotions