Mastering the Grit of Letting Go and Letting God Handle the Situation

1,656 words, 9 minutes read time.

Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways submit to him, and he will make your paths straight — Proverbs 3:5-6 NIV

This command is the ultimate field manual for the man who thinks he can out-think or out-work his circumstances; it demands you stop treating your own intellect as the final authority and start deferring to the Sovereign Architect.

The Brutal War of Surrendering the Situation to God

Men often grind their health into the dirt, torch their marriages, and hemorrhage their peace of mind because they are hooked on the lie of control. The common delusion is that one more double shift, one more aggressive text, or obsessively replaying a failure in the mind will force the world to bend. That isn’t leadership; it is pride. Anxiety is frequently dressed up as “responsibility” to make a man feel like a martyr, but in reality, it is a flat-out lack of faith. No man is powerful enough to sustain the weight of the universe, and trying to do so is an exercise in futility.

Real surrender isn’t a soft, flowery retreat for the weak. It is a violent, tactical act of the will where a man decides to stop playing God. Consider a man whose business is circling the drain, pacing the floor until 3:00 AM with a heart hammering against his ribs like a trapped animal. Worry is not fuel for a solution; it is spinning tires in the mud and digging a deeper hole. The turning point comes only on the knees, admitting the truth: the work has been done, but the outcome belongs to the Creator. If the ship goes down, God is still the King of the ocean.

That is the sacred art of letting go. It is the raw realization that human “understanding”—a narrow, meat-and-bone perspective—is a garbage foundation for a life. Leaning on personal intellect is leaning on a snapped crutch. Theology calls this “Providence,” which is the hard-nosed belief that God is actively steering the gears of the universe toward His purposes, even when the radar is dark. God does not need human panic to fix problems. In fact, white-knuckled gripping usually just gets in the way of the character God is trying to build. Stepping back isn’t quitting; it’s repositioning so the Almighty can take the point. No man was built to carry the weight of the “what-ifs.” Pick up the tools for today and leave the harvest to Him.

Releasing the Grip and Letting God Handle the Situation

Identify the one situation—whether it’s a wayward child, a legal battle, a crumbling marriage, or a career crisis—that is currently keeping you awake at night and eating you alive from the inside out. You have to stop the mental gymnastics and the frantic attempts to fix things that are outside your pay grade. Stand up, physically open your hands in front of you as a sign of total tactical surrender, and verbally tell God: “I am resigning as the manager of this outcome.” Be specific. Tell Him that while you will do the work set before you today, you are no longer responsible for the result. You are only responsible for your obedience in this moment. This isn’t a one-time suggestion; it is a daily transfer of weight from your breaking back onto His unshakable shoulders.

Prayer

Lord,

I’m done trying to micromanage the universe. I hand over this situation to You because I’m breaking under the weight and I was never meant to carry it. Take the wheel, take the burden, and give me the guts to stay out of Your way.

Amen.

Reflection

  • What specific disaster are you trying to prevent through your own sheer arrogance and willpower?
  • Where has your “own understanding” left you exhausted and empty-handed lately?
  • Do you actually trust God’s capability, or is your stress level proving that you think you’re a better pilot than He is?
  • What is the line between “doing your job” and “trying to control the result”?
  • How would your life change today if you accepted that the final result is already settled by God?

Author’s Note:

I usually plan the topics for these blogs months in advance, typically without any concern for what might be going on in my own life on those days. I also tend to write them well in advance and have them scheduled for release; occasionally, I’ll change the topic right before writing, but for the most part, the calendar is set. Saying all of that, this topic hits me hard, and quite honestly, this devotional is exactly what I needed to hear today. It amazes me how often these devotionals tend to align perfectly with what I need to hear at the exact moment they are scheduled to go live.

The local Ice Show season started last night with the first show, which serves as a heavy reminder of why I had to learn to let go. As many of you know, I was deeply involved in taking photos of skaters and serving in a technical advisory role for a particular organization. To avoid discussing this ad nauseam, I eventually had to hand the entire situation over to God. I am still hurt by what happened, but I can move on with the focus on God’s promise: “It is mine to avenge; I will repay” (Romans 12:19 NIV). I have faith that one day, God will deal with the people involved.

Let’s be clear: forgiveness isn’t some mandate to develop amnesia. It isn’t about forgetting the betrayal or pretending the damage didn’t happen. Even Jesus, in the book of Revelation, is shown with the scars—the pierced hands, the feet, and the wound in His side. He didn’t “forget” the cross; He moved through it. Forgiveness is about knowing exactly what debt was owed and making the executive decision to cancel it so you can move the hell on. People around me know that I still struggle with the raw hurt caused by the lies told by this person. The scars are there, but they don’t have to be shackles.

“There is no more dangerous ground for a man to occupy than the space between God and His mission, obstructing the work He intends to do.”

There is a terrifying reality in Matthew 18:6 about those who cause “one of these little ones” to stumble; it’s better for that man to have a millstone hung around his neck and be drowned in the depths of the sea. By holding onto my own desire for vengeance, I was effectively getting in the way, trying to play judge where God already has a gavel.

This is the power of what is “bound and loosed” (Matthew 16:19). If I stay obsessed with the debt they owe me, I am binding myself to them and their lies. I stay stuck in the mud of that past event. But when I choose to loose that debt—to unbind it and hand it to the Almighty—I am finally free. Forgiving the “debt” of revenge isn’t about being a doormat; it’s about tactical freedom. By handing that debt over to God, I am no longer the debt collector. I don’t have to waste my mental rounds calculating how or when they will get hit with what’s coming to them. That is God’s business, and His artillery is much more accurate than mine.

In my situation, letting God handle the “repayment” has freed me to continue doing what I love without the poison of bitterness clogging the lens. It allows me to keep showing up at the rink to capture the incredible work of these skaters. These kids are world-class athletes who put in grueling hours of practice, often in the dark of early morning, achieving feats of strength and grace that largely go unnoticed by the broader community. They deserve to have their achievements documented and celebrated. If I had stayed stuck in my anger toward the organization or the cowards involved, I would have walked away from the ice entirely. I would have let the actions of a few people rob me of my passion and rob these athletes of the recognition they’ve earned.

This freedom is what allows me to capture the moments of pure, unadulterated grit. One of my favorite photos is of a skater finally nailing an advanced jump during an event—a jump she had bled for over a long period of time. In that split second, the camera captures the culmination of months of falls, sweat, and raw determination. If I were still white-knuckled in my resentment, I would have been too distracted by the politics in the building to see the triumph on her face. Surrender protects my ability to witness those victories. When I’m behind the camera now, I’m not thinking about the technical roles I lost or the people who mistreated me. I’m thinking about the lighting, the shutter speed, and the sheer force of an athlete hitting their mark. Forgiving that debt didn’t just change my perspective; it saved my craft. It allowed me to move on with a clean slate, trusting that while I document the beauty on the ice, God is perfectly capable of handling the justice behind the scenes. That is the freedom found in surrender.

Call to Action

It’s time to make a tactical decision. Are you going to continue binding yourself to the hurt, or are you ready to experience the freedom of unbinding that debt and handing it to the Almighty? Releasing control isn’t a sign of weakness; it is the ultimate expression of grit and faith.

Your Battle Ends Today. How will you take the first step toward surrendering control and mastering the grit of letting go?

SUPPORTSUBSCRIBECONTACT ME

D. Bryan King

Sources

Disclaimer:

The views and opinions expressed in this post are solely those of the author. The information provided is based on personal research, experience, and understanding of the subject matter at the time of writing. Readers should consult relevant experts or authorities for specific guidance related to their unique situations.

#athleticAchievement #biblicalManhood #biblicalMasculinity #bindingAndLoosing #capturingGrit #characterBuilding #ChristianMenSDevotional #ChurchHurtRecovery #dealingWithEnemiesBiblically #emotionalFreedom #faithForMen #faithInTheWorkplace #faithUnderPressure #familyLeadership #figureSkatingPhotography #findingPeaceInChaos #forgivenessForMen #GodSProvidence #GodSSovereignty #healingFromLies #JesusScarsMeaning #justiceBelongsToGod #leavingItToGod #lettingGoOfControl #lettingGodTakeTheLead #maleSpiritualGrowth #Matthew1619 #Matthew186 #mentalGymnastics #mentalHealthForMen #movingOnFromBetrayal #overcomingAnxiety #overcomingBitterness #prayerForMen #prideVsFaith #Proverbs356 #releasingResentment #Romans1219 #spiritualDiscipline #spiritualGrit #spiritualLeadership #spiritualWarfareForMen #stoppingTheGrind #surrenderIsNotWeakness #surrenderingToGod #tacticalSurrender #theArtOfLettingGo #trustingGodSPlan #VengeanceIsMine

The Cost of the Clean Exit: When the System Protects the Liar

3,572 words, 19 minutes read time.

Grant Miller sat in the clinical, blue-light glow of his home office, the low hum of three synchronized monitors serving as the only soundtrack to the wreckage of a decade. On the center screen, a spreadsheet acted as a cold, digital autopsy of ten years of his life. As a systems architect, Grant didn’t have “hobbies”; he had projects that required infrastructure, precision, and an uncompromising adherence to the truth. When he first walked into the local “Learn to Skate” rink with a camera bag and a laptop, he wasn’t looking for a plaque or a pat on the back. He saw a system that was broken—a chaotic, paper-trail operation where registrations were lost in overstuffed filing cabinets and the club’s “digital presence” was a joke. Over the next ten years, Grant didn’t just volunteer; he engineered. He built a fortress. By the time the dust settled, he had clocked over $65,000 in professional volunteer hours based on federal labor standards, and his private servers groaned under the weight of 100,000 high-resolution images captured on $10,000 of his own professional gear. He was the invisible backbone of the club, the man who turned a disorganized mess into a streamlined, encrypted powerhouse that parents actually trusted with their data and their children’s milestones.

The sheer volume of the work was staggering when viewed through the lens of objective data. We are talking about ten years of Saturday mornings spent in sub-zero rinks, ten years of weeknights spent editing thousands of RAW files to ensure every kid in the program had a hero shot that made them feel like an Olympian. Grant didn’t just take pictures; he managed the club’s identity. He built the website, secured the databases, and handled the tech support that the board was too technologically illiterate to understand. In the world of non-profits, a man like Grant is a unicorn—a high-level professional providing enterprise-grade solutions for the price of a lukewarm coffee. But the danger of being the man who builds the system is that you eventually become the only person who knows how the gears actually turn, and in a landscape ruled by small-town egos, that technical mastery is often viewed not as an asset, but as a threat to the established order of those who prefer to rule in the dark.

In the world of small-town sports politics, efficiency is a direct threat to those who thrive on opacity and “good old boy” networks. For years, the club’s board elections had been tainted by what the locals quietly called “funny business.” It was a shadowy, manual practice where Sarah, the Skating Director, and her inner circle would physically call members over the phone, pressuring them to cast votes for her hand-picked candidates in direct violation of the club’s own bylaws. It was a system built on social engineering and intimidation, a way to ensure that the “inner circle” remained unchallenged and that the director’s personal fiefdom remained intact. Sarah wore her high-level credentials with the national Figure Skating Association like a medieval mace, using her title to silence dissent and maintain a status quo that favored her cronies over the actual growth of the program. She didn’t want a fair vote; she wanted a coronation every cycle.

To kill this corruption and bring the club into the twenty-first century, Grant had implemented a third-party, industry-standard voting system years prior. He didn’t build the software—he was too smart for that—but he selected a platform that offered absolute integrity, two-factor authentication, and a verifiable audit trail. It was a secure tool designed to ensure that every member had a private, un-pressured voice, effectively stripping Sarah of her ability to manipulate the outcomes through late-night phone calls and locker-room arm-twisting. Ironically, that very system is still used by the club today, a testament to its reliability and Grant’s foresight in building something that could withstand the very rot he was trying to excise. But the moment the digital tally finally reflected a result that Sarah couldn’t control, the “funny business” shifted from the voting booth to a direct, surgical strike on Grant Miller’s reputation.

The transition from “valued volunteer” to “enemy of the state” happened with the flick of a bureaucratic switch. When the election results didn’t go Sarah’s way, she didn’t look in the mirror; she looked for a scapegoat. Using her high-level influence and her direct line to the national Figure Skating Association, she filed an informal grievance that was as calculated as it was malicious. She accused Grant of “digital manipulation,” claiming that he had used his administrative access to rig the election results through the third-party software. It was a character-assassinating smear designed to hit a technical professional where it hurts most: his integrity. She banked on the Association’s fundamental ignorance of technology, knowing that to a group of aging administrators, “software” was a magic black box that could be easily manipulated by a “hacker” in their midst. She didn’t need proof; she only needed to trigger the investigation to isolate Grant and cast a shadow of doubt over the entire digital infrastructure he had built.

The move was a masterclass in institutional bullying. Suddenly, the man who had donated $65,000 worth of his life to the program was being treated like a criminal in a defensive crouch. The Association, instead of looking at Sarah’s history of “funny business” or the verifiable logs of the third-party system, reflexively protected their director. They launched an inquiry that forced Grant to spend weeks of his own time—time he could have spent with his family or on his actual career—defending his honor against a baseless lie. This is the raw reality of the volunteer grind: the moment you stop being a “useful tool” and start being a “check on power,” the institution will turn on you with a cold, mechanical indifference that would make a corporate HR department blush. Grant found himself in a fight he never asked for, forced to prove a negative against a woman who had spent years treating the club’s bylaws like suggestions.

Grant didn’t retreat into anger; he retreated into the data. While Sarah was busy playing the victim in rink-side whispers and backroom meetings, Grant was operating with the cold, methodical precision of a man who knew that in a digital world, every lie leaves a footprint. He understood that the burden of proof in an institutional inquisition is rarely on the accuser, so he built a defense that was mathematically irrefutable. He spent dozens of hours—hours on top of the decade he’d already sacrificed—compiling a forensic dossier that documented every interaction with the voting software. He didn’t just tell them he didn’t rig the election; he showed them the server logs, the encrypted handshakes, and the third-party security protocols that made it impossible for an administrator to alter an individual ballot once cast. He presented a timeline of every email sent, every website modification made, and every administrative login, cross-referenced against the club’s own bylaws which Sarah had so casually ignored for years.

The sheer density of the evidence was a silent middle finger to the incompetence of the board. Grant produced a document that mapped the “funny business” of previous years—the phone call logs and the manual tallies that didn’t add up—and contrasted it with the sterile, unassailable integrity of the digital system he had implemented. He was forcing the Association to look at the mirror, showing them that the only person with a history of manipulation was the woman pointing the finger. For a man who lived by the logic of “if-then” statements, the hearing wasn’t an emotional plea for his reputation; it was a technical demonstration of Sarah’s malice. He sat across from the Association representatives—people who likely struggled to reset their own Wi-Fi routers—and spoke to them in the language of objective truth. He didn’t ask for their trust; he demanded they acknowledge the data.

The hearing was a collision between professional competence and bureaucratic ego. Grant watched as the Association reps flipped through his forensic audit with the glazed eyes of people who had realized they were in way over their heads. They had walked into the room expecting to slap the wrist of a “rogue volunteer” and instead found themselves staring at a mountain of evidence that implicated their own director in years of procedural misconduct. They saw the locks on the third-party system, they saw the clean logs, and they saw the verified results that matched the will of the members perfectly. There was no “hacker,” no “manipulation,” and no “rigging.” There was only a man who had done his job too well and a woman who had tried to destroy him for it. The truth was sitting on the table, cold and heavy, but the institution wasn’t interested in truth; it was interested in liability.

The final verdict arrived not with a bang, but with a whimper—a two-paragraph email that was a masterclass in corporate-filtered non-apology. The Association stated they could “find no fault” in Grant’s actions, a clinical way of admitting he was innocent without actually saying he had been wronged. There was a weak, throwaway sentence about the “inconvenience of the investigation,” but no mention of the ten years of service, the $65,000 in labor, or the 100,000 photos that had built their brand. Even more galling was the silence regarding Sarah. There was no reprimand, no suspension, and no acknowledgment of her baseless smear campaign. She was allowed to keep her office and her title, protected by a system that values the survival of the hierarchy over the character of its builders. The Association had looked at a decade of loyalty and a month of character assassination and decided that the status quo was worth more than a man’s honor.

In the immediate aftermath, Grant felt the weight of the “sunk cost fallacy” pulling at his gut. Ten years. Over a hundred thousand images of kids learning to find their edges, of parents crying in the stands, of a community he thought he was part of. He looked at the hard drives in his office—$10,000 worth of gear and an archive of a decade’s worth of growth—and realized that the club didn’t deserve a single byte of it. The “Actionable Fix” in this scenario wasn’t to stay and fight a guerrilla war against Sarah’s ego; it was to perform a total, scorched-earth decoupling of his identity from the program. He wasn’t just a volunteer leaving a post; he was an architect reclaiming his blueprints. He realized that Sarah had successfully weaponized the institution to run off its most valuable asset, and the board was too weak or too complicit to stop her.

The raw truth that every high-level volunteer eventually learns is that the institution doesn’t love you back. It is a machine that consumes “useful idiots” until they become “inconvenient truths,” and then it discards them with a form letter. Grant’s exit wasn’t a retreat; it was an evacuation of value. He deleted his administrative access, handed over the keys to the digital fortress he had built, and walked away with the one thing Sarah could never touch: his integrity. He understood that the club would likely devolve back into the “funny business” of phone-call voting and paper-trail chaos within a year, and he finally stopped caring. Forgiveness, for Grant, was the cold realization that he no longer owed his energy to a group of people who would trade his decade of sacrifice for a director’s comfort.

The first Saturday morning after his resignation was the loudest silence Grant had ever experienced. For ten years, the rhythmic scratch of toe picks, the deep hum of blades carving precise circles, and the echoes of classical scores over the PA system had been the heartbeat of his weekend. Now, sitting in his kitchen with a cup of coffee that didn’t need to be rushed, he felt the phantom weight of the camera bag on his shoulder. He looked at his gear—the Nikon bodies, the 70-200mm f/2.8 lens that had captured a hundred thousand tiny triumphs—and realized they were just tools again, no longer weapons of a community’s legacy. The realization hit him with the cold precision of a data point: he had been a ghostwriter for a story that the lead character was trying to delete. Sarah still held the keys to the rink, but she no longer held the keys to his time, a currency that, once spent, offers no refunds.

The “funny business” resumed almost immediately. Reports filtered back through the grapevine of the old “phone tree” tactics resurfacing, of board meetings descending back into the opaque, disorganized chaos that had defined the era before Grant’s digital intervention. The club was regressing, shedding its professional skin and returning to its form as a petty fiefdom. It was the natural state of an organization that chooses a comfortable lie over a demanding truth. Grant watched from the sidelines, not with the bitterness of a man who had lost, but with the detached observation of a scientist watching a predictable chemical reaction. When you remove the structural integrity of a building—the architect and the foundation—it doesn’t collapse all at once; it leans until it eventually becomes uninhabitable.

While the Association’s weak apology sat in his inbox like a digital insult, the real “audit” of Grant’s decade came from the people Sarah couldn’t control: the parents. His private gallery links began to see a spike in traffic. Families were downloading the archives, realizing that the man who had documented their children’s lives from their first wobbles to their high school graduations was gone. Those 100,000 photos weren’t just data; they were the only evidence of a decade of growth that the club had essentially disowned. Grant realized that by attacking his integrity, Sarah had inadvertently highlighted his value. Every high-resolution shot was a reminder of a standard she could never replicate with a smartphone and a grudge.

The $65,000 in volunteer hours was gone, a sunk cost in the ledger of his life, but the forensic defense he had built remained a masterclass in tactical self-preservation. He had proven that a man with a paper trail is a man who cannot be easily erased. He had shown that even in a rigged game, the player who keeps the best records can walk away with his name intact. This is the raw truth for any man in the trenches of a volunteer organization: build the system, but keep the logs. Serve the community, but never trust the institution. The only thing you truly own at the end of a ten-year grind is your reputation and the data that proves you were the one who held the line when everyone else was busy making phone calls.

Grant Miller eventually closed the spreadsheet. He archived the folder labeled “Skating Club Litigation” and moved it to a backup drive, a dark corner of his digital life that he intended to visit only if the “funny business” ever crossed the line into legal territory again. He wasn’t waiting for Sarah to be fired, and he wasn’t waiting for the Association to grow a spine and offer a real apology. That would be giving them more of his life, and he had already donated enough. The final transaction was the act of clicking “Logout” for the last time—not just from a server, but from a narrative that no longer served him.

Author’s Note

In the world of “sanitized” faith, we’re told forgiveness is a warm, fuzzy reconciliation. We’re fed a version of grace that expects a man to just “shake hands and forget” while his reputation is still bleeding out. But the reality of the grind teaches a harder truth: Sometimes, forgiveness is the tactical decision to stop trying to collect a debt from a bankrupt person. It’s handing the bill to a higher authority and walking off the job site.

For the men who know me, you’ll recognize the skeleton of this story. It’s loosely based on my own ten-year tour in the trenches—a decade of professional-grade labor met with a calculated strike at my integrity. Note that all specific names and locations have been changed to protect everyone involved. For a man in my field, a formal accusation of “manipulation” or “rigging” is a direct hit on my livelihood. I operate under a strict standard of professional appearance; a smear like this could ha

Even years later, I still feel the weight. Every year when the house lights dim and the ice shows begin, the struggle resurfaces like a ghost in the rafters. It’s a seasonal reminder of a wound that hasn’t fully closed—not because of a lack of faith, but because I refuse to lie about the truth. I still run the ice show circuit, taking the photos and giving them away for free, promoting the achievements of these young athletes and the sport itself. I do the work because the work has value to those skaters and thier families.

I’ve had to face the bitter reality that the people who launched this path of destruction were never held accountable—and in all likelihood, they never will be on this side of eternity. Even though her actions and that path of wreckage continue to this day, there was no grand moment of justice, no public clearing of my name, and no professional consequence for the liar. From what I’ve been told, this began long before I arrived and has left a trail of destroyed lives in its wake. This includes one individual handed a lifetime ban from skating—a move reminiscent of the Tonya Harding fallout—simply for trying to protect a skater from abuse. That wake of destruction remains active, and the wreckage continues to pile up. I have to believe that one day, God will say “enough.” This is my way of turning this situation over to God.

In Enemies of the Heart, Andy Stanley identifies Anger as the result of a “debt” mindset—the conviction that “you owe me.” When a bureaucrat smears your name or devalues a decade of your life, they create a massive debt. We wait for the apology or the admission of guilt to “balance the books,” but a bankrupt person can’t pay you back. Stanley’s solution isn’t “feelings”; it’s a business decision: Cancel the debt. You aren’t saying what they did was right; you’re deciding you will no longer wait for a thief to return what they stole.

I’ve heard the fake apologies—the corporate-speak non-apologies meant to shift the blame. Specifically: “I’m sorry you got your feelings hurt.” Let’s be blunt: that’s a tactical maneuver, not an apology. It ignores the lie, the rigged system, and the malicious intent. It treats a professional betrayal like an emotional glitch on your part. It’s the cowards’ way out.

Understand this: there is no commandment that forces you to associate with people like this. In my opinion, based on the Word, there are actually commandments not to associate with them. Scripture doesn’t call us to be door-mats for the deceptive. It tells us to “have nothing to do with them” (2 Timothy 3:5) and to “shun” those who persist in division and deceit. Forgiveness is about your heart’s freedom from their debt; it is not a legal requirement to invite a known liar back to your table.

“Forgive and forget” is a myth. Even the resurrected Christ carries the record of what was done to Him.

“Then I saw a Lamb, looking as if it had been slain, standing in the center of the throne…” — Revelation 5:6 (NIV)

The scars on the resurrected Christ prove that memory and mercy are not mutually exclusive. Those wounds are the eternal record of the price He paid. He hasn’t “forgotten” the cost; He absorbed the debt so the bill never reaches the one who owed it. Forgiveness isn’t forgetting; it’s absorbing the hit.

I wrote this for the men who still struggle, like I do, with the hard facts. I wrote it for the men who have done the work, kept the logs, and watched the “system” protect the liar. If you’re in those shoes, understand this: Your integrity isn’t defined by their inability to tell the truth. I know that one day God will hold them accountable, even if they never face justice on this earth. Scripture is clear: “It is mine to avenge; I will repay,” says the Lord. Sometimes, the most masculine thing you can do is shake the dust off your boots, cancel the debt, and leave the final audit to the only Judge who actually keeps the books.

Call to Action

If this story struck a chord, don’t just scroll on. Join the brotherhood—men learning to build, not borrow, their strength. Subscribe for more stories like this, drop a comment about where you’re growing, or reach out and tell me what you’re working toward. Let’s grow together.

D. Bryan King

Sources

Disclaimer:

The views and opinions expressed in this post are solely those of the author. The information provided is based on personal research, experience, and understanding of the subject matter at the time of writing. Readers should consult relevant experts or authorities for specific guidance related to their unique situations.

#accountability #AndyStanley #betrayal #biblicalForgiveness #CareerReputation #CharacterAssassination #CorporateGaslighting #dataIntegrity #DebtCancellation #DigitalManipulation #DocumentingTruth #ElectionRigging #enemiesOfTheHeart #FakeApologies #FigureSkatingAssociation #ForensicAudit #ForgivenessVsReconciliation #InstitutionalCorruption #InstitutionalCowardice #IntegrityInTech #LeadershipAccountability #masculineFaith #moralCourage #NonProfitPolitics #PhotographyArchives #ProfessionalIntegrity #recoveringFromBetrayal #ResurrectedScars #Revelation56 #ShakingTheDust #SkatingDirector #SmallTownCorruption #SmearCampaigns #StandardOfAppearance #standingFirm #SystemsArchitect #TheSlainLamb #ThirdPartyVotingSystems #VengeanceIsMine #VolunteerBurnout

Roemer Film Festival Proposal

My friend Andrea asked if I would be up for proposing a mini film festival for a local film culture society here in Trento. Ever since I’ve been chatting film on the regular with MBS as part of the Family Pictures Podcast (FPP) I feel ever more confident—not sure that’s entirely a good thing. So when he suggested the idea I immediately thought of a NYC in the 80s festival, showcasing movies […]

https://bavatuesdays.com/roemer-film-festival-proposal/

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Roemer Film Festival Proposal | bavatuesdays

*NEW BLOG POST*

My review of #VengeanceIsMine by Michael Wood is live on #damppebbles!

A very enjoyable, tense and twisty read. Dark, suspenseful and intriguing throughout.

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“A GRUESOME MURDER Twenty years ago, a young girl vanished from a quiet street in Northumberland. When her body was found in an attic close to her home, the whole neighbourhood was shocked. A…

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“A GRUESOME MURDER Twenty years ago, a young girl vanished from a quiet street in Northumberland. When her body was found in an attic close to her home, the whole neighbourhood was shocked. A…

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#BookReview: Vengeance is Mine by Michael Wood @0neMoreChapter_ #VengeanceIsMine #BookTwitter #booktwt #BookX #BookSky #damppebbles

"A GRUESOME MURDER Twenty years ago, a young girl vanished from a quiet street in Northumberland. When her body was found in an attic close to her home, the whole neighbourhood was shocked. A DEVASTATING SECRET For her entire life, Dawn Shephard has never known her father. But when news breaks that a murderer is about to be released from…

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@Priyajsridhar
I keep the rejections, for bookkeeping purposes, at least electronically.

I suppose if I ever had a nasty one I could print it out to burn it, symbolically . . .

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