The Lie of “Strong Enough”
What if the thing you’re most proud of is the thing that’s breaking you?

“She’s so strong.” “I don’t know how she does it.” “You’re the strongest woman I know.”
I collected those words like trophies. Every compliment about my strength went straight to the shelf where I kept my identity. I was the one who held it together. The one who didn’t crumble. The one everyone could count on.
Until the day I realized that the “strong” or “strong enough” labels I had worn like a crown, had become a prison to my soul.
Because somewhere along the way, being strong stopped being a character trait and became a contract. An unwritten agreement between me and the world that said: you will never need help, you will never fall apart, and you will never, ever admit that you’re drowning.
And I kept that contract. For years. While my soul quietly suffocated under the weight of it.
“But he said to me, ‘My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.’ Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ’s power may rest on me.” — 2 Corinthians 12:9
Here’s What Your Feelings Tell You Otherwise...
The “strong enough” lie sounds like this:
“If I ask for help, I’m admitting defeat.”
“People are counting on me. I can’t let them down.”
“If they saw the real me, they’d be disappointed.”
“God gave me this load because He knows I can carry it.”
“Who will hold things together if I fall apart?”
I believed every single one of those for longer than I’d like to admit.
The truth? I wasn’t being strong. I was performing strength. There’s a difference.
Real strength knows when to ask for help. Real strength says, “I’m not okay right now.” Real strength puts down the cape and picks up the phone.
But performance strength? That just keeps smiling. Keeps serving. Keeps saying “I’m fine” while the walls close in.
The Deeper Story
Paul didn’t say he overcame his weakness. He didn’t say he pushed through it. He said he boasted in it.
Boasted. In. Weakness.
That’s the opposite of everything we’ve been taught. The world says hide your weakness. The culture says power through. Even some church circles say “just have more faith” as if admitting exhaustion means admitting doubt.
But Paul understood something that took me decades to learn: God’s power doesn’t show up in our self-sufficiency. It shows up in our surrender.
When we finally stop pretending we’re strong enough on our own, we create space for His strength to actually do what ours never could.
“The Lord is my strength and my shield; my heart trusts in him, and he helps me.” — Psalm 28:7
Notice: “The Lord is my strength.” Not “I am my strength.” Not “My willpower is my strength.” Not “My ability to hold it all together is my strength.”
He is.
And here’s the beautiful paradox: admitting you’re not strong enough is actually the strongest thing you can do. Because it shifts the weight from your shoulders to His. And His shoulders? They never get tired.
Think about the women in Scripture who modeled this. Ruth admitted she had nothing and gleaned from someone else’s field. Hannah poured out her grief so raw that the priest thought she was drunk. The woman at the well told Jesus her whole messy story. None of them performed strength. They showed up honest. And God met them there.
What This Means for You
Sweet friend, if you’ve been carrying the title of “the strong one,” can I ask you something?
Who carries you?
Who do you call when you’re the one falling apart? Who holds the space for your tears, your fears, your “I can’t do this anymore” moments?
If you can’t name anyone, that’s not a badge of honor. That’s a warning sign.
You were never meant to carry it all alone. Not the family. Not the ministry. Not the emotional weight of everyone around you. God designed us for interdependence, not independence.
“Carry each other’s burdens, and in this way you will fulfill the law of Christ.” - Galatians 6:2
Each OTHER’s. That means someone should be carrying yours too.
Remember This Truth
Being strong is not the same as being okay.
Asking for help is not giving up. It’s growing up.
And admitting you’re not “strong enough”? That’s not weakness. That’s the beginning of real freedom.
You don’t have to be the strong one anymore. You just have to be the honest one. And let the God whose power is made perfect in weakness do what He does best.
Put down the crown, sweet friend. Pick up the rest.
An Invitation
I want to ask you something, and I want you to answer honestly:
What are you carrying right now that you were never meant to carry alone?
Maybe it’s a role. Maybe it’s a relationship. Maybe it’s an expectation you placed on yourself so long ago you forgot it was optional.
Name it. Say it out loud or write it down. And then ask yourself: what would it look like to set this down?
Reply or leave a comment and share with me. You might be surprised how many other women are carrying the same thing. And there’s freedom in knowing you’re not the only one.
Joyfully yours,
Tina 💛
📣What “strong enough” lie are you ready to let go of? Reply or comment below. Let’s lay it down together.
“From my heart to yours, thank you for reading. 💖
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