
Posted on March 14th, 2026
I used to hear that and file it under “nice quote.” Then I saw a reel on Instagram that hit me like a warning shot: sometimes what delays your promise isn’t your effort. It’s your attachments.
Not the enemies you can see. The relationships you keep excusing.
If you’ve felt stuck—like you’re not elevating, not expanding, not progressing—don’t only audit your skills. Audit access. Who has your ear? Who has your time? Who has your money? Who has the power to derail your focus with one phone call?
Joshua, Caleb, and the Cost of the Wrong Crowd
Numbers tells the story of a people standing on the edge of promise…and then shrinking back.
Joshua and Caleb believed God. They didn’t rebel. They didn’t complain. They didn’t spread fear. God had no issue with them.
Yet the entire community’s unbelief turned a short journey into a 40-year delay.
They were ready, but they were surrounded by a camp that normalized fear. And when fear becomes normal, obedience becomes negotiable.
Here’s the part most people skip: the delay didn’t end with “and then everything was easy.”
When the people finally entered the land, they still had to fight for every inch. Caleb later says he was 40 when he was sent as a spy—and 85 when he’s still asking for his mountain. Forty-five years later, he’s still contending for what God promised. Still pushing giants out of territory.
So yes—God keeps His Word. But poor proximity can cost you years. And it can increase your warfare because you lost time you could have spent building capacity, stability, and strategy.
This is where it gets personal, because the biggest diversions aren’t always “bad people.”
Sometimes they’re family. Sometimes they’re loved ones. Sometimes they’re people you’d never call toxic—until you add up the receipts.
Family diversion #1: The bailout pattern
It starts as compassion. Then it becomes expectation.
Rent again.
A “temporary” car note that never ends.
Utilities.
A phone bill.
A cousin who “just needs help this month.”
A sibling who’s always one crisis away from your wallet.
And the script is always the same:
“Don’t forget where you came from.”
“That’s your blood.”
“If you don’t help, who will?”
“I would do it for you.”
But nobody says:
“What is this costing you?”
“What are you postponing to keep rescuing me?”
“Why am I still repeating the same emergency?”
At some point, it stops being generosity and becomes leakage. You’re trying to build a future while funding someone else’s refusal to grow.
Family diversion #2: The time theft that looks like “being there”
You finally carve out time to build what God told you to build—your business, your book, your program, your healing, your discipline—and then the interruptions arrive.
“Can you run me here?”
“Can you watch the kids?”
“Can you handle this for me?”
“Why are you always busy?”
“You think you’re better now?”
And if you don’t protect your time, you will keep donating your destiny to other people’s convenience.
Busy doesn’t always mean productive. Sometimes it means captured.
Family diversion #3: The guilt lever
This one is quieter, but it’s deadly.
They don’t ask. They imply.
They don’t request. They pressure.
“You only have one mother.”
“Family is all you’ve got.”
“God wouldn’t want you to say no.”
“So you’re too good to come around now?”
Love doesn’t require you to abandon stewardship.
Family diversion #4: The identity trap
Some families don’t hate your growth. They fear it.
Because if you change, the system has to change.
If you become whole, somebody loses control.
If you get disciplined, somebody loses access.
So they keep calling you what you used to be:
“You’ve always been like that.”
“You never finish anything.”
“You’re doing too much.”
“That’s not going to work.”
Those aren’t opinions. They are assignments. And if you accept them, you’ll shrink to keep the peace.
Friend diversion: The lifestyle subsidy
God calls you to build, but you keep financing distractions—your friend’s “nightlife,” their emergencies, their poor decisions—because they hype you, flatter you, and make you feel loyal.
They’re not aligned with your assignment. And your seed keeps getting used as sympathy.
Circle diversion: The low-ambition environment
You bring vision, they bring doubt.
You speak faith, they call it “too much.”
You talk about execution, they talk about risk.
You want growth, they want comfort.
And over time, their ceiling becomes your ceiling—if you keep letting them shape your thinking.
Loyalty without discernment becomes self-sabotage.
The Hidden Cost of Unaligned Proximity
When I stay close to people who can’t see what God has shown me, three things happen:
That’s why some people are exhausted. Not from work. From carrying relationships God never assigned them to carry at that level.
I’m using March to run a life audit. Not emotional. Not impulsive. Strategic and prayerful.
Here are the questions I’m asking:
And then I’m making decisions.
Some relationships need boundaries.
Some need distance.
Some need accountability.
Some need to end.
Let me be clear: boundaries are not bitterness.
I can love people and still limit them.
I can forgive people and still create distance.
I can honor family and still stop funding dysfunction.
I can care without carrying.
Boundaries aren’t rejection. They’re protection.
If I don’t know who I am, I’ll keep choosing relationships out of guilt, fear, loneliness, and people-pleasing.
But when identity is anchored in Christ, my standards change. My discernment sharpens. My “yes” becomes intentional. My “no” becomes clean.
If this hit home, don’t stop at emotion. Use a tool.
The Identity Audit helps you identify the beliefs driving your patterns, the relationship dynamics shaping your decisions, and the boundaries needed to protect what God is building in your life.
Take the Identity Audit: shunammiteenterprises.com
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