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Practicing What You Preach

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by Vanessa Davis Griggs




  Practicing What You Preach

  Also by Vanessa Davis Griggs

  “The George Landris/Johnnie Mae Taylor” Series:

  The Rose of Jericho

  Promises Beyond Jordan

  Wings of Grace

  Blessed Trinity Trilogy:

  Blessed Trinity

  Strongholds

  If Memory Serves

  Practicing What You Preach

  VANESSA DAVIS GRIGGS

  KENSINGTON PUBLISHING CORP.

  www.kensingtonbooks.com

  Dedicated to those who know but just need to be reminded

  of God’s love and forgiveness and that there really is nothing

  too hard or too big for our God.

  To the memory of my grandmother Peggy Jane Wiseman,

  my aunt Naomi Session, my uncle Henry Davis,

  my cousins Valerie Randle and Joseph “Lil Joe” Lee III

  —forever inside of my heart!

  Acknowledgments

  All that I am and all I ever hope to be I owe to an awesome and great God who truly loves me. Thank You, Heavenly Father, who gives me the victory and always causes me to triumph. To my mother, Mrs. Josephine Davis, and my father, Mr. James Davis Jr., who celebrated fifty years of marriage on November 23, 2008. You both have loved me and my siblings with an everlasting love, while having enough love to share with others who are blessed to know you, as you make them feel they’re just as special.

  Love to my family: my husband, Jeffery, of thirty-one years; my children, Jeffery, Jeremy, and Johnathan Griggs; grandchildren Asia and Ashlynn; sisters Danette Dial and Arlinda Davis, sister-in-law Cameron Davis; brothers Terence and Emmanuel Davis. Oh, if there were only words to express how much I love you all. My life is so much richer because of all of you.

  To those in our family who carry the history and memories of our past and to those who push us toward our future. My aunts: Mary Mack, Rachel Shockley, Ruth Washington, and aunt-in-law Clara Lee; uncles Joseph Lee Jr., Abraham Lee, and Daniel Lee; nieces and nephews Bart, Alexis, Ariel, Chantelle, Charisse, Christopher, Arionna, and Rechelle. The memories we make together no one can ever take away. Let’s hold the good things close to our hearts to warm us on those days when it may feel a bit cold and to hold them high to light our path when we need to see our way just a little bit better.

  I am so blessed to have friends who continue to encourage me on this journey: Rosetta Moore, Vanessa L. Rice, Stephanie Perry Moore, Irene Egerton Perry, Zelda Oliver-Miles, Linda H. Jones, Bonita Chaney, Ella Wells, Pam Hardy, Shirley Walker, and Malinda Millings. There are many who read my books, and I thank you so much for that. Two people I’d especially like to acknowledge: Regina Biddings and Gregg Pelt.

  To my editor, Rakia A. Clark: Do you have any idea how much I truly appreciate you and your wonderful spirit? I appreciate you! I am so blessed to know you and to be able to work with you. And I mean that from the bottom of my heart. To the staff of Kensington/Dafina: thank you for all that you do when it comes to me and my books. One plants, one waters, but God gives the increase.

  To those of you who have honored me by choosing to read Practicing What You Preach: I love you much! I’ve said this before and I mean it: I don’t and won’t ever take you for granted. Many of you may know by now how much I pray about what I do before I ever begin. I know how much God loves you and how much He wants the best for you. I just want to be obedient to what God gives me to do. God told me to write this book because He cares about those who feel bound and are hurting. It’s not I but He that dwells within me. I thank God for caring so much about us the way that I know He does.

  I love hearing from you. Thank you for spreading the word about my books. May you continue to walk in God’s exceedingly, abundantly, above-all-you-can-ever-ask-or-think blessings. Now, let’s get started! It’s good to be blessed, but even better to be a blessing.

  Vanessa Davis Griggs

  www.VanessaDavisGriggs.com

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  Discussion Questions

  Chapter 1

  And the hand of the Lord was there upon me; and he said unto me, Arise, go forth into the plain, and I will there talk with thee.

  —Ezekiel 3:22

  The sunlight seemed to pour through my bedroom window even more than usual. I pulled my blanket completely over my head as soon as I realized the brightness was affecting my sleep. I didn’t want to get up today. I just didn’t. I was tired. Not physically tired (although working a full-time job while putting together an elaborate wedding is draining), but tired on the inside. Tired of people expecting things from me, tired of people asking if I can do things for them, automatically assuming I’ll do it. T-i-r-e-d, tired! I sneaked a quick peek at the clock. Twenty more minutes until the alarm was set to go off. Quick! Go back to sleep. Before there are people to please.

  I don’t usually consider myself a people pleaser. In fact, I would describe myself as strong and independent. But lately, I’ve been taking on more and more. I don’t know, maybe all of this can be traced back to my upbringing—the people-pleasing part, that is. It’s what my mother prides herself on, although she likes to call it being a peacemaker…a unifier…a real leader. My mother, Ernestine, is the one everybody goes to when somebody needs something: time, help, money (especially money), and everything in between. She’s the one who takes care of the family—immediate, extended, and those who merely call themselves family. She forever places herself last on the list, which normally means there’s nothing left when her turn finally rolls around. And at fifty-two that’s what’s slowly taking a toll on her. It’s not the high blood pressure and cholesterol her doctor has her taking pills for daily. Putting everybody else’s needs and wants above her own is what’s dragging her down.

  Well, I’ve decided at age twenty-eight that my mother’s fate will not be mine, no matter how much people claim I’m just like her. I want a lot out of life, and I don’t intend to put my goals on the back burner. I just need to figure out how to say no to things I don’t want to do and stick with it after I say it.

  Those two letters—n and o—when knitted together form a definitive answer. But for some reason I’ve not been able to make them work for me effectively. Sure, I may start with the n but it will invariably come out as, “Now?” or “N…oh, you really want me to?” Or worse: “No problem.”

  Two days ago my friend Nae-nae called and gave me a chance to test just how far I’d come with this “saying
no” business.

  “Peaches, I have something I have to do that I absolutely can’t change,” Nae-nae began, calling me by the nickname reserved and used only by a few family members and my closest of friends. “Can you take my mother to the grocery store for me tomorrow?”

  “No,” I said firmly, fighting off my normal knee-jerk reaction to add something else to it in the form of some type of acceptable excuse.

  “No?” she said as though I had no right to ever say that. “What do you mean, no?”

  “I have some things I need to do myself,” I said as I began to slip back into my usual role of not wanting anyone to be upset with me because I’d dared not please them.

  She laughed. “Oh! Is that all? Well, you can just take her after you finish what you have to do. It’s not like she has to be at the grocery store at a certain time or anything, although you know she is slightly disabled and shouldn’t be out too late at night. Come on, Peaches, you know I don’t have anyone else to help me out. I’ve always been able to count on you. Please don’t start being like everybody else and let me down now. Pleeeaaase?” she whined.

  “Okay, fine. I’ll take her,” I said even quicker than I suspected I would. She thanked me and hurried off the phone. I had caved in yet again.

  What I should have said was, “Well, if your mother doesn’t have to be there at a certain time then you can take her after you finish what you have to do.” That’s what I should have said. But no, that wasn’t what I said at all. I’d merely given in once more.

  It’s so funny how later on you can always think of stuff you should have said. So my new goal is to learn how to say what I mean and stick with it no matter what. I just have a hard time telling someone I can’t do something when honestly I know that physically I can. Just one more lovely trait I can attribute to my fine upbringing.

  My mother never believed in telling lies, not even the little white ones folks basically say it’s okay to tell. You know like, “No, you don’t look fat in that.” Or “Cute outfit.” What about, “Oh, no; I really do like your hair. I was only staring so hard at you because it’s so…different.”

  Not my mama. It was “Girl, now you know you’re too old to be trying to wear something like that.” Or “Somebody lied to you. Go back and try again.” Or what about, “That looks good, it just doesn’t look good on you.” Still, she will do anything for you.

  I started planning special events as a hobby about two years ago, but lately it appears this could someday become my real bread and butter if I continue to pursue it seriously. Everybody says I’m great at putting things together. That’s what I was doing yesterday after work—taking care of some pressing business for an upcoming wedding. A wedding, incidentally, that’s huge and could really put my name on the go-to-for-event-planning map.

  I pushed myself to do what I had to do after work, then managed to take Nae-nae’s mother to the store. It took her two whole hours to shop. Two hours I really didn’t have to spare. She insisted on doing it herself. Seriously, she could have given me the list she’d already written out anyway, and I would have been done in fifteen minutes. Tops. Instead, she ended up riding in the mobile cart the store provided. She’d stand up, get an item, put it in the basket, sit down, then ride sometimes just to the next group of items, only to begin the slow and tedious cycle all over again.

  I don’t know, maybe I really am as hopeless a case as Cass said. Cass is my ex-boyfriend. His real name is Cassius, named after his father who was named after Cassius Clay the boxer before he changed his name to Muhammad Ali. If you ask me, I’d say Cass thought his name was short for Casanova. But truthfully, he was the one who got me started on this self-evaluating journey I’ve been on lately. Cass flat out said I was too easy and a real pushover. Well, he should know, since he treated me like a disposable pen, then pushed me over and threw me away when he felt my ink was all but used up.

  And to think he had the nerve to break up with me and make out like everything was all my fault. He claimed I was too self-centered for him. Give me a break! So I was supposed to believe that I was too easy, a pushover, while at the same time believe I was self-centered. All righty then. Looking back, the best thing Cass ever did for me was to move his narcissist-self on. Now, you want to talk about somebody being stuck on himself, then that is Cass, the guy I dated last for a whole year, to a T. After Cass, I started listening to my pastor and decided to pray that God would send the right man into my life, because I sure wasn’t doing all that hot on my own.

  This was all too much to be thinking about this early in the morning, especially with very little time before the alarm was going to sound. But I still found a way to doze off again. I hit the snooze button three times before finally dragging myself out of the bed. Standing in front of the window, I took in the stillness of the day’s beginnings, then hurried to dress, made my way to work, and got to my desk with two minutes to spare.

  Marcus Peeples was walking out of Dr. Brewer’s office when I arrived. He often comes into the OB/GYN’s office where I work. Definitely not the most handsome guy I’ve ever seen (especially with the glasses he wears), Marcus is around 5'11" and sort of lanky, particularly compared to me.

  Some label my body type as thick, which means curvy in all the right places. My mother said we’re just big-boned people. “Absolutely nothing to be ashamed of,” Mama always said. It’s never bothered me. After all, Marilyn Monroe was a size fourteen, same as me.

  Marcus seemed like an all right guy. He was usually trying to push (what I assumed) his pharmaceutical products on my boss, who must be too nice to tell him to buzz off. But lately, every time he has come in here with his fancy briefcase in hand, he has tried to strike up more and more conversation with me.

  Two months ago, he asked if I was married or dating anyone. Having just broken up with Cass a few weeks earlier, my answer pretty much conveyed that not only was I not dating anyone, but that I wasn’t interested in dating anyone anytime soon. He promptly dropped that line of questioning for a few weeks. Then it happened. Today, in fact.

  When Marcus walked into Dr. Brewer’s office, he stepped over to my desk and without his customary hi or how are you said, “How about you and I go out on a date.”

  I flashed him a quick fake, polite smile, and replied, “Thanks, but no thanks.” Who says I can’t say no and mean it?

  He nodded as he smiled back at me. “Oh, I see. You must only be interested in the kind of guys who like to break your heart, then leave you to put the pieces back together,” Marcus said.

  For someone who reminded me at best of a reformed nerd, at worst of someone almost anyone could take down in a fight, that statement took me totally by surprise.

  “No. I’m just not interested in you,” I said, pointing my finger at him on cue with the word you, not caring whether my words hurt his feelings. I was on a roll today: two no’s in a row.

  Instead of scurrying away the way I expected he would do, he set his briefcase down on my desk. “And how do you know that?”

  My eyes immediately went to the briefcase, then back to him. “A woman knows these things,” I said, rolling my chair back away from him just a tad. He’d gotten a little too close for my comfort.

  “Just as I suspected. You’re one of those women who will never give a good man a chance. That way, you can have your beliefs validated about all the men who have hurt you and feel justified without those beliefs ever being challenged.”

  What did he do that for? I was just about to say something smart like “Is that right, Dr. Phil?” when he suddenly took off his glasses. It’s amazing how glasses can change a person’s looks entirely. Right before my eyes, in just that instant, Marcus Peeples was transformed from Clark Kent into Superman—I kid you not. I noticed for the first time his hair, cut low and sort of wavy, most likely with the help of a wave cap. I took note of how perfect his hairstyle fit his caramel-colored face. His goatee, which I hadn’t paid attention to, was perfect for his triangular jaw. But it wa
s those long, thick, black eyelashes framing those gorgeous, twinkling brown eyes that now had me completely fixated and, quite frankly, at a loss for words. Dr. Phil who?

  I scooted my chair back a little bit more, smiled, then shook my head to emphasize that his assessment of me and my situation was totally wrong as I tried to right my ship. He’d gotten me a little off course.

 

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