Weekly meetings available to you are as follows:

Tuesdays at 6:00 PM, Foundry Church - 3010 Lakeland Cove, Flowood. Call Matt Flint at (601) 260-8518 or email him at matthewflint.makes@gmail.com or Lance Bowser at (601) 862-8308 or email at lancebowser@msi-inv.com.

Wednesday at 6:00 PM, First Baptist Church Jackson - Summit Counseling Suite - 431 North State St. Jackson. Call Don Waller at 601-946-1290 or email him at don@wallerbros.com.

Monday at 6:30 PM , Vertical Church - 521 Gluckstadt Road Madison, MS 39110. Mr. Roane Hunter, facilitator, LifeWorks Counseling.

Sunday night at 6:00 PM, Grace Crossing Baptist Church - 598 Yandell Rd. Canton. Call Ryan Adams at 662-571-5705 or email him at ryan.adams1747@gmail.com.


Monday, October 2, 2023

Give Yourself Credit Where Credit's Due / Look Towards The Future

The first Samson Society National Retreat I attended was during the fall of 2017 (I believe it was the first weekend of November).  The venue was a Tennessee state park smack dab in the middle of the Volunteer State.  The weather was perfect that weekend.  I vividly recall the fall foliage being spectacular.

The (earlier in 2017) email invitation which touted this retreat described it initially as a Samson Society meeting facilitators' retreat.  And it's important to note that back then, there were no virtual Samson Society meetings.  Every meeting across the country was face-to-face.

As the date for this 2017 retreat loomed closer, the description of said retreat changed.  What started out as a Samson facilitators' retreat morphed into a Samson Society retreat (come one, come all).  

I recall my Silas and I (who'd already signed up for the retreat) being disappointed therein.  For we were both fledglings facilitating face-to-face meetings at our respective church homes.  

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One week prior to our departure, there were three of us Jackson, MS Samson guys signed up to go (the plan was to carpool in one man's SUV), but at the very last minute, my Silas convinced one other longstanding / tenured Jackson, Mississippi Samson man to come too.  At this time, this man was having tremendous difficulties relative to his recovery, therefore my Silas, being the sympathetic man he was, felt compelled to pressure him to take this step / deep dive (as a last resort). 

This upended my plans to spend some quality time with my Silas during said 2017 retreat, and frankly, that greatly disappointed me.  For this fourth man would now be(come) the focus throughout the weekend.  I realize that sounds petty, but I honestly felt as if I was dealt an unfair hand regarding.  

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The Tennessee state park where the retreat was hosted had a motel attached to it.  Hence, these were our accommodations.  Overall, from what I recall, there were around 50 - 75 Samson guys at this retreat, and those who'd come some distance (as we had) stayed on site two-men to a motel room. 

I begrudgingly agreed to room with our Samson retreat straggler in lieu of my Silas.  And it was this lodging arrangement where the problems for me were centered.

This struggling Samson guy (fourth man) was an expat from Central America.  He'd lived in Mississippi most of his life but had family and numerous mistresses back in his native land.  In anticipation of his scheduled return to his home country (not long after this retreat). he was in the throes of sexting these mistresses in anticipation of his homecoming.  

I was privy to all this due to me inquiring as to why he was constantly using his pocket computer while we were there together (& otherwise) within our assigned motel room.  

I vividly recall wanting to vomit numerous times throughout the weekend as I worked hard to ignore his shenanigans.  

Keep in mind that my wife and I had dined with he and his wife 3-6 months prior to this retreat (they were 8-10 years older than us), therefore we'd had the opportunity to get to know his native Mississippi bride then (he was estranged from their grown children due to his serial adultery).  

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As you can imagine, I had to make the best of a really horrible situation.  As such, it tainted my outlook / turned the tables on my hopes for this initial National Samson Retreat experience.  It's important to note that I hardly even spoke to my Silas throughout this weekend (I was extremely pissed at him).

Like every Samson National Retreat I've attended, this 2017 retreat was no different in that it consisted of loads of free time.  Hence, due to my motel roommate's ongoing wretched behavior, I made a point to find any feasible excuse to vacate our shared space. 

One benefit of this venue (Tennessee State Park) was its proximity to a public golf course (right across the highway).  I recall heading over there numerous times to run the golf cart paths (thanks be to God I brought my running shoes).  Again, the weather was absolutely perfect for being out of doors during this particular weekend.

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After this 2017 retreat concluded, none of the other three Samson men attended another Samson National Retreat (except one guy in 2021 but only because he was asked to lead a workshop).   

Yet, I soldiered on by attending in 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, & 2022.  

Why?

In 2018, the venue changed (Methodist Retreat Center in Eva, TN), and that really was the deciding factor in motivating me to attend once again.  Two, I knew I'd not be a newbie going forward.  And three, our Jackson, Mississippi expat Samson colleague vanished immediately following the 2017 retreat.

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Many of you have had less than ideal Samson National Retreat experiences, and as such, refuse to even consider a return.

That being the case, please know that EVERY SAMSON SOCIETY NATIONAL RETREAT WHICH SUCCEEDED THE 2017 WAS FAR MORE ENJOYABLE FOR ROB.  

Give yourself credit where credit's due.  If you're like me, you made the initial attempt.  That says a lot.  But if your initial retreat experience didn't live up to your expectations, don't allow that to give you credence to write off future opportunities.  So many variables exist that are completely out of our control regarding these weekends.  Be open-minded.  Take another step forward, and please join us at the 2023 Samson Society National Retreat in Van, Texas (brand new venue!).  Who knows, this year's retreat may be an absolutely life-changing experience for you.  

Recommended Listening


Friday, September 29, 2023

Communication (Within Samson Society) Is A Key To Success

Saturday, (10/7) is slated to be the day Mr. Nate Larkin hosts the second official "Samson Society Meeting Host Training" via Zoom.  The first one occurred back in February of this year.  Throughout all my years of involvement within Samson Society (since August 2014), there's been nada training for meeting hosts.  Hence, this is a surprising, very exciting change that's immensely helpful to all of us involved.

Digital communications really took off within Samson Society in April of 2018 with the launch of the monthly emailed publication, "The No Bull Briefing".  This is an easy to read, snapshot newsletter that captures / informs really well.

But as of late, digital communications have been much more repetitious (there's been numerous emailed robo-emails touting the forthcoming 2023 National Samson Society Retreat).  These are all unique, fresh splash announcements that are eye-catching / engaging.  

Communication is a key to success.

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A summarization of Samson Society resources (w/ hyperlinks):

Sustaining Member Sign Up:
https://www.samsonhouse.org/member-registration
Sustaining Member Sign Up Password: NoBullBrotherhood
Giving:
https://samsonsociety.com/help-us-reach-more-men/
Sarah Society:
https://sarahsociety.com/
Samson Store:
https://samsonswag.squarespace.com/
National Retreat 2023:
https://samsonhouse.regfox.com/samson-society-summit-2023
No Bull Briefing and Daily Encouragement Registration:
https://signup.e2ma.net/signup/1891992/1898197/
Pirate Monk Podcast:
https://samsonsociety.podbean.com/
National Suicide Hotline: US: 988 (Call or Text)
Canada: Call 1-866-585-0445 OR Text WELLNESS to 741741

Communication is a key to success.

Recommended Reading

The Hyphen We Call Home: Everyday Life in the Last Days | Desiring God

Thursday, September 28, 2023

"I Found Jesus In Prison..." Ethan #12


"For it is true, we can seldom help those closest to us. Either we don't know what part of ourselves to give or, more often than not, the part we have to give is not wanted.  And so, it's those we live with and should know who elude us. But we can still love them - we can love them completely without completely understanding."

 

Norman Maclean ~ A River Runs Through It
 
 

Rob's Sobering Drive Home

I'm fortunate to live within a metro that simply doesn't have a snarled traffic expectation attached to it.  Hence, unless its holiday season (Xmas), I'm not at all constrained to come and go from home undeterred as I please.  As a result, Jackson, Mississippi and its surrounding suburbs feel more like a big-small town than a thriving urban metropolis.  As such, vehicular transportation flows relatively freely, and much of this can be attributed to the fact that a large majority of the city's (Jackson) impoverished (black populace) simply do not own cars.

Throughout the majority of my free-flowing drive home one afternoon this past week, I carried on disturbed, having spotted a couple exiting a (known) therapist's office, heading towards their parked car.  Obviously, this emotionally raucous (weighty) disturbance was centered around me knowing this husband / wife.  And not only that, but that knowing being rooted within the assumption that their marriage was no doubt Jackson, Mississippi upper-class white people picture P-E-R-F-E-C-T.

This couple has been married about as long as Angie and me.  We've known them for decades, having worshipped with them (same church) years prior.  But not only that, these two and their beautiful offspring have been featured repeatedly within print publications throughout the years.  Publications touting both their deep-seated faith and unconventional (yet obviously devout) approach to rearing their children.  To top it off, this couple is made up of two photogenically beautiful human beings, and not only from the standpoint of focusing on their health, but too, as it pertains to simply stellar DNA.  Intelligent, beautiful, charismatic = picture P-E-R-F-E-C-T.

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When Angie and I were first married, we worshipped with this couple and numerous others at First Baptist Church Jackson.  Angie at the time was working too for a massive international corporation that just happened to have a presence here in the Jackson Metro.  Hence, we found ourselves rubbing shoulders with the future "movers & shakers" of Jackson each time we stepped foot into that church.  Whether it was doctors, lawyers, accountants, heirs apparent to hugely successful enterprises, each represented crystallized perfection via how they dressed, where they lived and so forth. 

Yet, there of course, isn't any relational (& certainly not marital) perfection, is there?  

Marriages are tenuous.  Easily bruised.  Rarely solvent.  Under constant pressure.   

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What was so disturbing therein regarding my drive home was how unconvinced the wife looked compared to her beaming husband as they strode across the asphalt to their vehicle.  This woman has a powerfully emotive face, therefore I could read her expressions instantly during those few drive-by seconds.  

Perhaps her husband had launched a poorly timed joke that had fallen flat just moments prior.  I actually hope so.  Instead, what I saw seemed more of a potential reflection of what had transpired during the hour prior.

Very, very disturbing indeed.

What's that saying about a woman scorned?        

"The Spirals of Neurotic Thinking" - JR Everhart

Neuroticism is defined by a propensity toward anxiety, negativity, and self-doubt It is often experienced by constantly rehashing worst–case scenarios in your head, and it can be linked to a high level of guilt, worry, fear, and depression.

This just described my entire life!  The problem is I have no idea how to decouple myself from these overpowering thought patterns that are keeping me stuck in neutral - unable to move forward with my life.  Every time I reenter into the dating scene, I end up over thinking everything, thereby ruining any chance of the relationship growing forward.  When I realize this, I end up breaking it off prior to my significant other having a chance to see (up close) how messed up I truly am (and as a result, breaking up with me).  And yes, I know there’re layers of dysfunction within that - as described - self-defeating cycle.  


Fear is such a huge part of all this.


In all honesty, I’m terrified that if I advance forward emotionally with someone that it will close the door on any chance of me reconciling with my ex-wife.  I still love her very much, and I’m heartbroken over our divorce - even after 3 years.  I’ve tried to reach out to her countless times, yet she hasn’t said a word to me in three years.  Not even a fuck you, or go to hell, ABSOLUTELY NOTHING!  Therefore, I was left high & dry without any real closure.  Hence, I try to move forward, desiring the connection and commitment of a woman, but every time I start dating someone I morph into a discombobulated mess and screw everything up.  From there, the fall out is so taxing on me emotionally.  It just makes me want to never date again.  That lasts about as long as the next female prospect knocking on my inbox.   

Rereading that last paragraph summarizes the emotional roller coaster that has been my recently lived life.  Out - of - emotional - control.  The sad thing is, I know I just need to relax, cut myself some slack, and stop over thinking everything.  But that’s easier said than done.  I’ll be 51 next month.  As such, I'm finding myself knee deep in what feels like a mid-life crisis promulgated by all this.  Honestly, I'm often dealing with intrusive thoughts like, “I’m quickly getting to old, fat, and gross to actually connect with a woman I’d actually want to build something with.  I guess I’ll just have to settle for someone as old, fat, and gross as myself…”  As you might imagine, this and spirals into the emotional abyss of madness almost instantaneously.  Other intrusive doubts manifest themselves as, “Perhaps I’ll die alone; having settled into my recliner whilst watching Star Wars movies.  In the end, no one will have found me for weeks…”  This is insane thinking!  (Though it’s hilarious to read.)  


This is neurotic thinking at its finest. 


So where is there hope in all this?  TRUST GOD! 

It’s the only advice that has any merit to it.  At the foundation of neurotic behavior is a lack of trust that God‘s gonna do anything to bless your unworkably difficult situation.  Why do we refuse to trust?  Perhaps it's due to the fact that we’ve asked God to jump through our hoops this way or that way, and yet he's been unmoved as to his own will.  The enemy can use this as artillery to destroy our faith.  Neurotic behavior is lubricated by a madcap demand of wanting control when in actuality, it’s a lack of having control over the future that drives us nuts.  We want answers, and ultimately, I want love without any risks whatsoever.  In essence, I desire (my version of) the perfect woman.  A woman that understands and accepts all my craziness within the first 20 minutes of dialogue.  I don’t want to wait for anything. I want instant gratification!  I feel as if I deserve that by justifiable asking the following, "Haven’t I suffered enough in this world, beaten and abused, heartbroken and alone?  Are you paying attention God?  Don’t you see how good of a person I am, and how much I deserve to be treated differently than everyone else?  Shouldn’t I be allowed to live by a more lenient set of rules than everyone else due to my suffering, abuse, and trauma?  And on, and on, and on, the spiral goes. W hen I get like this, I’m reminded of how much I sound like Job.  Suffering brings out the the worst in us sometimes, and when life isn’t working as we see fit, then we tend to push God out of the driver's seat like an angry teenager who thinks he knows more about driving at 16-years-old than his father does.  Again, this lack of faith is where the neurotic thinking tends to take root.  

Simply trusting our Heavenly Father to comfort and heal us is the only way off the rollercoaster!  I’ve reconciled myself to this truth a thousand times, but yet I still find myself drifting toward insanity (if I even look at the driver's seat).


Unconditionally / helplessly surrendering these unhealthy thought patterns is the only pathway to peace.


As humans, we are so ill equipped to be able to handle the trauma and the disappointment of this world. It’s only through our relationship with Jesus Christ that we can find any longstanding fulfillment, comfort, and peace.  The book of Ecclesiastes is all about that very truth!  When reading it, one can easily relate to the neurotic thinking Solomon, yet all the while, he was constructing an argument for unconditional surrender to God coupled with healthy connection with supportive friends.  Honestly men, that’s all any of us really have in this world.  Everything else is meaningless…


Lagniappe

Wednesday, September 27, 2023

Book Your Flight to the Summit for Half Price!

 


Recommended Reading

Until You Get to Pastor: Seven Ambitions for Aspiring Men | Desiring God