By: Wendy Morris
Trust is a big thing.
I think sometimes people believe trust is only broken through major betrayals, huge lies, or devastating situations. But honestly, trust usually starts breaking long before that. It breaks in the little things first. The inconsistencies. The half-truths. The things that “don’t add up.” The moments where your spirit starts noticing something your heart is trying to ignore.
Because if trust can be broken in small ways, what is to say it won’t eventually be broken in bigger ways?
That is the part people struggle with understanding.
Trust is not built overnight, and it is not usually destroyed overnight either. It is built through consistency, honesty, transparency, and feeling emotionally safe with someone. It is built when words and actions align repeatedly over time.
Proverbs 10:9 says,
“Whoever walks in integrity walks securely, but whoever takes crooked paths will be found out.”
Integrity creates safety. Deception creates instability.
And once trust is damaged, even in small ways, it changes things.
You begin questioning.
Overthinking.
Analyzing.
Trying to figure out what is real and what is not.
That is exhausting.
No healthy relationship should require you to become a private investigator just to feel secure.
One thing I have learned is this: people who have been hurt by lies sometimes turn around and lie to others themselves. At first, that never made sense to me. If someone knows firsthand how painful deception feels, why would they willingly do it to someone else?
But pain does strange things to people when it goes unhealed.
Sometimes people lie because they are afraid.
Afraid of conflict.
Afraid of disappointing someone.
Afraid of losing control.
Afraid of being fully honest because honesty requires vulnerability and accountability.
Other times, lying becomes a learned survival behavior. Something they picked up long before you ever entered their life. A defense mechanism they justify because facing the truth feels harder than hiding it.
But understanding why someone lies does not make it okay.
Being hurt is not an excuse to hurt others.
Ephesians 4:25 says,
“Therefore each of you must put off falsehood and speak truthfully to your neighbor.”
At some point, every person has to decide whether they are going to heal from their pain or allow that pain to spill into the lives of people who love them.
Pain can either make someone more honest…
or more deceptive.
More accountable…
or more avoidant.
More trustworthy…
or more guarded and self-protective.
The difference is whether they choose healing.
I think when you have experienced broken trust before, you start valuing honesty differently. You stop looking for perfection, but you do start looking for consistency. You stop wanting empty words and start paying attention to actions.
1 John 3:18 says,
“Let us not love with words or speech but with actions and in truth.”
Because real love is not just spoken. Real love is demonstrated consistently through honesty, character, and integrity.
You realize love without honesty does not create peace — it creates anxiety.
And real love should not constantly leave you questioning what is true.
Trust matters because emotional safety matters.
Without trust, relationships slowly become emotionally exhausting instead of emotionally fulfilling. You cannot truly rest where you constantly feel uncertainty.
The older I get, the more I realize that honesty is one of the purest forms of love and respect you can give someone. Even when the truth is uncomfortable. Even when it is hard. Even when it risks disappointment.
1 Corinthians 13:6 says,
“Love rejoices with the truth.”
Because honesty gives people the ability to make informed decisions with clarity instead of confusion.
And that matters.
Proverbs 12:22 says,
“The Lord detests lying lips, but he delights in people who are trustworthy.”
The older I get, the less impressed I am by charm, words, or promises alone. I pay attention to consistency now. To patterns. To integrity. To whether someone’s actions match what they say.
Because trust is fragile. Once broken, it takes consistency, accountability, and genuine change to rebuild it.
But one thing I know for sure is this:
I no longer want relationships that require constant questioning, confusion, or emotional investigation.
Peace exists where honesty lives.
And trust may be fragile, but discernment is a gift.
God will often show us what our heart is trying to overlook if we are willing to pay attention. Discernment allows us to recognize patterns, inconsistencies, and warning signs before deeper damage is done. It protects our peace, our emotional well-being, and sometimes even our future.
So pay attention to patterns, not just promises.
Because peace will never grow where honesty does not exist.
-Wendy

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