I’ve carried scars most of my life. Some are visible, but most are invisible, the scars of foster care, of trauma, of being told by circumstances that I didn’t belong. For years, I believed those scars disqualified me. I thought they made me less than.
But over time, I discovered something powerful: my scars were not my shame, they were my strategy.
Did you catch that? What you think disqualifies you might actually be the very thing that equips you.
That’s why I believe the Triple R Method™ — Reframe, Reclaim, Rename, isn’t just for careers or money. It’s also a framework for faith and identity. Here’s how it applies.
So many people believe their scars disqualify them. But faith tells a different story. Your scars are proof of survival. They are evidence of God’s grace.
When I look back on my life, losing my mother, growing up in foster care, facing rejection and doubt, I don’t see just pain. I see preparation. Pain became gold.
Your Move:
Write down one scar you carry. Then reframe it: “This doesn’t prove I’m broken; this proves I survived.”
Scripture says:
“My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.” (2 Corinthians 12:9)
Scars can make you feel powerless, like life happened to you and there’s nothing you can do about it. But reclaiming means refusing to let your scars tell the last word.
When I stepped into leadership, I brought my scars with me. They reminded me that I’d already survived worse than boardroom politics or business setbacks. That truth gave me courage to speak up, to lead boldly, and to walk in rooms I never imagined.
Your Move:
Identify one way your scars have already shaped your strength. Write it down. Then choose to live from that strength instead of from fear.
Scripture says:
For we are God’s handiwork, created in Christ Jesus to do good works.” (Ephesians 2:10)
Too often we let scars define us by old labels: abandoned, unworthy, broken. But in Christ, we get a new name. We are chosen. We are redeemed. We are called.
I had to stop calling myself “the orphan who got lucky” and start calling myself “a son of God with purpose.” That renaming gave me confidence to walk in identity, not insecurity.
Your Move:
Write down the label your scar has given you. Then rename it with the truth of who God says you are.
Scripture says:
“To the one who is victorious, I will give… a white stone with a new name written on it.” (Revelation 2:17)
Your scars are not your shame. They are your story, your strength, and your strategy.
Reframe them. Reclaim them. Rename them.
Do that, and you won’t just carry scars, you’ll rise with them, walking in the very purpose God designed you for.