Fear It Will Never Be Good Enough: Finding Freedom from Discontent
Nov 01, 2025
Title: Fear It Will Never Be Good Enough: Finding Freedom from Discontent
Podcast Date: October 28, 2025
Listen Here:
Description
Do you ever feel like nothing in your life will ever be good enough? In today’s honest and insightful episode, Heather Creekmore opens up about her struggles with CDD or “Chronic Disappointment Disorder”—a feeling that no achievement or special day is ever truly satisfying. She explores the root of this persistent discontent and uncovers how fear, envy, and comparison play into our longing for "enough."
Heather dives deep into the heart-level issues fueling our dissatisfaction and shares practical wisdom on searching for true contentment in Christ. Drawing lessons from Tim Keller’s teachings on envy, Heather reveals how comparison, restlessness, and selfish ambition point us toward deeper spiritual problems, including idolatry. The episode is packed with personal stories, scriptural references, and actionable advice for anyone weighed down by the fear of never measuring up.
If you struggle with body image, success, or just feeling like you’re perpetually missing out, Heather walks you through how to identify envy, repent, and redirect your heart toward worship and gratitude. Ultimately, this episode is filled with hope—reminding us that our deepest satisfaction can only be found in Jesus and in the coming kingdom.
Episode Highlights:
- Personal stories of disappointment, from vacations to Mother's Day
- Discontent, envy, and their spiritual dangers
- How reslessness and comparison are more than just “bad habits”—they're rooted in envy
- The connection between body image, identity, and idolatry
- Scripture references: James 3:16, Galatians 5:19-21, 1 Corinthians 13:4, Proverbs 14:30
- Tim Keller’s two directions for overcoming envy: upward (fear of the Lord) and forward (hope in Christ for the future)
- The crucial role of repentance and confession—not just positive thinking
- Surrendering goals and desires to God for genuine change
- Turning discontent into worship and gratitude
Resources & Links:
- The Comparison Free Life by Heather Creekmore*
- 40 Day Body Image Workbook*
- Tim Keller’s Sermons on Envy (Listen here)
Connect with Heather:
Transcript
Heather Creekmore [00:00:02]:
Life Audio. Hey there, friend. Thanks for listening to the Compared to youo podcast today. I'm Heather Creekmore. I'm glad you're here. And I've got a confession to make. I struggle with something called C D Chronic Disappointment disorder. Okay.
Heather Creekmore [00:00:22]:
It's not a real thing. You can't, like, look it up in the dsm, but it's real for me. It's. It's this challenge problem I've had where it's felt like nothing will ever be good enough. Maybe you felt it too. It can feel like this internal flaw, like, what is wrong with me that I can't just be happy and see the glasses half full? Why do I always have to find the flaws in everything? What is going on here? And I think what's going on here is what's going to surprise you today. You see, we're in this series called Fear Free Fall. If youf.
Heather Creekmore [00:01:01]:
You haven't Listened to any of the other episodes, I highly encourage you go back. Especially that first episode where I talk about the big dichotomy between fear and faith and why sometimes faith doesn't work to conquer our fears like we think it should, and why that is what's actually going on, why our faith is misplaced when it doesn't work like we want it to. But today we're talking about the fear that it'll never be enough, that it'll never be good enough or. Or really the fear that I'll never be content. And if you've been raised in the church, you might be saying to yourself, I know I'm supposed to be content. I know discontentment is a sin. I know Paul was content. Even in prison, you know all the things, and yet getting that knowledge from your head to your heart has felt like an impossible journey.
Heather Creekmore [00:01:49]:
That's where we're going today, friend. We're going to look at what is the fear under the fear, or what is really the heart problem under the fear of us being afraid. It'll never be good enough, that we'll never be content. That's where we're going today. I'm so glad you're here for it. It's going to be so good. Let's get right to it. The fear of never being content.
Heather Creekmore [00:02:19]:
My chronic disappointment disorder, where no matter what it is or how amazing it is or how wonderful it's been supposed to be, there's this little part of me that knows I'll find some way to be disappointed. Some part of it is going to let me down. I think about vacations where I had this grand dream for how the vacation was going to be. And I don't know, something goes wrong. Maybe it rains, maybe the schedule didn't work out like I wanted it to and flights were delayed and I'm disappointed. Or maybe it was a holiday. I was looking so oh forward to Christmas and this Christmas was going to be so special. And people get sick or family members don't show up or things just don't go according to plan.
Heather Creekmore [00:03:09]:
Maybe it was even your own wedding. Like it was that way for me. Oh my goodness, the number of things that went wrong at my wedding that tried to steal the joy of that day and left me facing again. My cdd, my chronic disappointment disorder. It'll never be good enough. It's never enough. It's not the way I imagined it. And friends, if you're like me, this is a really frustrating place to be, right? Holding these secret fears that it'll never be good enough, that I'll never be satisfied, that I'll never be happy.
Heather Creekmore [00:03:46]:
And being so focused on what goes wrong instead of what goes right. And oh, friend, we get so in our head over these things and we really don't know how to get out. There are a hundred different illustrations from my life I could give you, but the one that I wrote about on the blog probably 12, 14 years ago now has been super popular. And so I'm gonna use that illustration. And that illustration is Mother's Day. You see, I was pregnant for the first time at 32 years old. But you need to know that all my life I just wanted to be a mom. And so I'm pregnant with my first child at 32, feeling like I've waited my entire life for this Mother's Day, the Mother's Day that I am finally pregnant.
Heather Creekmore [00:04:33]:
And it was just supposed to be this amazing day, this amazing celebration. And would you like to know what happened on that first Mother's Day? Well, I was at the stage of pregnancy where you start to have like weird like shoulder, neck, freeze up stuff. Like I don't really remember technically what's going on, like your nerves go crazy or something. But I had a frozen and shoulder. I mean, I had so much pain. And it was summer, of course, because Mother's Day is in May and I lived in California at the time and I remember wearing a tank top, but I wore those, I think they're called thermal care, like heat patches. I had one of those. I actually maybe had two of those on my shoulder under my tank top.
Heather Creekmore [00:05:14]:
So that looked really Classy. And I just had these great expectations for this beautiful Mother's Day. And instead what happened was I had real pain. I felt like I didn't look pregnant. I was at that stage of pregnancy where it's kind of like, is she. Is she not? That's a belly, but is that a pregnant belly? I was there and struggling with body image issues, and my husband bought me a gift card for, like, a spa day, which was a super nice thing, but I don't know, it just didn't hit the way I thought it was going to hit. Like, I just. I thought everything was going to be amazing.
Heather Creekmore [00:05:50]:
It was finally Mother's Day. It was finally my day. I was finally able to celebrate. And. And instead, all I could think about was all the things that were wrong with that day and how it didn't meet my expectations for that day. And it wasn't what I wanted it to be. It wasn't enough. I had reached the day I'd always waited for, and it still wasn't enough.
Heather Creekmore [00:06:14]:
But here's the truth. It was never going to be enough. You see, friend, I don't know if you can relate to my Mother's Day story. Maybe for you it was your wedding or, or a vacation or a holiday. It could be anything, right? But the true struggle behind our fear of it's not gonna be enough, or it's not gonna be good enough, or maybe it's, I'm never gonna be good enough. The true struggle there, friend, is something called discontent. And it's this fear that I'll never be satisfied. And this is a huge issue in our faith.
Heather Creekmore [00:06:54]:
Because, friend, like, I hate to give you the punchline so early in the episode, but the truth is we are never going to be satisfied by any of these things that tell us they will bring us satisfaction. We will only ever find true satisfaction in Christ. And I think if you've been a Christian for any amount of time, you know that intellectually you've heard that you can give me that quote, unquote, God and Jesus answer. But perhaps, like me, you struggle to live as if that's actually true. You still find yourself searching, hoping, wondering, wishing that maybe you can find some little degree of satisfaction if this goes right, or if this goes as you imagined, or if this goes as planned. So, friend, that's what we're going to explore today. And here's how we're going to kind of segment our day. We're going to look at what's behind this fear of discontent.
Heather Creekmore [00:07:53]:
And then this is where it's going to get good. We're going to look at how it connects with are you ready for this envy? And then we're going to look at how we can move forward and find true contentment in the only one who can ever offer it to us. We're going to get to all this right after this quick break. My inspiration for today's fear topic actually came from perhaps an unexpected place. It was a Tim Keller message. That's not the unexpected part, if you've been on this show for any amount of time. But it was a Tim Keller message on Envy. And I was thinking about the Fear series and thinking about the different fears that people like me and you struggle with.
Heather Creekmore [00:08:42]:
And I never thought about the Envy connection. But before I get to that, like, let's just define the problem. We don't often use the word discontent very often. In fact, I was in a women's group the other day and they talked about comparison or like, just wanting things to be better or wanting to improve things or feeling kind of restless, you know, like wanting more, wanting something different. But it's very rare that we take those labels like restlessness or ambition or even selfish ambition or comparison and cache them out as discontentment. And yet that's really what those are symptoms of, right? Like, I'm restless because I need something else. Because everything in my life isn't making me feel the way I want it to feel, or I compare myself to. To others all the time because again, I feel like I need something else for me, because the things I have or the way I look or what I am doing isn't enough to make me feel the things I want to feel.
Heather Creekmore [00:09:55]:
And I need more. And I'm actually discontent. But Tim Keller talked about this as envy. Envy is the root of deep discontentment. And Keller defines envy as wanting someone's life or parts of it, or maybe the way their body looks, that kind of body, and resenting their happiness. And get this, being unhappy with their joy. So that friend who gets the thing it is that you wanted is happy, and you're kind of upset about it. You can't rejoice with them because you're envious.
Heather Creekmore [00:10:41]:
You kind of hate them for having that thing that you want so badly. In my book, the Comparison Free Life, which I highly encourage you to grab a copy of, it's like, literally probably my favorite book that I've written. I really think there's a lot of good stuff in there. So I highly encourage you. Go grab a copy of that. Grab a copy For a friend, read it together. But in my book, I talk about discontentment and I talk about comparison and how those two things are connected. I also go into the difference between envy and covetousness and jealousy.
Heather Creekmore [00:11:14]:
So I encourage you to grab that book. But here's the bottom line, right? This stuff's dangerous, friend. We can't just be like, oh, yeah, I have an envy problem, right? We're so casual about saying, oh, yeah, I compare myself. Oh, yeah, I know, I'm too ambitious. Oh, yeah, I know, I'm too restless, right? But if we talk about envy, we're talking about a sin, and it's a ser sin. James 3:16 talks about where jealousy and selfish ambition exist. There will be disorder and every vile practice. In other words, when we are envious and out for ourselves and restless and comparing, right? That's not all that's happening there, right? There's going to be disunity in the body of Christ when that happens.
Heather Creekmore [00:12:06]:
And every vile practice. In other words, like, this is kind of foundational for us just treating each other really badly, not loving each other. This is a problem. And other passages of scripture, like Galatians 5:19 through 21, that list of sins has envy right there, friend, right there. With like, witchcraft and orgies, okay? So it's not just like, oh, envy, no big deal. No, it's a serious thing. It's an act of the flesh. You know, First Corinthians 13:4, the very famous love passage.
Heather Creekmore [00:12:41]:
What does it tell us about love? Love does not envy. And if you're supposed to love others, then, friend, you are not supposed to envy. And then, my favorite, right, Proverbs is a book of wisdom. But in Proverbs 14:30, Scripture says, Envy will rot your bones. And I believe envy doesn't just take a spiritual toll on us. I believe this proverb is literal, that it can take a physical toll on our bodies, too. We are so stressed out trying to be like everyone, trying to get ahead of everyone, trying to be better than everyone. Our discontentment actually can have a physical detrimental impact on.
Heather Creekmore [00:13:29]:
On our bodies. And that's why envy and the fear of discontent is so dangerous, right? Because it's insidious. It hides itself. It hides itself behind these noble goals, like, I just want to be better. And we could even tell ourselves, like, I just want to be better for Jesus, right? I can just serve him better once I'm better. And it drains our joy. I mean, it's just like a vacuum cleaner sucking away our joy. It also poisons gratitude we don't enjoy what we have.
Heather Creekmore [00:14:06]:
Nothing ever seems good enough because we're always comparing. We always want things to be better than they are. It is a treadmill that never stops. We can get to that place where we think we will be happy. And we get there only to find out, nope, I need just a little bit more. Maybe you've experienced this in your body image journey. I know I did. It was like maybe I could lose a couple pounds.
Heather Creekmore [00:14:30]:
But instead of just being satisfied that I lost a couple pounds, then I started to notice how frizzy my hair was or how pimply my skin was, or now how wrinkled my skin is, or how much slight light there is on the back of my thighs. Or there was always something else. And so then try to fix the next thing. Okay, I'll get this treatment for my hair. Okay, I'll get this treatment for my skin. And there's still something else. It is never enough. Maybe you've walked that too.
Heather Creekmore [00:15:04]:
But here's what is really going on. Envy. Discontentment. What this really reveals is our deepest longings. And what that reveals is our idols. What we envy gives us a clue as to what we are trusting for our identity, right? So let me spell this out a little bit. If envy for you and your life and discontent in your life is around your body and you find yourself constantly comparing yourself to an envying women who look different than you, right? Then I would suggest that you are trusting in your appearance for your identity. You know you have worth and value if you look a certain way, if you weigh a certain amount, if you project a certain image.
Heather Creekmore [00:16:02]:
And if this is where you are finding identity, if this is where you are trusting in, if you're trusting in your appearance to give you your value and worth, if this is where you are envying, then I can say with great certainty that this is where you have an idol that you are serving. Perhaps two masters. You might say, you know Jesus and love Jesus, but you also have a body image idol, and no man can serve or woman can serve two masters. The idol is always going to separate you from God because idolatry is sin. It's actually pretty top of the list of the ten Commandments, right? Thou shall have no other gods before me. That includes your body image idol, my friend. Maybe it's not body for you. Maybe it's success, right? Maybe you're envious of people who have a lot of online success, who get more followers and more likes and just seem to climb the ladder effortlessly.
Heather Creekmore [00:17:06]:
They just everything they touch turns to gold. They have the Midas touch. If that's you and that's what you're envying, then perhaps you have an idol of success. Perhaps you are trusting in your success to define who you are, that you're valuable and worthy because you have X number of followers or you make X number of dollars. Friend again, you can't trust in your success for your identity. That's an idol. One of the very cool things about our 40 day journey and my 40 day body image workbook is that it's so much more than just like how to smile at yourself in the mirror. In fact, that's not a thing.
Heather Creekmore [00:17:48]:
But we talk about this idolatry, we go deep into this idolatry and I actually have a list in that book of things that possibly could be idols in your life. Because friend is always about so much more than our bodies. It's about our longings, it's about our desires, it's about what is going on in our hearts. We envy. We have longings, we have idols because there is some spiritual sickness inside of us. And identifying what that is is the only way to be well. So we talked about why this envy is so dangerous, right? It's dangerous because it's sin. It leads to idolatry.
Heather Creekmore [00:18:29]:
It drains our joy. We can't possibly live grateful, thankful lives. And for those of my friends that are super health conscious and trying to exercise more and eat better and do all the things to be health conscious, you need to know the studies out there show that the healthiest thing for you is to have gratitude. Right? Being thankful is so healthy for your body. And so if you're trying to eat all the right things and do all the right things, but you can't be grateful you are doing something like completely at odds with your health goals. It's so fascinating to me how scripture is actually laying out for us the ways to truly be healthy. Right? Like envy. Rotting the bones is health instruction there, my friends.
Heather Creekmore [00:19:18]:
So don't be drinking your calcium and lifting heavy, thinking you're doing something good for your bones while envying other women at the gym. Because that is going to be counterproductive. That's something we gotta deal with. So how do we deal with it? Where do we turn with that fear? Well, Tim Keller, in the sermon that I'm referencing, he takes two different directions on how do we overcome this fear that it'll never be enough, this fear of discontentment and how do we actually find contentment. And so the first way he takes it, and he puts it into two literal directions. The first thing he suggests is we take it upward. We take our envy, and we turn our fear of discontentment into fear of the Lord. Now, we talk about fear of the Lord, right? We're not literally talking about, like, ooh, I'm scared he's going to come down and zap me.
Heather Creekmore [00:20:17]:
Fear of the Lord, from scripture, means awe. It means worship. It means we are overwhelmed, overcome with a sense of God's greatness. I see how big God is and how small I am, and I recognize my utter dependence on him. So I'm turning this fear of not having enough, of not being enough, into realizing I don't know. I love ant illustrations. Ants are fascinating to me, but in some ways, it's helpful for me to think of myself as a little ant. And it's like, man, you don't think about little ants as they're marching along as, like, having their own agenda.
Heather Creekmore [00:20:59]:
Or, you know, maybe they're marching, pouting because, like, they wanted to go the other direction. Like, you don't think about those sorts of things, right? But in perspective here, friend. Like, God is so big and so infinite in wisdom and knowledge and power, and I am so, so, so, so small. And what happens when I envy, right, is I've made myself big, big, big, big, big. And my goals, big, big, big, big, big. And really my lusts, right? Because lust isn't sexual. Like, biblically, it can be, right? But lust is, like, things I want. I have to have it.
Heather Creekmore [00:21:35]:
I need to have that. I need to have that, or I won't be enough, or it won't be enough desires and surrendering them to God, because I know, oh, my word, your plans are so much better. God, you are so much wiser than I am. I am the ant. Please tell me how to march, because that is ultimately going to be the best way for me. And recognizing just my smallness, surrendering to his greatness. Because here's what we have to understand. And.
Heather Creekmore [00:22:08]:
And this is kind of what I tried to tell you a few months ago in my apology, I'm sorry message the podcast back in August, right? But these aren't thinking issues, right? Envy is not solved in your head by just taking thoughts captive and okay. Oh, goodness. I read a book that said this one time, and it drove me crazy. But it was like when you see her and you feel envious, you just tell yourself, I'm happy for her. And it was like this Jedi. It was a Christian book, but it was like Jedi mind tricks. Like, you just say, I'm happy for her, I'm happy for her. I'm happy for her, right? Friend, that is not it.
Heather Creekmore [00:22:50]:
Because envy is sin. And you can't just talk your way out of sin. Sin is something that has to be confessed. You have to repent. Envy is not something you can play with, right? Remember I said it's on the same list as like, orgies and witchcraft, okay? Like it's actual sin that we have to feel broken over and repent of and confess. And in doing so, that's when we can reorient our hearts to God. Because envy is a sin that stands between us and God. If you feel like, yeah, you know, I pray, read my Bible.
Heather Creekmore [00:23:27]:
I just don't really hear from God or I don't feel like God's directing me, or I don't feel close to God. Friend, check and see. Is envy like a big thing in your life? Because again, if discontentment is a big thing in your life, then there's a good shot that envy is a big thing in your life. And if envy is a big thing in your life, it is a sin that is keeping you from hearing God clearly. It's sin separates Keller's other instruction. So remember, the first instruction was upward. Take your envy and turn your fear of discontentment into fear of the Lord. And the second instruction is the direction of forward.
Heather Creekmore [00:24:06]:
And Keller suggests that we take our envy toward the hope of the future. Because here's what we have to recognize, right? That fear of discontent, that's there for a reason. That feeling that I'll never be satisfied, that's in there for a reason. Because the truth is, nothing in this world can fully satisfy me. I have deep, deep desires that will never be fully satisfied in this world. Like, those feelings we have are accurate, but the only thing I can do with them as a believer and follower of Jesus Christ is to recognize the truth of that exist. Because I know a greater truth. I know that thanks to the resurrection, thanks to God's promise that we'll have a new heavens and a new earth and I'll be a renewed and a glorified body and I'm going to live forever in eternity with him, right? That is the place where all of my heart's longings will be fulfilled.
Heather Creekmore [00:25:16]:
And so my true challenge, with what I do with my envy, with what I do with my discontentment, with what I do with my fear, fear that it'll never be enough, is actually saying, oh yeah, that's right, it will never be enough. Because I wasn't made for this world, I was made for the next one. And I get to live in the next one with him for eternity. And that's where I will ultimately feel satisfied. And it's uncomfortable to live with that sense that, okay, I am going to have dissatisfaction here. Okay, it is going to feel incomplete as long as I live here, right? There's that song. All I know is I'm not home yet, right? It speaks to that. You know, it just isn't going to be comfortable here.
Heather Creekmore [00:26:04]:
I want it to be comfortable. I want it to feel good. I don't want to struggle or suffer. But that's not reality. Because I wasn't made for this world. I was made for a better world. And that world is coming. And so recognizing, thinking forward, recognizing the hope of my future, gives me something else to do with my envy.
Heather Creekmore [00:26:29]:
It gives me permission to live in this incompleteness because I know something better is coming. And truth is, friend, the only cure for envy, the only cure for our discontent, the only cure for our chronic disappointment disorder, fearing it'll never be enough, is to surrender that and say, okay, that's right, it will never be enough. But I'm going to stop trying to do things according to this kingdom. I'm going to stop trying to build my own kingdom and find my own satisfaction apart from God and create my own contentment and believe that I can have enough selfish ambition to fulfill my own goals and, and make myself happy, right? In doing all of that, friend, I'm kind of being my own God, right? I'm like, yeah, yeah, Jesus, I know your way. That sounds amazing. I'm gonna just try my way for a little while and see if that works out. There's this old Jim Carrey quote, and it was like, I wish everyone who longed for more wealth and success would get all the wealth and success so that then they could know that there's no happiness hiding there or something. That's a bit of an abridged version of the quote, but it's so true, right? And our hearts are so deceptive.
Heather Creekmore [00:27:47]:
I was listening to a podcast series recently where I was talking about body image things and I was just talking about like, you know, knowing the motives of your heart. And I was getting so frustrated because, friend, we don't know the motives of our heart. We are so self deceptive. The heart is deceitful. Who can know it, right? And goodness gracious, how many of you have I coached or talked to who told me the motive of your heart was just to get physically healthier? But then as we Dig in deeper, we realize, oh, goodness, there's a lot of junk there. There's a lot of envy there. You really, like, want to have the same body as this girl you knew in high school, and you've been thinking about how to have a body like hers for decades, and we have to root out some of that junk. I'm not saying that's a story for all of us.
Heather Creekmore [00:28:37]:
But, friend, if you struggle with comparison, if you struggle with disappointment, if you struggle with. With discontent, think about what economy you're living in. Are you living life according to a kingdom mentality where you're living life in light of eternity, you're storing up not treasures here, but crowns in heaven? Or are you living trying to make this your heaven, this earth that will never be enough? Are you trying to make this your heaven? Because if you try to make this your heaven, you're going to miss out on what true heaven is. You're going to miss out on true heaven for eternity if you're trying to make this world your heaven. But the good news is, if this world feels a little bit like your hell, this is the only hell you're ever going to experience because you'll have a full eternity in heaven where you will never, ever be discontent. What we all need, friend, is God's grace. And my book, the Comparison Free Life, that's really a primer on God's grace. I didn't have any idea what God's grace was.
Heather Creekmore [00:29:47]:
I really didn't. I grew up in church, I grew up in Christian schools, but I had no idea how God's grace was a practical concept. To me, God's grace was like, oh, yeah, that'll be great when I die. So if you're in that spot too, grab that book. I think it'll really help you. But for today, friend, here's what I want you to think about as we close. Just be honest with yourself. Ask yourself, like, what areas of my life do I most struggle with discontent? And then ask yourself, is there envy underneath that? Am I afraid it'll never be good enough? Because my standard of good enough is not set on something in the Bible or scripture or something godly, but it's set on something worldly.
Heather Creekmore [00:30:28]:
It's my standard of what is good based on something I saw on Instagram or something I saw in a magazine. Oh, friends, those of you body image issues, is your definition of what a good body is based on something you saw in a magazine 30 years ago? What are you envying? What do you long for? And friend, I just encourage you deal with it biblically, right? Once you've identified what that is, take a moment and just ask God to forgive you. Repent, repent of that envy. Stop calling it comparison, stop calling it ambition, stop calling it restlessness, stop calling it your hashtag goals that are good for you. And repent. And then, friend, turn it to worship. That's where gratitude can come in, right? After that repentance, turn it to worship. Remind yourself of how big God is.
Heather Creekmore [00:31:20]:
I don't know. I like this song. How great is our God? Right? That's just straight to the point. How great is our God? It reminds me, he is so big and I am so small. And when you reposture your heart towards gratitude, towards the worship of a God who actually deserves your worship, versus the worship of an ideal, an ideal image, a better job, a better house, the worship of a better body, that's what we do with these idols. We worship them, right? When you reposture your heart towards worshiping a God who deserves and is worthy of your worship, and it will change you from the inside out. You don't have to do Jedi mind tricks to stop envying and stop comparing and stop being so fixated on wanting what other people have. You just need a heart that is surrendered.
Heather Creekmore [00:32:14]:
And then Jesus can do that hard work, right? But once you're surrendered in your heart, that's when things can really change. So, friend, if you fear discontent, if you fear dissatisfaction, if you fear that it will never be enough, I want to encourage you. It can be only through Christ though. So put the fear aside, take a bold step of faith, repent, confess and turn your worship to him. And watch how he can change everything for you. Hey, thanks for listening today. I hope something today has helped you stop comparing and start living. Bye bye.
Heather Creekmore [00:32:50]:
The Compare to podcast is proud to be part of the Life Audio Podcast network. For more great Christian podcasts, go to lifeaudio.com sat.
Disclaimer: This transcript is AI-generated and has not been edited for accuracy or clarity.
Tired of fighting your body image issues alone? Do you know that you're "fearfully and wonderfully made," yet still feel like your body isn't good enough?
Sign up here for weekly encouragement and take the 5-Day Body Image Challenge!