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Have you ever looked over your life and thought,
“What’s wrong with me?”
I don’t just mean a thought that crosses your mind when you’ve made a mistake, got chewed out by your boss, or had a rough morning. I’m talking about that deep, internal ache that says:
- “Why can’t I get it right?”
- “How come I’m always struggling?”
- “Why does it seem so easy for everyone else?”
- “I’m tired of being the screwup.”
- “What’s the matter with me?”
- “I just have to accept the fact that I’m defective/broken.”
Let’s go ahead and name that for what it is: shame disguised as identity.
What Does It Mean to Feel Defective or Broken?
Feeling defective is the belief that there’s something fundamentally wrong with you. In other words, you’re not just flawed, you are flawed beyond fixing.
Sure, you may look fine on the outside, but on the inside, you’re constantly trying to hide your cracks or overcompensate for them.
Psychologically, you may feel like a leaky boat. Full of holes that you have to keep plugging to stay afloat so nobody sees you sink.
Feeling defective is the belief that there’s something fundamentally wrong with you. You’re not just flawed, you are flawed beyond fixing. Psychologically, you may feel like a leaky boat. Full of holes that you have to keep… Share on XThis feeling often comes from various experiences, including a history of trauma/abuse, neglect (whether physical or emotional), a series of rejection/abandonment, being made to feel like you haven’t and will never be able to live up to others’ expectations, or even repeated failures of one kind or another.
Over time, these negative experiences color the lens of your life. So rather than viewing them as a series of events that happened to you (and wrongfully so) you start to see yourself as the epicenter of it all. Bad things don’t just happen to me. I am the bad thing. I am broken.
Over time, negative experiences color the lens of your life. So rather than viewing them as a series of events that happened to you, you start to see yourself as the epicenter of it all. Bad things don’t just happen to me. I am the… Share on X5 Signs You Might Be Struggling with Feeling Broken or Defective
- You constantly replay past mistakes. Even years later, you still define yourself by what you did (or what was done to you).
- You don’t believe good things will last. You’re always waiting for the other shoe to drop because you think you’re the problem. There’s no way something good can happen to you. No way that great guy could love you. No way you would get a promotion when there are so many other more qualified candidates.
- You don’t believe people would want to be with you. When people are nice to you, you brush it off. Or you figure there’s some hidden motivation or agenda because ‘Why in the world would they want to be with me?’
- You feel unworthy of healing or growth. You think others deserve transformation — but your pain feels “too deep” or “too raw” or “too ugly.” After everything that has been done to you, or that you’ve done in your life, you figure it’s too late for you.
- You constantly assume that you’re the problem. When someone brings up something wrong, you automatically start to fix yourself because obviously, you’re the defective one.
- You avoid vulnerability. If people really knew your story, you’re convinced they’d reject you or pity you. So you hide behind a mask of people-pleasing or being hypercritical (thus rejecting others before they can reject you).
- You spiritualize your brokenness into bondage. You believe your struggle disqualifies you from purpose, joy, or being used by God.
A Story You Might Relate To
Imagine a close friend of yours telling you, “I feel like I came off the assembly line wrong.” Imagine that she had been through deep childhood trauma, struggled with addiction, promiscuity, or codependency, and couldn’t seem to “fix” the broken way she saw herself.
Maybe on the outside, she looked like she had it all together. Maybe she was the type who always had a smile on her face and an encouraging word for everybody else. But on the inside? Cold. Empty. Lonely. Broken.
Maybe you don’t have to imagine this girl at all. Maybe that girl is you. Maybe you hate journaling or looking inward because all you’ve ever seen are the ways in which you feel you don’t measure up or are messed up beyond repair. Like a mistake God didn’t mean to make.
But sis, if you’re thinking this way, you have swallowed a lie of the devil. You are not a mistake. You are not broken or defective. You are beautifully and wonderfully made. You are a miracle in progress.
The good news is, if you’re struggling with feeling broken, defective, rejected, abandoned, or like you’re not enough, you are not alone.
Biblical Figures Who May Have Felt This Way
- Tamar (Genesis 38): Was abused, discarded, and forced to commit a heinous act (sleeping with her father-in-law) out of desperation. Yet God included her in the lineage of Jesus.
- Rahab (Matthew 1:5): Was a prostitute in Jericho. Yet after an encounter with Israelite spies, she was chosen, redeemed, and became an ancestor of Christ.
- Job: Lost everything — his animals, his children, his servants, his shepherds, his farmhands. He was covered in sores. He questioned God and eventually reached the point where he cursed the day he was born. But God restored him and publicly honored him.
- The Bleeding Woman (Luke 8): Burdened by constant bleeding for 12 years of suffering. Untouchable. Unclean. But Jesus called her “daughter” and restored her completely.
- Paul: A zealous religious leader who persecuted Christians, had a thorn in his flesh (that he asked God to remove 3 times), but still became the most prolific New Testament writer.
Each of these individuals had trauma. Lapses. Brokenness. Scars. But God didn’t reject them — He revealed Himself through their healing. Broken doesn’t mean unusable.
So what can you do to start to reclaim your identity as a healed, redeemed, whole (in Christ) daughter of God?
Journal it Out!
Journaling Exercise: Digging Up the Roots of “I’m Broken”
Those heavy feelings of being defective, broken, or “not good enough” didn’t appear out of nowhere, sis. They usually sprout from seeds planted in our past — through painful experiences, neglect, harsh words, or rejection. This exercise will help you identify those roots, bring them into the light, and let God begin rewriting the story.
Step 1: Name the Lie
- Write down the exact words your inner critic says when you feel defective, broken, or inadequate.
- Examples: “I’ll never be good enough.” “I’m unlovable.” “Something is wrong with me.” “I’m such a screwup.” “Who would ever love/want someone like me?”
- Circle the one(s) that hit(s) the hardest.
Step 2: Trace the Voice
- Ask yourself: Whose voice does this sound like? (P.S., Don’t just focus on the words. Pay attention to the feeling this elicits in you. Who used to make you feel that way?).
- Was it a parent, a teacher, a friend, a childhood bully, a corworker, a past partner?
- Write about the first time(s) you remember feeling this way. What happened? How old were you?
Step 3: Unpack the Wound
- Journal through these prompts:
- What message(s) did I absorb about myself from that moment? (e.g., I’m stupid, ugly, defective, inadequate, a loser, a failure, etc.)
- How did I cope back then? (e.g., people-pleasing, hiding, perfectionism)
- How has that message followed me into adulthood?
Step 4: Hold It to the Light of Truth
- Write out 2–3 Scriptures that directly contradict the lie. (Examples: Psalm 139:14, Isaiah 43:4, Ephesians 2:10.) If you don’t know many scriptures by heart, Google will be your friend when it comes to quickly finding verse references.
- For each negative message you’ve absorbed, write a few sentences on how God’s truth speaks differently than the lie you’ve been carrying.
Step 5: Rewrite the Narrative
- Imagine speaking to your younger self at the age you first felt “broken” or “defective.”
- Write her a letter in your journal. Tell her what she needed to hear but didn’t. Speak comfort, love, and the truth of God’s word over her.
Step 6: Anchor in God’s Presence
- End by writing a prayer:
- Confess the lie you’ve been believing.
- Ask God to heal the root wound.
- Invite Him to help you walk in His truth daily.
So that’s the first part in your healing journey. Take your time completing this journaling exercise. Feel free to repeat steps 1-6 as many times as possible.
Don’t say to yourself, “Only a truly broken person would have to do this so many times.” NO, sis! if you’ve been exposed to lots of poison, you may need to get several “treatments” before you start to get better. This will increase the chances that you uproot each and every idea that is not of God that keeps you stuck.
Don’t say to yourself, “Only a truly broken person would have to journal so many times.” NO, sis! if you’ve been exposed to lots of poison, you may need several “treatments” before you start to get better. Share on XNow I want you to start to affirm the new truth to yourself on a daily basis. What might this look like?
5 Scriptures and Statements to Speak Over Your Healing
Don’t rush this part of the process. Recite these phrases as often as you need to in order to start to retrain your brain. You’ve spent far too long feeling like the weakest link. God wants to help you be free. Just believe!
- “He heals the brokenhearted and binds up their wounds.” — Psalm 147:3
- “I am not defective. I am being made new.” — 2 Corinthians 5:17
- “God does not despise a broken spirit.” — Psalm 51:17
- “Scars come from living.” – tobyMac
- “Even when I feel shattered, God is holding every piece of me together.”
- “I am not broken. Because of Jesus’s sacrifice, I am made whole.”
- “I may feel shattered, beat up, and bruised today, but like Jesus, resurrection always comes after pain.”
- “I reject the notion that I am broken or defective. I am whole and redeemed in Jesus’ name!”
- “Heal my brokenness, Lord, because if you heal me, I will truly be made whole. Jeremiah 17:14
- “Yes, I’ve been to hell and back. But ‘God will give a crown of beauty for ashes.’” Isaiah 61:3
Reminders About Your True Identity
Let me speak this to your soul:
- You are not broken beyond repair. You are being rebuilt with holy hands.
- You are not damaged goods. You are deeply loved, seen, and being restored daily by a God who loves you to pieces.
- You don’t have to be spotless to be used. God has a habit of choosing “messy” women for His most meaningful work. The Bible is full of them!!!
- You are not your past. Your trauma, pain, or mistakes are part of your story — but not the whole story.
- You are still worthy. Not because of your performance, but because of your position — daughter of THE King, Jesus.
Know a sister who thinks she’s too broken to be chosen, healed, or loved? Send her this post. Remind her: God is not scared of her wounds. He’s the Healer. Have you ever felt defective, damaged, or beyond repair? What did that look like for you — and how are you learning to heal? Share your story in the comments below. You never know who might need to see beauty in your brokenness.