Skill Six: Surrender
How to release what was never yours to carry — and why this is not giving up.
You are lying awake at 2 a.m. thinking about your adult daughter. About the choices she's making. About the man she's with. About the future you can see coming and she can't.
You are sitting at a meeting at work, thinking about a colleague's repeated mistakes. About the project that is going to fail because of them. About how nothing you say seems to land.
You are turning over, for the hundredth time, what your mother said at Thanksgiving. What she meant. What she didn't say. Whether to bring it up. Whether to let it go. Whether you can let it go.
Most of what we carry, when we are honest, is not actually ours. It belongs to someone else, or to God, or to a future that hasn't arrived. The skill of recognizing that — and putting it down — is called Surrender.
What This Post Answers
Surrender is the practice of releasing what isn't yours to carry — while keeping firm hold of what is. This post explains why surrender is not passivity, the Three Circles framework for sorting what you can control from what you can't, four practices for actually putting things down, and the faith dimension of releasing to God without surrendering to people who are not God.
What is the skill of Surrender?
Surrender is the practice of releasing your grip on what you cannot control — so that you can act with clarity on what you actually can.
It is not passivity. It is not resignation. It is not letting people walk over you. It is not pretending you don't care about the things you cannot change.
It is, in fact, the most active and discerning of the eight skills. It requires you to look at every weight you are carrying and ask: "Is this actually mine? Was it ever?" And then to put down what wasn't — not because you don't care, but because carrying it costs you the strength you need for what is yours.
There is a tremendous freedom on the other side of this work. And, for some women, there is also tremendous grief — because so much of what we have been carrying for so long was not ours, and we have spent decades not knowing the difference.
Definition
Surrender: the practice of releasing what is not yours to carry — the choices of others, the outcomes you cannot control, the future that has not arrived — so that you can act with full presence on what is actually within your power.
The Three Circles: a framework for what is yours
Almost everything that wakes you at 2 a.m. lives in one of three circles. Naming which circle a thing is in is half the work.
Circle One: What is in my control
This is a much smaller circle than most of us think. What is in your control: your responses, your choices, your next action, your boundaries, your tone, your willingness to apologize, your willingness to forgive, your decision to seek help, the words you let yourself say and the ones you choose not to. Your circle is real, but it is small. And what lives in it is entirely yours.
Circle Two: What is in others' control
This is the circle that holds your adult daughter's choices. Your husband's reactions. Your coworker's behavior. Your mother's words. Your son's growth. Other people's healing, on their own timeline, in their own way. You may have enormous influence in this circle — especially as a parent, a spouse, a friend. But you do not have authority here. Trying to operate in someone else's circle as if it were yours is one of the most exhausting things a human being can attempt. It produces the particular fatigue of women who have been doing exactly this for decades.
Circle Three: What is in God's control
This is the largest circle. Outcomes. Timing. Ultimate justice. Whether and how a wound finally heals. Whether and how a prodigal finally returns. Whether and how a sickness ends. Whether and how a marriage is restored or grieved. Whether and how the people you love come into the lives you hoped for them. This circle holds almost everything we lose sleep over — and we have no authority here at all. We can ask. We can hope. We can grieve. We cannot control.
Most of our exhaustion comes from this: we live, mentally and emotionally, in Circles Two and Three. We try to manage what is not ours to manage. We grip what is not ours to hold. We carry what was never given to us.
Surrender is the daily, ongoing practice of returning to Circle One. Of releasing what belongs in the other two. Of recognizing — sometimes a hundred times a day — that the only place I have real power is right here, in the small, sacred circle of my own choices.
Why does surrender feel so hard?
Because grip feels like love.
When you hold tight to your adult child's choices, the holding feels like care. When you carry your husband's emotional state, the carrying feels like devotion. When you lose sleep over a friend's situation, the worry feels like love. Releasing any of that can feel, at first, like abandonment. Like you stopped caring. Like you gave up on them.
But here is what is actually true: the grip is not the love. The grip is your nervous system's response to your love. The grip is what your body does when it cannot bear that someone you love is in a circle you cannot enter. The love is the love. The grip is something else — something heavier, something more anxious, something that costs you more than it costs them.
You can love someone deeply and still release them. You can care profoundly and still put down what was not yours to carry. In fact, your love often becomes more real, not less, when you stop trying to control its object — because love that does not depend on outcome is a different, sturdier thing than love that has to manage the future.
What about the things that were never yours to begin with?
There is a particular kind of weight that deserves its own naming. Some of what you carry was given to you by someone else — placed on your shoulders deliberately, often early in your life, often by someone whose own load was too heavy and who needed somewhere to put it.
A parent's emotional regulation, that you became responsible for at age six. A sibling's wellbeing, that became your job before you could even articulate the assignment. A partner's mood, his happiness, his sense of self — placed on your shoulders, sometimes explicitly, more often by silent expectation. A family's reputation. A church's approval. A culture's standard for what a good woman should be.
These weights were never yours. They were given to you. And the work of surrender, in this case, is not only to put them down — it is to recognize that they were not yours to pick up in the first place.
If, as you read this, you feel a small ache of recognition — that some of what you have been carrying for decades was given to you by someone whose load it actually was — let yourself feel that. It is one of the most important truths a woman can come to. And it is part of what surrender will, eventually, help you put down.
How do you actually practice Surrender?
Four practices.
1. The Three Circles inventory
When something is weighing on you, pause and ask: "Which circle is this in?" Be honest. If it's in Circle One, what is the next action you can take? If it's in Circle Two, who actually has authority here, and is there an invitation you could offer them — without forcing? If it's in Circle Three, can you name it and release it, even briefly? The act of sorting alone often lifts more weight than you expect.
2. The releasing breath
Name the thing you are carrying. Out loud if you can. "I am carrying my daughter's choice to stay with him." Take a slow breath in. As you exhale — long and full — imagine setting that specific thing down. Not throwing it away. Setting it down. In God's hands, in the floor, on a shelf — whatever image lands for you. Repeat the breath three times. This is small. It is also surprisingly effective. The body needs to participate in the act of release, not just the mind.
3. The open-hand gesture
Sit with both hands palm-up, open, resting on your lap or thighs. Hold them this way for a full minute. Notice how different this feels from your usual posture — from the unconscious clenching, from hands that hold or grip even when no one is watching. The body posture of surrender is the body posture of receiving. You cannot grip what you are holding and receive at the same time. The open hand is a physical practice of being available to what is coming, instead of being braced against what is not.
4. Naming what was never yours
In a quiet moment, with a notebook, ask: "What am I carrying that was never mine?" Let the answers come. Maybe it's your parent's happiness, given to you at five years old. Maybe it's your spouse's emotional regulation. Maybe it's your church's approval. Maybe it's the family secret you were told to keep. Maybe it's a sibling's life path. Make the list without judgment. Then, beside each item, write: "This was given to me. It was never mine to hold." This practice does not immediately put any of those things down. But it begins the long, important work of telling the truth about what you have been carrying, and at whose direction.
"But what if I really should be doing something?"
This is the fear underneath much of our resistance to surrender. If I let this go, who will take care of it? If I'm not gripping this, won't it fall apart?
Sometimes the answer is yes — this is in Circle One, and there is real work for you to do. Surrender does not mean refusing to act. If you are watching a situation that genuinely requires your action and you call your refusal to act surrender, you are spiritualizing avoidance. That is not what we are talking about.
But often the answer is no. Often the thing you are gripping is in Circle Two or Three, and the gripping is preventing both you and the situation from doing what each needs to do. Your adult daughter cannot grow into her own decisions while you are holding them for her. Your husband cannot do his own emotional work while you are doing it for him. The future cannot arrive on its own timeline while you are trying to drag it forward.
Surrender, paradoxically, is often what allows other people to step into their own Circle One. When you put down what was never yours, you create the space they need to pick up what is actually theirs.
The faith dimension: surrendering to God without surrendering to people who are not God
I need to be careful here, because the word surrender has been used to wound many women in the name of God.
If you grew up in certain Christian contexts, surrender may have meant: give up your voice. Stop having opinions. Submit to your husband even when his behavior is harmful. Yield to your pastor's authority even when something feels wrong. Don't complain. Don't push back. Don't make waves. Just surrender it all to God — meaning, in practice, surrender it to whoever holds power over you.
That is not what scripture means by surrender. That is the misuse of a sacred word to keep women small.
Biblical surrender is the relinquishing of your self-sovereignty to God — the God who made you, who calls you by name, who values your voice, who gave you a will and gifts and a body and dignity. It is the trust that God is wiser than you, that the universe is held by hands more capable than yours, that ultimate outcomes are not your weight to carry.
That kind of surrender is liberating. It hands the unbearable weight of the universe back to the One who can actually hold it. It does not require you to be silent in the face of harm. It does not require you to tolerate what God himself called injustice. It does not require you to disappear.
You can surrender to God without surrendering to people who are not God. In fact, real surrender to God may be the thing that finally gives you the freedom to stop surrendering to them.
If you have lived under a version of surrender that asked you to give up things that were not God's to require — your voice, your safety, your gifts, your honest grief — you can let yourself release that teaching too. It was never the truth. It was the misuse of the truth. And both can finally be put down.
What I want you to take from this post
Three things.
First — most of what wakes you at 2 a.m. does not actually live in your circle. The gripping does not change what is in someone else's circle, or in God's. It only costs you sleep.
Second — surrender is not the opposite of love. It is what love looks like when it stops trying to control its object. It is what care looks like when it has matured.
Third — pick one practice. The Three Circles inventory is the most clarifying. The next time you notice you are carrying something, pause and ask: which circle is this in? You will be surprised how often the answer is not Circle One.
You can surrender to God without surrendering to people who are not God.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the coping skill of Surrender?
Surrender is the practice of releasing your grip on what you cannot control — the choices of others, the outcomes you cannot determine, the future that has not arrived — so that you can act with full presence on what is actually within your power.
Is surrender the same as giving up?
No. Giving up is refusing to act on what is in your circle. Surrender is releasing what is in someone else's circle — so that you can act with clarity on what is in yours. Surrender is the most active of the eight skills, not the most passive.
What are the Three Circles?
Circle One: what is in your control (your choices, your responses, your next action). Circle Two: what is in others' control (their choices, their reactions, their growth). Circle Three: what is in God's control (outcomes, timing, ultimate justice). Most of our suffering comes from operating in Circles Two and Three as if they were Circle One.
What if I'm carrying things that were given to me by someone else?
Many women are. A parent's emotional state, a partner's wellbeing, a family's reputation — weights placed on us by others, often early. Part of surrender is recognizing what was given to you that was never yours to begin with. That recognition is its own grief, and its own beginning of freedom.
How is biblical surrender different from being silenced?
Biblical surrender is the relinquishing of self-sovereignty to God — the God who values your voice, gave you gifts, and called you by name. It is not surrendering to people who are not God. Misuse of the word surrender to silence women or override their dignity is not what scripture means. You can surrender to God without surrendering to those who are not.
About the Author
Agenna Mathley is a Trauma-Informed Life and Mindset Coach, published author of Healing What Hides in the Shadows: A Private Journey Through Sexual Trauma Recovery, and the creator of Built Before the Storm. She coaches women who are holding too much, helping them heal what hides in the shadows, build the skills to stand in what they can't control, and root themselves in who God says they are. Learn more about Agenna →
This is the eighth in an 11-post series. Catch up on the earlier posts at coachagenna.com. Next: Skill Seven — Connect. How to stay in real relationship with the people who can hold you.
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