There is a question your family answered before you could talk. It was never asked out loud. No one sat you down at the kitchen table and posed it in plain language. But it was answered - in the silence after a disagreement, in the look on your mother's face when you said something she did not want to hear, in what happened when your father was angry.
The question is this: Could you openly, honestly, respectfully disagree or be different from your parents and still be a good son or daughter?
The answer you carry in your body - not in your theology, not in your head, but in your nervous system - is running your life right now. It follows you into your marriage, your church, your workplace, and your relationship with God. It determines whether you can hold your own mind under pressure or whether you lose yourself the moment someone you love is upset.
Dr. Michael Semon calls this capacity viability: the ability to be your own person and remain connected at the same time. In forty years as a licensed marriage and family therapist, he has watched it predict the trajectory of every marriage, every ministry, and every life he has sat with.
The Viability Paradox is Book One of The Believer's Paradox, a three-volume exploration of the paradox at the heart of the Christian life: whoever wants to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for My sake will find it. Book One is the diagnosis. Book Two - The Fairness Paradox - is the exposure. Book Three - The Grace Paradox - is the exchange.
Drawing on Bowen family systems theory and forty years of clinical observation, Semon traces a single pattern from the family of origin through marriage, church, and Scripture. He shows how borrowed oxygen - the sense of being okay taken from another person's approval, a performance, or a substance - keeps people alive and keeps them premature. He maps the four-stage sequence that every person with underdeveloped capacity cycles through: comply, defy, freeze, escape. And he follows the pattern from Adam's garden through Israel's wilderness to the church that was supposed to develop the believer's lungs and too often has not.
At the center of the book is a distinction most believers have never been taught: the difference between pleasing God and trusting God. Between performing for Christ and being present to Christ. Between a professor who carries the lamp and a possessor who carries the oil. Jesus did not say to the people in Matthew 7, "You never knew Me." He said, "I never knew you." The question has never been whether you know enough about Christ. The question is whether Christ knows you - whether the real you has ever been in the room.
This book will not give you a program. It will not tell you to try harder. It will locate you - with enough precision that you cannot pretend you have not been found. And wherever it finds you is not a sentence. It is a starting point. It is the first bar on the monkey bars, and there is a second bar within reach.