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Written Off: Navigating Rejection and Faith in the Search for Love, Family, and Belonging (The Approved in Christ Series)

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Buy Online:   Lisa N PhilipsAmazon
  

What if the pain that broke you became the doorway to your healing?

Lisa Phillips grew up longing for her mother’s love—yet faced rejection, emotional distance, and a parental wound that shaped her identity for decades. As a woman of faith, she later discovered that the hurt she carried was not the end of her story, but the beginning of God’s restoration.

Written Off is Lisa’s powerful true story of navigating rejection, rediscovering her identity in Christ, and breaking free from the generational patterns that silenced her family for three generations.

In this faith-filled memoir, you’ll discover:

  • How rejection shapes identity—and how God restores what was lost
  • The spiritual roots of emotional pain and how truth brings freedom
  • Faith-based tools to overcome shame, guilt, and family strongholds
  • A compassionate path toward forgiveness, renewal, and inner peace


Through raw honesty and biblical insight, Lisa reveals how God transformed emotional wounds into spiritual wholeness—and how you can begin that same journey, especially if you have faced rejection, abandonment, or painful parent–child relationships.

Those who seek faith-based healing for emotional or generational trauma, or yearn to rebuild identity, belonging, and trust in God’s redemptive love will find comfort and hope.

Written Off is more than a memoir—it’s an invitation to see your own story through the lens of grace. No matter who has written you off, God is already writing you back into His plan with purpose, freedom, and hope.

Part of the Written Off series — a three-book journey from rejection to restoration.

The Story Behind This Book

The story behind Written Off began with a deep need to understand the pain of rejection, the wounds created by emotional invalidation, and the lasting impact of difficult family patterns. For many years, Lisa N. Phillips carried questions about identity, belonging, love, and self-worth. Those experiences became the foundation for a journey of faith, truth, and healing. This book was written from a place of honesty and restoration. It explores what happens when a child feels unseen, unheard, or unchosen, and how those early wounds can shape the way a person sees themselves, their relationships, and even God. Through personal reflection, research, and spiritual insight, Lisa began to recognize the false beliefs that had taken root and the generational patterns that needed to be broken. Written Off is more than a memoir. It is a testimony of God’s ability to heal the soul ache, restore what was broken, and lead a wounded heart toward freedom. The heart behind the book is to encourage readers who have experienced rejection, toxic family dynamics, or emotional pain to know that they are not forgotten, they are not beyond healing, and their story is not over.

Praise and Reviews

What sets this book apart from other memoirs about difficult family relationships is Phillips' three-generational approach. Instead of telling only her own story, she traces patterns through her grandmother, mother, and herself - showing how rejection and trauma get passed down and how those cycles can finally be broken. Phillips introduces concepts like "emotional encroachment," her term for how parents systematically erode a child's sense of self through invalidation and gaslighting. She also explores the biblical concept of parental blessing in depth, explaining what it means and why withholding it has such lasting consequences.


The integration of faith and psychology here is really well done. Phillips discusses how spiritual strongholds operate in family systems without getting preachy or dismissing the psychological aspects. She tackles the reality of untreated mental illness in families head-on, maintaining compassion while clearly identifying harmful patterns. The balance between vulnerability and instruction is harder to achieve than it might seem, but Phillips manages it effectively.


Phillips positions this as "a mirror for your own healing journey," providing a template and vocabulary for readers to understand their own experiences. As book one of a trilogy, it offers hope that healing is a process with a destination. Worth reading if you're interested in breaking generational patterns or understanding the deeper dynamics of family rejection through both a faith-based and psychological lens.



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