
What do you do when someone starts dragging your name through the mud?
Nothing.
That answer may surprise you because everything inside you wants to defend yourself, explain yourself, and prove your innocence. You want people to know the truth. You want your name cleared. You want justice.
But here’s the problem: the person attacking you has already created a narrative where they are the victim, and you are the villain. In their story, no matter what you say, your response becomes “proof” against you.
The harder you fight to explain yourself, the harder they work to discredit you. Some people will twist conversations, manipulate facts, and even create false evidence just to keep the story alive. And while you are exhausting yourself trying to put out the fire, they are standing quietly in the shadows, pouring gasoline on it.
Meanwhile, everyone is watching you.
They’re watching your reactions.
Your emotions.
Your explanations.
Your defenses.
And as long as the spotlight stays on you, very few people stop to examine the person creating the chaos.
So instead of giving lies your energy, what if you simply let the lies lie?
Not because the accusations are true.
Not because you are weak.
But because some battles are too small for your destiny.
When you refuse to wrestle with every false accusation, you send a powerful message: This lie does not deserve my peace.
Over time, something interesting happens. The accusations begin to lose momentum. The drama becomes exhausting to those watching. People begin to notice that one person is obsessed with tearing someone down while the other continues living with dignity, grace, and purpose.
And eventually, the one creating the smear campaign begins to expose themselves.
Years ago, I taught my sales agents an important principle about negotiation: the person who talks the most usually loses.
Why?
Because when you are constantly talking, you are not listening. And when you are not listening, you miss discovering the deeper dynamics of what is really happening.
The same principle applies here.
When someone endlessly attacks another person, people eventually stop hearing “truth” and start hearing desperation. Constant mudslinging rarely reveals strength. More often, it reveals insecurity, envy, bitterness, or unresolved pain.
The truth is, many people attack others because they are struggling with their own insecurities. They see someone who is confident, successful, hopeful, respected, or deeply loved, and instead of rising higher themselves, they attempt to pull that person lower.
But tearing someone else down never builds true character.
Eventually, mature people recognize the difference between confidence and chaos.
Between peace and performance.
Between integrity and manipulation.
So if someone throws your name in the mud, let it stay there for a while.
Because in time, mud dries.
Truth rises.
And character speaks louder than accusations ever will.
And sometimes, the greatest victory comes from simply standing still and letting God fight the battle for you.
As Scripture reminds us:
“The Lord will fight for you; you need only to be still.”
— Exodus 14:14 (NIV)
And again:
“Do not take revenge, my dear friends, but leave room for God’s wrath, for it is written: ‘It is mine to avenge; I will repay,’ says the Lord.”
— Romans 12:19 (NIV)
Let the Lord do what He does for us. Let him fight our battles. All we need to do is stay out of His way. Let Him take care of the people who harm us; He will either help them change their ways or, if they fail, punish them. Either way, it’s not our problem. It’s His.
My song, “Let the Lord Fight Your Battles,” is one I wrote during a time when I needed to be reminded that I do not need to fight battles. I need to sit quietly in all matters and let the Lord handle things on my behalf.
Listen to the song, “Let the Lord Fight Your Battles.”
There is strength in silence.
There is wisdom in restraint.
And there is peace in knowing that truth does not need constant defense to remain true.
