April 2026

THE COPE SECTOR

The Cope Sector

By Sharav (Tsatsa) Narantsatsral

Why is the COPE sector part of the heart circle?

Coping is our way of responding to hardship, stress, and pain. In many ways, it acts as a defense mechanism to protect us from what feels overwhelming or unsafe. However, the way we cope is not random. It reflects what is happening deeper within our heart circle, particularly in the areas of love, truth, and control.

Before I began to receive help for my inner life, I noticed that I often coped by fighting, reacting strongly to others, or by flight, keeping myself constantly busy so I would not have to feel or face the painful parts of my life.

Looking back, these responses made sense. My love sector carried beliefs that I was unworthy, alone, rejected, and abandoned. My truth sector was filled with feelings of inadequacy and weakness. In that state, coping was not really a choice, but was a way to survive.

While these coping strategies may have helped in the short term, the deeper wounds remained. Beneath the surface, the pain continued unseen, unprocessed, and slowly growing.

Like me, many of us rely on coping patterns in addition to fight or flight, such as:

  • Faking (pretending everything is fine)
  • Freezing (shutting down emotionally)
  • Fleeing or avoiding
  • Fantasising or escaping reality
  • Flopping (feeling overwhelmed and collapsing inward)

These coping mechanisms become the “exit” of our hearts, the way our inner world expresses itself outwardly. Often, the more wounded the heart, the more intense or reactive these coping responses become. Because many of these patterns were formed in early life, they tend to operate automatically and unconsciously, making them feel difficult to control.

What is healthy coping?

Healthy coping does not mean avoiding pain or pretending everything is okay. It means learning how to move through life’s difficulties in a way that leads to healing rather than further harm.

As followers of Christ, we look to Scripture as our foundation for what is truly healthy. Within this framework, healthy coping can be understood through four key responses:

Face – To face is to acknowledge reality with honesty and courage.
It means being willing to see the truth about our situation, our pain, and even ourselves.

Forgive – Forgiveness is a deliberate and often difficult choice.
It involves letting go of resentment and choosing not to hold onto bitterness—even when the hurt is real.Forgiveness is not a one-time event, but a process that leads to deeper freedom.

Fun – Healthy coping also includes the ability to experience joy and even laugh at ourselves.

This is not denial, but a sign of freedom—where we are no longer defined or controlled by our pain.

Freedom – As we practice facing truth and extending forgiveness, we begin to experience true freedom:“If the Son sets you free, you will be free indeed” (John 8:36).This freedom allows us to live more fully, love more openly, and respond to life with greater peace and self-control.

How can we practice healthy coping?

Healthy coping does not happen instantly—it is a process of transformation. In the Gospel of Luke 5:36–37, Jesus speaks about not putting new wine into old wineskins. This image reminds us that new ways of living require renewal from within. In the same way, we cannot simply “add” healthy coping on top of old, unexamined patterns.

Instead, we are invited to:

  • Connect with oneself – Pause and reflect on one’s own current coping patterns
  • Understand self – where they come from
  • Respond by gently facing the underlying pain, bringing these areas to God
  • Engage help – getting help from a trusted friend/small group leader/pastor/professional, if it is hard to address

As we receive love, truth, and a renewed sense of control in Him, our old coping mechanisms can begin to change. This process is not about striving harder, but about allowing God-centered transformation from the inside out.

A gentle invitation

What are your usual ways of coping when life feels overwhelming?

Are they helping you move toward healing—or keeping you stuck behind a wall?

There is no shame in how we have learned to cope. These patterns were often formed to protect us.

But we are not meant to stay there. We are invited into something deeper— a life where we can Face truth, Forgive freely, find joy (Fun), and live in true Freedom, which makes us able to Fight the good fight to bear the Fruit.

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The Cope Sector of the Heart: From Surviving to Surrendered Strength

The Cope Sector of the Heart: From Surviving to Surrendered Strength

By John Wadsworth

Since, then, you have been raised with Christ, set your hearts on things above, where Christ is, seated at the right hand of God. Set your minds on things above, not on earthly things. For you died, and your life is now hidden with Christ in God. Colossians 3:1-3

How do you respond when pressure rises? What happens in you when you feel threatened, overwhelmed, or in conflict?

If I am honest, my tendency is often to withdraw or shut down. It is a familiar pattern,  one that feels safe in the moment, yet often keeps me from engaging with what is really going on.

The Cope Sector, found within the heart, is one of the most revealing aspects of our inner life. As Jesus reminds us, it is from the heart that our responses flow. This is the place where we instinctively move to protect ourselves, where we seek safety, stability, and relief. God designed this capacity to cope as something good. It is not weakness; it is part of being human. Yet it can function in two very different ways, either life-giving and grounded in truth, or shaped by hidden patterns that can trap us in unhealthy outcomes.

The key question is not whether we cope, but how we cope.

Many of our coping patterns were formed long before we were deeply rooted in Christ. Some of us minimise what we feel. Others distract ourselves through activity or constant noise. Whist some of us displace emotions onto others, rationalise or over-spiritualise, or simply withdraw and disconnect. These patterns often helped us survive. They protected us in seasons when we felt unsafe or overwhelmed. But survival is not the same as flourishing in a God-centred life. The Cope Sector reveals what we truly believe about God.
When pressure comes, do we move closer toward Him,  or further away from Him?

Do we fight, flee, freeze, or try to fix? Do we present a strong, composed version of ourselves while something deeper struggles within? These responses are often the signs of a coping system trying to function without God at the centre. Yet there is another way…

Healthy coping flows from our Christ-centred self, where our inner world is aligned with truth and rooted in Christ. Instead of reacting from fear, we begin to respond from a place of secure attachment to Him. Our lives become grounded in what we know to be true through the cross: that we are held in His Person, sustained by His Presence, secure in our Placement, guided by His Purposes, and cared for through His Provision. From this place, we begin to adapt rather than defend. We face reality with honesty, forgive freely, and move forward with hope. Our responses become shaped less by reflex and more by the Holy Spirit, producing fruit that reflects His life within us.

We also recognise our limits. Our capacity to cope is often diminished when we are hungry, angry, lonely, or tired. At times, the most spiritual response is simply to acknowledge this and receive care. Over time, and time matters, the Cope Sector becomes the outworking of what is formed within us. Like fruit on a tree, our responses reveal the condition of our heart.

The invitation this week is simple:
When stress rises, pause. Ask yourselfWhere am I? (square) How am I really?

Notice whether your old self is reacting, or whether your secure self in Christ is responding.

God-centred flourishing is not the absence of pressure, but the presence of Christ within it. And in the Cope Sector of your heart, He is gently leading you, from defence, to dependence, to flourishing. Therefore, as God’s chosen people, holy and dearly loved, clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness and patience. Bear with each other and forgive one another if any of you has a grievance against someone. Forgive as the Lord forgave you. And over all these virtues put on love, which binds them all together in perfect unity. Colossians 3:12

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