After a week devoted to rest, recovery, and stillness, stepping back into work felt unexpectedly heavy. Ambition disguised itself as urgency, whispering that I was somehow behind, convincing me to chase deadlines that didn’t even exist. For a moment, I entertained the illusion. I scrambled, I pushed, I tried to reclaim time that had never been lost. But something in me had changed. The distractions that once would have stolen my attention arrived as they always do, but this time they only earned a brief glance before fading into the background. What once felt important no longer carried the same weight. The week away gave me something productivity never could: perspective. There was something about sitting before the vastness of the ocean that challenged me. Maybe it was the reminder that God speaks most clearly when the noise subsides. Maybe it was realizing how small my fears looked against something so endless. Whatever it was, I found myself in deep reflection, sitting with tr...
Before my beach trip, I realized I had been operating on autopilot for far too long. So busy moving, producing, and responding to life that I had slowly become disconnected from myself. My patience was wearing thin. My energy was depleted. My days had become predictable rhythms of responsibility and routine. I didn’t realize how much of me was running on empty. But there is something sacred about the beach. The sound of the waves. The feel of the sand beneath your feet. The cool breeze. The warmth of the sun. For me, it all becomes a sanctuary—a place where creation reminds me of the Creator. My grandson and I spent six uninterrupted hours on that shoreline, disconnected from the noise of civilization and fully present in the moment. No agendas. No pressure. No distractions. Just space to be. And somewhere between the crashing waves and the endless horizon, something shifted. I believe we were both releasing what we didn’t need and receiving what we did. Mental clutter was cleare...