10-06-2025, 04:35 PM
This resonated with me today, because I do try and keep my nose to the grindstone and the routine work till exhaustion... wash rinse repeat...
Im thankful for every morning of every day, but I rarely reflect like I should... the family has had a few challenging months recently... I want to be able to help those who are struggling, and this might help me find something to slow their minds and focus on finding balance, so life doesn't seem so daunting for them at the moment.
It's like my older sister suggested, it's having the faith that whatever storm comes your way, you will have the strength and wisdom to find and navigate your path.
It's been 13-14 years since I intensely prayed/mediated, I RARELY do, and it was about my daughter(s) then as it is now.
She is independent as hell, rarely complains or asks for anything... her life was going well, found a good guy who is great for her, but they have been given a couple of gut punches so close together it's a lot
After the first gut punch, we were talking, and she said
"Daddy, sometimes my heart feels so broken I think it's gonna burst"...
She is doing better and has a therapist for her loss, but on top of this other horrible news ....
I want to find the best way for her and her husband to find the peace and solace they are both looking for...
Im thankful for every morning of every day, but I rarely reflect like I should... the family has had a few challenging months recently... I want to be able to help those who are struggling, and this might help me find something to slow their minds and focus on finding balance, so life doesn't seem so daunting for them at the moment.
It's like my older sister suggested, it's having the faith that whatever storm comes your way, you will have the strength and wisdom to find and navigate your path.
It's been 13-14 years since I intensely prayed/mediated, I RARELY do, and it was about my daughter(s) then as it is now.
She is independent as hell, rarely complains or asks for anything... her life was going well, found a good guy who is great for her, but they have been given a couple of gut punches so close together it's a lot
After the first gut punch, we were talking, and she said
"Daddy, sometimes my heart feels so broken I think it's gonna burst"...
She is doing better and has a therapist for her loss, but on top of this other horrible news ....
I want to find the best way for her and her husband to find the peace and solace they are both looking for...
Quote:
[Image: https://pbs.twimg.com/profile_images/191...normal.jpg]
Mase
@masonkuhr
Most people avoid meditation because stillness forces them to confront everything they've been running from. You stay busy, stay distracted, stay moving because sitting in silence means facing the emotions you've buried, the truths you've avoided, and the pain you've been numbing. But that's exactly why you need it. The things you're running from are the things keeping you stuck. Stillness isn't some New Age practice that conflicts with Scripture. It's how you commune with God. "Be still and know that I am God" wasn't a suggestion, it was an instruction. You can't hear His voice when you're drowning it out with constant noise and endless activity. When you finally sit in silence and those uncomfortable emotions start rising - the anxiety, the grief, the anger, the shame, that’s the Holy Spirit interceding for you with groans too deep for words. He's bringing to the surface what needs to be felt, processed, and released. Your body has been holding emotions you never gave yourself permission to feel. Meditation creates space for those stored feelings to finally come up and out. The resistance you feel toward sitting still is actually your fear of what might surface if you stop running. David wrote the Psalms from a place of stillness where he processed every emotion before God: rage, despair, confusion, joy. He didn't suppress his feelings or stay busy to avoid them. He sat with God and let everything come to the surface. That's why his relationship with God was so deep. Jesus regularly withdrew to solitary places to pray. He practiced stillness not because He was escaping life but because He was preparing for it. In the silence, He heard the Father's voice. In the stillness, He gained clarity for His mission. In the solitude, He processed what was coming. When you meditate and difficult emotions arise, you're finally acknowledging what's already there. The anxiety you feel in stillness has been running in the background of your mind all along. The sadness that surfaces during prayer has been weighing on your heart for months. Stillness reveals your emotions so they can be healed. The Holy Spirit knows what you're carrying better than you do. When you give Him space through stillness, He starts bringing things to your attention that need to be released. Sometimes it's grief you never processed. Sometimes it's anger you never expressed. Sometimes it's fear you never acknowledged. He's faithful to surface what needs healing. The emotions you're running from don't disappear when you stay busy, they just get stronger. But when you sit with them in God's presence, they lose their power over you. Stillness is where warriors are made over time. Be still. Feel what comes up. Trust that the Holy Spirit is doing the work your constant activity has been preventing. On the other side of that discomfort is the freedom you've been searching for.
7:45 AM · Oct 6, 2025
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His mind was not for rent to any god or government
Always hopeful yet discontent, knows changes aren't permanent
But change is
Professor Neil Ellwood Peart
![[Image: PEART-2744335652.gif]](https://denyignorance.com/uploader/images/PEART-2744335652.gif)
Always hopeful yet discontent, knows changes aren't permanent
But change is
Professor Neil Ellwood Peart
![[Image: PEART-2744335652.gif]](https://denyignorance.com/uploader/images/PEART-2744335652.gif)






