Saturday, May 16, 2026

The Quiet Work of Change

 


Dear Reader,

A year ago, I wrote about change, willingness, and the Seventh Step of Alcoholics Anonymous.

At the time, I believed the central question of spiritual life was:

"Am I still willing to change?"

Today, the question feels quieter—and perhaps more honest:

"Can I trust God even when change no longer feels dramatic?"

In early recovery, transformation often comes with visible action.
We stop drinking.
We attend meetings.
We rebuild broken relationships.
Life moves with urgency because survival itself feels urgent.

But after years pass, spiritual life changes shape.

The battles become less outward and more inward.

We begin confronting discouragement, fatigue, loneliness, aging, uncertainty, and the slow realization that some defects of character do not disappear all at once. Some soften gradually through humility, prayer, failure, forgiveness, and time.

And perhaps this too is part of grace.

The Seventh Step Prayer still speaks to me today:

“My Creator, I am now willing that you should have all of me, good and bad…”

What moves me now is not merely the request for defects to be removed.
It is the phrase:

“all of me, good and bad.”

Not the polished self.
Not the inspired self.
Not the productive self.

All of me.

The tired part.
The uncertain part.
The procrastinating part.
The grieving part.
The aging part.
The hopeful part that still reaches toward God despite everything.

Perhaps real spiritual maturity begins when we stop offering God only our strengths and begin trusting Him with our limitations as well.

I no longer believe willingness always feels inspiring.

Sometimes willingness simply means getting out of bed.
Saying a prayer without emotion.
Answering the phone.
Helping another person while carrying your own burdens quietly inside.

The Apostle Paul wrote:

“My grace is sufficient for thee: for my strength is made perfect in weakness.”
— 2 Corinthians 12:9

What if weakness is not always an obstacle to spiritual growth?
What if weakness itself becomes the doorway through which grace enters?

Recovery has taught me that God often works more through surrender than through force.

Confucius once spoke of “the desire to reach your full potential,” but age and experience have taught me something equally valuable: not every season of life is meant for achievement. Some seasons are meant for deepening. Some are meant for reflection. Some are meant for learning how to remain faithful when certainty disappears.

The scriptures quietly affirm this truth:

“Be still, and know that I am God.”
— Psalm 46:10

Stillness is difficult for many of us because we mistake it for stagnation.
Yet some of the holiest work of life happens invisibly.

Roots grow in silence.
Faith deepens in silence.
Character is refined in silence.

Today, I do not ask God to make me extraordinary.
I ask Him to keep me honest, useful, compassionate, and willing.

The miracle is no longer that I can change overnight.
The miracle is that grace continues working on me at all.

And perhaps that is enough.

I think now of these words from the Book of Mormon:

“By small and simple things are great things brought to pass.”
— Alma 37:6

A prayer whispered in weakness.
A meeting attended despite exhaustion.
A kind word offered when discouraged.
A willingness to begin again.

These small acts may not look dramatic to the world, but spiritually they are enormous.

A year later, I no longer believe the spiritual life is about becoming flawless.

I believe it is about remaining open.
Open to correction.
Open to grace.
Open to God.
Open to becoming, even now.

And maybe the real gift of the Seventh Step is this:

Not that God instantly removes every defect,
but that He patiently teaches us how to walk with Him while transformation slowly unfolds.

“Draw near unto me and I will draw near unto you.”
— Doctrine & Covenants 88:63

May we continue forward gently.
Not perfectly.
Not fearlessly.
But willingly.

One prayer.
One act of faith.
One quiet day at a time.

Peace After Fear


 Dear Reader, 

In recovery there are moments when life feels very much like those in the days of Gideon.

We hide emotionally. 
We live in fear. 
We wonder if we are strong enough to face what stands before us. 

In the Book of Judges, Gideon is found threshing wheat in a winepress, hiding from the Midianites. He is not standing boldly in the open—he is simply trying to survive. 

Many of us understand that feeling. 

There are seasons when addiction, grief, shame, resentment, depression, fear, or loneliness seem to invade the soul the same way Midian invaded Israel. 

We withdraw. 
We grow uncertain. 
We question our worth. 
We wonder if God still sees us, hidden away in our private winepresses. 

And yet—it is there, not in Gideon’s strength but in his weakness, that the Lord meets him. 

After Gideon places his offering on the rock, fire rises up and consumes it, and the angel disappears. Overwhelmed, Gideon fears for his life, believing that no one can encounter God and live. 

But the Lord speaks: 

“Peace be unto thee; fear not: thou shalt not die.” 
— Judges 6:23 

Gideon responds by building an altar and naming it: 

“The LORD Is Peace.” 

What a powerful truth for those walking the road of recovery. 

Notice this carefully: 
The Midianites had not yet been defeated. 
The struggle was not over. 
The battle still lay ahead. 

And yet, Gideon already called the Lord Peace. 

Why? 

Because peace was no longer tied to circumstances. 
Peace came from discovering he was no longer facing the darkness alone. 

Recovery often begins in much the same way. 

Not when temptation disappears. 
Not when every wound is instantly healed. 
Not when fear completely fades. 

Recovery begins the moment we realize: 
God has entered the battle with us. 

The Hebrew word shalom means far more than calm or quiet feelings. It speaks of wholeness, restoration, healing, harmony—a life brought back into order. 

That is what grace begins to do within us. 

Slowly, the fragmented soul becomes whole again. 
The fearful heart begins to trust again. 
The isolated person begins to reconnect again. 

And like Gideon, we come to discover that the greatest miracle is not only that life begins to change around us—but that something changes within us. 

The Lord becomes our peace… even before the battle is over. 

🙏🏻🧘‍♂️💕🤗☮️ 

 

Friday, May 15, 2026

Growth Through Opposition

  

Dear Reader,

One of the great truths restored through scripture is that opposition is not merely an interruption to life—it is part of the very process by which souls are refined.

The Book of Mormon teaches plainly:

“For it must needs be, that there is an opposition in all things.”
Book of Mormon 2 Nephi 2:11

Without challenge, resistance, disappointment, or sorrow, there could be no growth, wisdom, compassion, or spiritual strength.

This truth reminds me of the reflection:

“Difficulties are opportunities for advancement, for increased self-awareness, for self-fulfillment.”

How beautifully this harmonizes with the Lord’s words in modern revelation:

“All these things shall give thee experience, and shall be for thy good.”
Doctrine and Covenants Doctrine and Covenants 122:7

Joseph Smith received that revelation while suffering in Liberty Jail—a place of cold, loneliness, uncertainty, and injustice. Yet even there, the Lord taught that adversity could become a sacred teacher.

In recovery, faith, and ordinary life, we often discover the same principle.
When we fight reality with resentment and fear, suffering deepens. But when we seek acceptance, humility, and trust in God, trials can begin to transform us rather than defeat us.

The Apostle Paul expressed this beautifully:

“We glory in tribulations also: knowing that tribulation worketh patience;
And patience, experience; and experience, hope.”
Bible Romans 5:3–4

That progression is profound.
Tribulation → patience → experience → hope.

Not despair.
Not defeat.
Hope.

The restored gospel repeatedly teaches that growth often comes “line upon line” and “grace for grace.” We are not expected to become strong instantly. Rather, we are shaped gradually as we continue forward despite difficulty.

Even the Savior Himself “learned… obedience by the things which he suffered” (Hebrews 5:8). If suffering became part of Christ’s mortal experience, perhaps we should not be surprised when growth in our own lives comes through seasons of challenge as well.

The comforting truth is this:
we do not face adversity alone.

The Lord promises:

“I will go before your face. I will be on your right hand and on your left… and mine angels round about you, to bear you up.”
Doctrine and Covenants Doctrine and Covenants 84:88

Perhaps that is why many people in recovery discover an unexpected gratitude for trials. Difficulties humble us, awaken us, soften us, and teach us dependence on God and one another.

Without challenge, the soul can become stagnant.
But through faithful endurance, the heart expands.

And eventually, we discover something remarkable:
the very struggles we once prayed to escape became the instruments that helped us grow closer to God, to others, and to our truer selves.

Amen

  🙏🧘‍♂️💕🤗☮️  



Thursday, May 14, 2026

The Power to Wound, The Choice to Love

Dear Reader,

There is a difficult truth most of us eventually discover about ourselves.

We are capable of both kindness and selfishness. 
Compassion and resentment. 
Mercy and judgment.

At first this realization can feel discouraging. We want to believe goodness means the absence of darker thoughts and impulses. Yet human experience, recovery, and faith all suggest something deeper.

We are not made good because we are incapable of harm. 
We become good when we recognize the darkness within us and choose, day by day, to live by love instead.

There is no triumph in kindness when selfishness was never a temptation. Character is revealed when one has the strength to wound, yet chooses mercy.

The Apostle Paul seemed to understand this struggle within the human heart when he wrote:

“Let all bitterness, and wrath, and anger, and clamour, and evil speaking, be put away from you… And be ye kind one to another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another…” 
— Epistle to the Ephesians 4:31–32

Notice Paul does not pretend bitterness and anger do not exist. 
He speaks to people who know these emotions well.

The invitation of the Gospel is not to deny our humanity, but to transform it.

This transformation often happens quietly in ordinary moments of life.

When we could speak harshly but remain gentle. 
When pride asks to be right, but love asks us to listen. 
When resentment begins to rise, yet we pause long enough to choose compassion instead. 

Perhaps this is why mercy is such a sacred thing.

Mercy is not weakness. 
It is strength disciplined by love.

An anonymous writer once observed:

“Blessed is the soul who knows its power to wound, yet chooses gentleness; who feels anger, yet seeks peace; who sees weakness within, yet walks daily in love.” 

To me, this is one of the clearest signs of spiritual growth and recovery.

Not perfection. 
Not pretending we are free from selfishness or fear. 
But becoming increasingly aware of what lives within us and choosing, one day at a time, to let kindness speak louder than anger. 

Maybe the truly good person is not someone untouched by darkness, but someone who has looked honestly at their own heart and still chooses love, acceptance, forgiveness, and peace.

🙏🧘‍♂️💕🤗☮️