Dear Reader,
This morning I reflected on a quiet truth from As Bill Sees It:
“Moments of perception can build into a lifetime of spiritual serenity…”
Along the coast of Monterey stands the Lone Cypress—
A single tree, rooted in rock,
surrounded by wind and wave.
It is not protected from the storm.
It is shaped by it.
That image feels true to my life.
Serenity did not come all at once.
It came in small moments—
a clearer thought,
an honest admission,
a willingness to change.
Or, as the Book of Mormon teaches:
“Precept upon precept, line upon line…” — 2 Nephi 28:30
And as David A. Bednar has taught:
“Line upon line, precept upon precept… things are accomplished through small and simple means.”
At first, everything felt tangled—
fear, habit, and confusion.
But slowly… something deeper began to grow.
Roots.
Not seen… but real.
Roots of truth.
Roots of faith.
Roots that hold.
And when the storms come—and they will—
it is not the surface that determines whether I stand…
It is what I am rooted in.
As Russell M. Nelson has counseled:
“The Lord loves effort.”
So today I ask:
What truth can I accept?
What small effort can I make?
What moment can I allow to take root?
Because over time—
line upon line,
precept upon precept—
these small efforts become something lasting—
A life not free from storms…
but no longer shaken by them.
Quietly… deeply…
anchored in peace.




