Thursday, March 12, 2026

Running Into Ourselves




“No matter where you run, you just end up running into yourself.”   — Audrey Hepburn 

“Until you make the unconscious conscious, it will direct your life and you will call it fate.”   — Carl Jung 

 

There comes a moment in life when running stops working. 

We run from places. 
We run from memories. 
We run from mistakes. 

 

Sometimes we even run from the quiet voice inside us that asks us to change. 

But eventually we discover something surprising: 

 

 

Wherever we go, we bring ourselves with us. 

Our fears travel with us. 
Our wounds travel with us. 
The habits we refuse to see quietly shape the road ahead. 

 

Audrey Hepburn captured this truth in a simple but powerful way: no matter where we run, we eventually run into ourselves. 

 

Psychologist Carl Jung saw the same reality from another angle. He observed that the parts of ourselves we refuse to recognize still influence our lives. When we ignore them, they quietly guide our choices, and we call the results fate. 

 

In recovery, this moment becomes a turning point. 

We stop blaming geography. 
We stop blaming other people. 
And we begin the deeper work of honesty. 

 

That is where the real change begins. 

 

One truth slowly becomes clear: 

“Wherever I run, my fears go with me. 
Wherever I surrender, God can meet me.” 

The road forward does not begin by running farther. 

It begins the moment we stop running, turn inward, and face the truth of who we are. 

And in that quiet place of honesty, we discover something we may never have expected: 

We were never meant to run forever. 

We were meant to surrender. 

Because the place where we finally meet ourselves is also the place where God has been waiting all along. 

Sunday, March 1, 2026

He Walked It With Me

 


A Reflection on How the Gospel of Jesus Christ Changed My Life


I have lived a long road.


It has not been straight.

It has not been smooth.

It has not always been faithful.


There were years when I believed I was walking alone.

Years when pride led me.

Years when fear shaped my decisions.

Years when I thought I had to fix myself before God could possibly want me.


Recovery began to loosen that illusion.

“I can’t. He can.”


But for a long time, I did not fully understand who “He” was.


Over time — through loss, service, scripture, surrender, and quiet repentance — something changed. Not suddenly. Not dramatically. Slowly.


I began to see that Jesus Christ had not entered my life late.


He had been walking it with me all along.


When I was raising my son alone.

When relationships ended and I did not understand why.

When shame felt heavier than hope.

When I sat in meetings unsure if I could stay sober one more day.


He was there.


Not excusing my mistakes.

Not approving my pride.

But sustaining me in ways I did not recognize at the time.


The beauty of my story is not that it was clean.


It is that I was never abandoned.


The gospel of Jesus Christ did not erase my past.

It redeemed it.


It did not remove my weaknesses.

It reshaped them into dependence.


It did not make me impressive.

It made me grateful.


Today, when I serve, teach, work, pray, or sit quietly with scripture, I do so with a steady awareness:


The road was long.


But it was never lonely.


And the Savior who walked it with me then

is still walking it with me now.