from Roscoe's Quick Notes

Rangers vs Yankees

Can my Rangers do it again?

Today's game is the 3rd in this 3-game series between the Rangers and the New York Yankees. The Yankees won the 1st game on Tuesday, and my Rangers won the 2nd game yesterday. I'll certainly be cheering for my Rangers to win again today in this early afternoon game.

Following today's game may be tricky as the wife will be returning home from work during the game. She and I usually watch old episodes of “Price is Right” on TV while we eat lunch at home together. So if she gets home during the game, we'll probably follow our regular routine. I've hauled a laptop out to the front room so I'll be able to follow the game scores and stats quietly in real time, but rather than listening to the radio call of the game I'll be listening to either Bob Barker or Drew Carey hosting old episodes of their game show.

And the adventure continues.

 
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from 💚

Our Father Who art in Heaven Hallowed be Thy name Thy Kingdom come Thy will be done on Earth as it is in Heaven Give us this day our daily Bread And forgive us our trespasses As we forgive those who trespass against us And lead us not into temptation But deliver us from evil

Amen

Jesus is Lord! Come Lord Jesus!

Come Lord Jesus! Christ is Lord!

 
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from kinocow

you create nothing

A friend of mine handed me a nice camera “to give it a spin” and see if I needed it. A few years ago this would've been a godsend, with ideas trickling out of every orifice of my body I'd have set forward to doing something with it. Now as a resident corporate slave who's firmly attached to the teat of the system, this event was stark in the way it non-registered. I used to reason earlier that the reason I didn't do more creative projects was the lack of money, resources, the Ausländerbehörde not accepting creativity as a valid excuse for having a work visa, laziness, lack of network.. the pit of excuses has no bottom. Now, coming from a place of plenty where I have the resources to make things work, years spent trying to find stability have eroded any last figments of creativity in me. There are days when there are no dreams in my head, the hunger has died down both in the stomach and the brain and I think more about tax efficiency than lighting, so I am on the good path to being a good middle-aged person who has given up on their dreams and gets salty as the years pass by.

Having a voice is also important and the time I spent trying to figure out corporate Germany stymied any kind of creative voice I've had. Working with career drones who can only talk about sport, profit margins or cars means a day spent without thinking about Philip K. Dick's exegesis or the latest Linklater (there seems to be two of them and I've skipped them both). This stability induced lethargy, combined with the dullness of the everyday makes me a non-questioning, almost non-human, just a piece of flesh existing for pleasure hits and bonuses.

What is the way foward from here? Only time will tell, but this is exercise in trying to keep the writer in me a bit out of the vegetative state. Will I survive?

#writing #corporate #adulthood

 
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from An Open Letter

I went to an event by 222, which is essentially like time left if you know what that is. And I really felt like I was the life of the party for my group, I had people kind of hovering around me and if I went to a different group or made new friends I would eventually have my old group end up coming to me. I made a lot of new friends and people that are interested in doing several different things, and I very much consider it a success. I also want to kind of be a little bit intentional with reminding myself that I was good at being social and I was very well received by others. I also feel like I was very charismatic and entertaining with my stories, and I was consistently making people laugh. I remember that one reel that talked about how interesting people constantly have applicable stories and I kind of felt that way where I was able to just naturally have a lot of related stories that I felt like I was able to tell in a very entertaining manner and I was even complimented on my storytelling at one point. I just wanna take a little bit to be proud of myself for that and to acknowledge that as a strength of mind that I’ve worked hard for.

Additionally there was this one girl named A, who I was friendly to from the beginning but was pretty judgmental and honestly rude. When I would make friendly comments or conversations she would be pretty rude or would casually throw in put downs towards me, and this really does remind me of L. I essentially just stopped interacting with her, and she ended up kind of gravitating back towards me mostly because I was kind of at the heart of social interaction. But she still continued to be rude to me and so I just didn’t really go out of my way to interact with her too much. I invited some other people to a game night at some point in the future, mostly just checking for interest and I didn’t explicitly ask her because she wasn’t directly in that conversation and I wasn’t going to go super out of my way to invite her. When I finally dropped off everyone at their cars, I was talking with another person that I enjoyed meeting, and her. I was telling them a couple of different stories, and I eventually asked if she was interested in board games or specifically social deduction games and she said she was. She seemed friendly then. It kind of feels like there’s as weird manipulation thing almost of kind of being somewhat rude to them, and by that I mean not going out of my way to engage with them or to involve them with things which I do think is fair. But I feel like once that person gets that social feedback that their behavior of being rude gets them that response, they become a little bit more friendly.

 
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from Douglas Vandergraph

Chapter 1: The Quiet Ache of Looking Back

There is a certain kind of tired that does not come from a long day. It comes from looking back over your life and feeling like too much of it slipped through your hands. You may be sitting in a quiet room, driving home after work, lying awake before the sun comes up, or staring at a life you never planned to have. Somewhere inside, a sentence keeps pressing on you that you do not want to admit. You feel like you wasted years. Not a weekend, not a season, not a few bad months, but years. That kind of regret does not shout all the time. Sometimes it just sits in the background and makes everything feel heavier. That is why the faith-based YouTube message about being strong when you feel like you wasted years of your life matters so deeply, because this is not a small pain for people who are carrying it.

The hardest part is that wasted years rarely look the same from the outside as they feel on the inside. Other people may see you still functioning. They may see you working, smiling, paying bills, answering messages, showing up where you are supposed to show up. They may even think you are doing fine. But inside, you may be grieving a version of yourself you never became. You may be thinking about the years you spent afraid, stuck, distracted, bitter, ashamed, broken, lonely, addicted, depressed, or just surviving. You may be asking God why it took so long to wake up. You may be trying to believe the future can still hold something good, while another part of you keeps whispering that you already missed it. That is the ache underneath this deeper Christian encouragement for regret, lost time, and hope in Jesus, because the pain is not only about what happened. It is about what you think can never happen now.

I want to begin there because most people try to rush past that place too quickly. They want to throw a bright sentence over a dark wound and call it healing. They want to say God has a plan, keep going, everything happens for a reason, and all of that may sound nice to someone who is not sitting in the wreckage. But when you are the one carrying the regret, those words can feel too thin. You need something stronger than a slogan. You need a Savior who is not embarrassed by the years you do not know how to explain. You need Jesus not as a polished idea, but as someone close enough to sit with you in the silence and strong enough to tell you the truth without crushing you.

That is where this has to start. Not with pretending. Not with forcing yourself to sound more grateful than you actually feel. Not with burying the grief because you think a faithful person should not hurt like this. Some people have prayed and still made bad choices. Some people loved God and still got lost in fear. Some people wanted to build a better life and still spent years under pressure that wore them down. Some people made decisions they regret because they were trying to escape pain they did not understand. Some people lost years to someone else’s cruelty, somebody else’s neglect, a family wound, a private battle, a season of confusion, or a kind of exhaustion that made simple obedience feel impossible.

There is a cruel way regret talks when it gets control of your mind. It does not just say, “You made mistakes.” It says, “You are the mistake.” It does not just say, “You lost time.” It says, “You are too late.” It does not just say, “You should have done better.” It says, “You will never be what you could have been.” That voice can sound so convincing because it often uses pieces of truth. Yes, some things did happen. Yes, some choices had consequences. Yes, some years are gone. But regret becomes dangerous when it starts acting like it gets to tell the whole story.

Jesus never gave regret that kind of authority.

One of the most quietly powerful things about Jesus is how often He met people at the point where their life looked interrupted, damaged, delayed, or morally complicated. He did not only meet people at the beginning of a clean story. He met them in the middle of consequences. He met them in public shame. He met them after years of sickness. He met them after failure had already happened. He met them when everybody else had already formed an opinion. That matters because many people think Jesus is mainly interested in the person they should have become by now. But the Gospels show us something better. Jesus keeps walking toward real people inside real lives that do not look neat.

There was a woman in Scripture who had been sick for twelve years. That is not a small detail. Twelve years is a long time to live around a wound. Twelve years is long enough for hope to become complicated. Twelve years is long enough for people to stop asking how you are. Twelve years is long enough for your pain to become part of your identity. She had spent what she had, tried what she knew, and still carried the same suffering. When she reached for the edge of Jesus’ garment, she was not reaching from a place of religious confidence. She was reaching from desperation. And Jesus did not treat her like an interruption. He stopped.

That is easy to miss. Jesus stopped for a woman whose life had been bleeding away for twelve years. He did not tell her she should have come sooner. He did not shame her for everything she had tried before Him. He did not make her explain every year. He called her daughter. He gave dignity back to a person who had spent years losing pieces of herself. When you feel like years have been wasted, that story becomes more than a healing story. It becomes a window into the heart of Christ. He is not irritated by the length of your struggle. He is not confused by the time it took you to reach for Him. He is not standing there with a calendar in His hand, measuring whether you arrived early enough to deserve mercy.

Some people need to hear that because they are not only grieving time. They are ashamed of how long it took them to change. They look back and think, “Why did I stay so long? Why did I keep choosing that? Why did I not see it earlier? Why did I waste my strength on what was slowly hurting me?” Those questions are real. Some of them need honest answers. But Jesus does not heal you by letting shame become your permanent home. He heals by meeting you in the truth and then calling you forward with mercy.

There is another overlooked moment in the life of Jesus that speaks directly to people who feel like only fragments remain. After He fed thousands with a small amount of bread and fish, the people were full, and the miracle had already happened. Most of us would have focused on the crowd. We would have focused on the abundance. We would have talked about how little became much. But Jesus said something that can hit your heart differently when you feel broken. He told His disciples to gather the leftover pieces so nothing would be lost.

That line is not loud, but it is deep. Gather the fragments. Let nothing be lost. Jesus cared about what remained after everyone else had eaten. He cared about the pieces that could have been stepped over. He cared about what looked unnecessary once the big miracle was done. That says something about how He sees your life. You may look at the pieces left after regret and think there is not enough there to matter. Jesus does not agree. He gathers what remains. He does not waste the fragments.

Maybe you are not starting with a full basket. Maybe you are starting with broken pieces. Maybe your confidence is in pieces. Maybe your family story is in pieces. Maybe your faith has been shaken into pieces. Maybe your dreams are not gone, but they no longer look like they looked when you were younger. Maybe the person you thought you would become feels far away. Jesus is not limited to the clean version of your life. He can work with what is left, and that is not a small hope. That is the kind of hope a tired person can actually hold.

There is a difference between pretending the past did not matter and believing the past does not get the final word. Jesus never asks you to lie about pain. He does not ask you to call destruction beautiful. He does not ask you to smile while your heart is bleeding. But He does ask you not to hand your future to a wound that cannot save you. Regret can tell you what happened, but it cannot redeem what happened. Shame can remind you of the cost, but it cannot give you life. Only Jesus can step into what looks lost and begin turning it into something that serves love, wisdom, humility, courage, and grace.

This is where strength begins in a quieter way than most people expect. It begins when you stop trying to solve your entire life at once. People who feel like they wasted years often panic. They feel behind, so they start trying to catch up in every direction. They want to fix their money, their body, their family, their faith, their purpose, their discipline, their habits, and their future all at the same time. That pressure can crush a person. It can make change feel impossible before it even begins. Jesus does not usually lead people by panic. He leads by calling them into the next honest step.

The next honest step may not look impressive. It may be getting out of bed and praying one sentence without pretending. It may be making one apology without trying to control the outcome. It may be telling the truth to someone safe. It may be turning away from one destructive pattern today. It may be opening the Bible not to prove you are spiritual, but because your soul is starving. It may be resting because your body has been carrying grief for too long. It may be admitting that some years hurt and you need God to help you stop hating yourself.

That last part matters. A lot of people call self-hatred repentance, but it is not the same thing. Repentance turns you toward God. Self-hatred turns you against yourself. Repentance tells the truth and opens the door to mercy. Self-hatred tells the truth in a way that makes mercy feel impossible. Jesus calls people to turn, but He does not call them to despise the person He came to save. You can own your past without letting it become your identity. You can confess what was wrong without agreeing that you are beyond repair.

Peter is one of the clearest pictures of this. He failed Jesus at the worst possible time. He did not fail in private. He denied Him in the hour when loyalty mattered most. If anyone could have believed he wasted his calling, it was Peter. He had walked with Jesus. He had heard the teachings. He had seen the miracles. He had promised courage and then collapsed under fear. That kind of failure can ruin a man from the inside if shame gets the final word.

But after the resurrection, Jesus came for Peter. He did not come with mockery. He did not pretend it had not happened. He asked Peter, “Do you love Me?” That question was not soft because failure did not matter. It was strong because love was still the doorway back. Jesus brought Peter back to relationship before He sent him back into purpose. That is one of the most overlooked mercies in the Gospel. Jesus does not restore people by pretending their failure was small. He restores them by showing that His grace is greater.

When you feel like you wasted years, you may think the question over your life is, “How could you?” But Jesus may be asking a deeper one. “Do you love Me?” Not because love erases responsibility, but because love is where life starts again. If you still love Him, even weakly, even through tears, even with confusion in your chest, then you are not done. If you can turn toward Him today, then grace is still moving. If you can whisper, “Lord, I do not know how to rebuild, but I am here,” then you have already taken a step out of the grave regret tried to dig for you.

The pain of wasted years is not only about time. It is about trust. You trusted certain paths, and they disappointed you. You trusted certain people, and they hurt you. You trusted your own judgment, and it failed you. You trusted that life would look different by now, and it does not. So when someone says, “Trust Jesus,” part of you may want to believe it, while another part feels too tired to trust anything. That is not rebellion every time. Sometimes that is wounded faith trying to breathe.

Jesus understands wounded faith. He met people who believed and trembled at the same time. He met people who asked for help with unbelief. He met people who came at night because daylight felt too exposed. He met people who had questions, fear, confusion, and mixed motives. He was not fragile around honest weakness. He was tender with the bruised reed. He did not break what was already bent. That means you do not have to clean up your inner world before coming to Him. You can come with the ache still in you.

This is one of the reasons the message of Jesus is stronger than motivational talk by itself. Motivation can help you move for a little while. It can push you, wake you up, challenge you, and sometimes that has value. But motivation alone cannot forgive sin. It cannot heal shame. It cannot restore a soul. It cannot give meaning to suffering. It cannot sit with you at three in the morning when your past starts talking again. Jesus can. He does not just inspire you to try harder. He gives you Himself.

And that is the question under everything. Is Jesus enough for this kind of regret? Is He enough when the years behind you feel heavier than the years ahead? Is He enough when you are not young like you used to be, not confident like you hoped to be, not healed like you thought you would be, and not sure where to begin? The answer is not cheap. The answer is not a slogan. The answer is found slowly as you bring Him the truth and discover that He does not leave.

He is enough not because the pain was not real. He is enough because He enters what is real and remains Lord there. He is enough because He can forgive what needs forgiveness and heal what needs healing. He is enough because He can use what you learned in the dark without calling the darkness good. He is enough because He can give you a future that is not chained to your worst chapter. He is enough because He is not intimidated by time.

That may sound simple, but it is not shallow. Many people believe Jesus can save them in a broad eternal sense, but they struggle to believe He can meet the personal ache they carry today. They can say He died for the world, but they wonder if He is patient with their slow growth. They can say He rose from the grave, but they wonder if He can resurrect any desire in them after years of disappointment. They can say He is Lord, but they wonder if He cares about the quiet grief of feeling behind. The Gospel is not less powerful when it gets personal. It becomes more beautiful because you realize Jesus did not come only to make a statement about heaven. He came to seek and save the lost, including the parts of you that feel lost inside your own life.

There is something else people often miss about Jesus. He did not measure people by the same timelines everyone else used. When others saw the woman at the well through the lens of her past, Jesus saw a thirsty soul ready for living water. When others saw Zacchaeus as a corrupt man in a tree, Jesus saw someone He wanted to visit that day. When others saw children as interruptions, Jesus welcomed them. When others saw a thief dying beside Him as too late, Jesus spoke paradise over him. That last one is almost too much to take in. A man near the end of his life turned toward Jesus, and Jesus did not say, “You should have come sooner.” He gave him mercy in the final hours.

That does not mean we should waste time on purpose. It means time does not have the final authority over grace. It means Jesus can still be generous when the day is late. It means the mercy of God is not trapped inside our preferred schedule. If you feel late, you are still not beyond Him. If you feel behind, you are still not hidden from Him. If you feel like too much is gone, you are still standing in a day where grace can reach you.

This is not an invitation to be careless with the rest of your life. It is an invitation to stop being paralyzed by what you cannot recover. There is a big difference. When regret is driving, you either freeze or rush. You either give up because you feel too far behind, or you start running so hard that you burn out. Grace moves differently. Grace tells the truth, receives mercy, and takes the next faithful step. Grace does not waste today punishing you for yesterday. Grace teaches you how to live now.

Maybe today you need to stop saying, “I wasted my life,” as if that is the final name over you. You may have wasted some time. You may have lost some opportunities. You may have walked through years that took more from you than you can explain. But your life is not the same thing as your lost years. Your life still belongs to God. Your breath today is not an accident. Your desire to be stronger is not nothing. Your grief over what was lost may even be a sign that something in you is waking up again.

A numb heart does not grieve this honestly. A dead soul does not care. The fact that you ache over the years may mean there is still tenderness in you. It may mean God is stirring something beneath the regret. It may mean you are finally able to face what you once had to avoid. Do not mistake awakening for condemnation. Sometimes the first feeling of coming back to life is pain, because you can finally feel what happened. Jesus can handle that pain. You do not have to turn it into a performance.

I think many people are exhausted because they keep trying to make their past make sense before they let themselves move forward. They want a full explanation for every delay, every disappointment, every unanswered prayer, every wrong turn, every loss, every season that felt wasted. It is natural to want answers. But healing often begins before every answer arrives. Jesus did not explain everything to everyone before He called them to follow. He gave enough light for the next step. That can feel frustrating when you want the whole map, but sometimes the whole map would overwhelm you. The next step is mercy.

There is strength in saying, “I do not understand it all, but I will walk with Jesus today.” That is not denial. That is faith with dirt on it. That is faith after disappointment. That is faith that has stopped trying to impress people. It is the kind of faith that may not sound dramatic, but it is real. You wake up and choose not to let regret be your master. You pray with honesty instead of polished words. You ask Jesus for enough strength to obey today. You receive forgiveness again. You let one small act of faith become the place where the future begins to change.

The strange thing about wasted years is that God can use even the grief from them to make you more compassionate. A person who has never felt behind can be harsh with people who move slowly. A person who has never failed deeply can speak too quickly about someone else’s weakness. A person who has never had to rebuild may not understand how much courage it takes to start again. But when Jesus redeems regret, He often turns it into tenderness. He makes you slower to judge. He makes you more honest about grace. He teaches you to speak to broken people without standing above them.

That does not make the lost years good. It means Jesus is that powerful. He can take what shame wanted to use against you and make it serve love. He can take the very place where you felt disqualified and turn it into a place of humble strength. He can make you the kind of person who knows how to sit with someone else in pain because you remember what it was like to sit there yourself. That is redemption. Not the erasing of the wound, but the miracle of God bringing life where shame expected only death.

Still, there will be days when regret comes back. You may hear a song, pass a place, see someone your age doing what you thought you would be doing, or realize another year has gone by. The ache may rise again. When it does, do not panic and assume you are back at the beginning. Healing is not always the absence of old feelings. Sometimes healing is having a new place to bring them. You can bring them to Jesus without letting them rule you. You can say, “Lord, this hurts again,” and then let Him remind you what is true.

What is true is that your past is known, but it is not king. Your regret is real, but it is not lord. Your lost time mattered, but it is not more powerful than Christ. The years behind you may be heavy, but Jesus is not weak under their weight. He can carry what you cannot carry. He can teach you how to walk without dragging every old chain into every new day.

That is why this article has to move slowly and honestly. We are not going to rush into a fake victory. We are not going to act like one good sentence solves twenty years of pain. We are going to walk into the truth with Jesus at the center. We are going to look at regret without worshiping it. We are going to look at lost time without giving it final authority. We are going to look at the teachings of Jesus that many people overlook because they are quieter than the famous verses, yet they carry deep mercy for anyone who feels late, tired, ashamed, or afraid.

If you are reading this with a heavy heart, I want you to know something before we go any further. You do not have to fix your whole life before this can matter. You do not have to feel strong before Jesus can strengthen you. You do not have to understand every wasted year before grace can begin reclaiming today. The first chapter of strength may be much simpler than you thought. It may begin with telling the truth in the presence of Christ and letting Him stay near.

You are allowed to grieve what you lost. You are allowed to wish you had chosen differently. You are allowed to feel sorrow over the years that did not become what you hoped. But you are not required to turn that sorrow into a prison. Jesus is not standing at the door of your future with His arms crossed. He is standing in mercy, calling you out of the grave clothes of regret, one honest step at a time.

This is where the story begins again. Not where everything is fixed. Not where the pain magically disappears. Not where the past suddenly stops mattering. It begins where a tired person stops running from the truth and discovers that Jesus is already there. It begins where shame expected condemnation and mercy speaks instead. It begins where the fragments are gathered. It begins where the late worker is still welcomed. It begins where Peter hears his name again. It begins where the wounded hand reaches for the edge of His garment and finds that He still stops for the one who has been bleeding for years.

Chapter 2: The Lie That Says You Came Too Late

There is a lie that starts sounding reasonable after enough regret. It does not always feel like a lie because it speaks in a tired voice. It sounds like your own thoughts. It says, “Maybe God could have used me if I had started sooner.” It says, “Maybe things could have been different if I had listened earlier.” It says, “Maybe I had a chance once, but I missed the window.” That lie is cruel because it does not need to make you stop believing in God. It only needs to make you believe your own life has passed the point where His mercy can still build something meaningful.

A lot of people are not walking away from Jesus because they hate Him. They are standing at a distance because they feel embarrassed to come near Him this late. They have prayed enough to know the right words, but they also know how many years they spent doing the opposite of what they knew was good. They know the habits they kept feeding. They know the relationships they stayed in too long. They know the money they wasted, the time they lost, the anger they carried, the fear that ruled them, and the opportunities they watched disappear while they were stuck. So when grace is offered, they do not always reject it. Sometimes they just feel too ashamed to receive it.

That is why the teaching of Jesus about the workers in the vineyard matters more than many people realize. He described a landowner who went out at different hours of the day and brought workers into his vineyard. Some were hired early in the morning. Some came later. Some were still standing there near the end of the day when there was barely any daylight left. The ones who came late did not have a full day to offer. They did not have the same long record as the ones who started early. They had only the time that remained.

Jesus said the landowner still called them in.

That picture can feel almost uncomfortable if you have always measured life by fairness, timing, and visible effort. It bothered the early workers in the story because grace often irritates the part of us that wants everything measured exactly the way we would measure it. But if you are the person who feels like you came late to your own life, that story becomes deeply personal. It tells you something about God that shame does not want you to believe. The Lord of the vineyard still goes looking late in the day. He still calls people who have been standing around with unused hours behind them. He still gives purpose to people who thought the workday was almost over.

That does not mean late years are easy. It does not mean the years before that moment suddenly stop mattering. But it does mean your delay is not stronger than His call. Jesus did not tell that story so people would become lazy about their lives. He told it to reveal the generosity of God. He wanted us to see that the kingdom is not run by the cold math of shame. The mercy of God is not trapped inside your old timeline. He can still call you in when you feel late, and He can still make the remaining daylight matter.

Some people need to sit with that slowly because they have been living under a private sentence. They may not call it a sentence, but it acts like one. It says, “You are too late to become disciplined.” It says, “You are too late to heal.” It says, “You are too late to be loved well.” It says, “You are too late to build anything that matters.” It says, “You are too late to become the kind of person God wanted you to be.” Once that voice settles in, it changes how you wake up in the morning. It makes effort feel pointless before you even begin.

That is one of regret’s most dangerous tricks. It turns sorrow over yesterday into surrender today. It convinces you that because you cannot get back what was lost, you should not offer God what remains. It makes you compare the small piece of life in your hand to the years you already spent, and then it whispers that the small piece is not worth giving. Jesus speaks differently. He took small things in His hands more than once. He took a few loaves and fish. He noticed a widow’s two small coins. He spoke about mustard seed faith. He kept showing that the kingdom of God does not despise small beginnings when they are offered honestly.

Maybe the strength you need today is not the strength to fix twenty years. Maybe it is the strength to stop insulting the day God has given you. That may sound strong, but it is said with mercy. Today may feel small compared to all the years that hurt. Still, today is alive. Today is reachable. Today is where obedience can begin. Today is where forgiveness can be received. Today is where one honest prayer can rise from a tired chest. Today is where Jesus can say, “Follow Me,” even if yesterday was full of wandering.

The enemy loves to make people think repentance is only beautiful when it happens early. Jesus tells a different story. The prodigal son did not come home before the damage. He came home after he had already wasted what had been given to him. He came home after the money was gone, after his pride was broken, after hunger had humbled him, and after the far country had shown its true face. When he started walking home, he had no speech that could undo the years. He had no way to pay back what he had burned through. He had only a broken heart and a direction.

The father saw him while he was still a long way off.

That detail is easy to read past, but it carries a whole world of mercy. The son had not even made it all the way home before the father ran to him. He was still dusty from the road. He was still carrying the smell of the far country. He was still rehearsing a speech built around shame. The father interrupted that speech with embrace. He did not deny what happened, but he refused to let waste have the final word over his son.

A lot of people know that story, but they miss how deeply it speaks to wasted years. The son truly wasted something. Jesus did not soften that part. The far country was real. The loss was real. The consequences were real. But the return was real too. The father’s love was not weaker because the son came home late. The robe was not imaginary. The ring was not pretend. The meal was not fake. Restoration did not mean the waste never happened. It meant the son was still a son.

That may be the word your heart has not been able to receive. You may have wasted things. You may have lost things. You may have done damage. You may have let fear rule you longer than you should have. You may have ignored wisdom until pain finally got your attention. But if you turn toward the Father, you are not walking toward a God who is looking for a way to humiliate you. You are walking toward the One Jesus revealed. You are walking toward the Father who sees the returning child while he is still far off.

Shame will try to make you write your whole identity from the far country. It will say you are the addiction, the divorce, the bankruptcy, the anger, the cowardice, the wasted youth, the missed calling, the broken promise, the years of depression, the bitterness, or the secret you still wish you could erase. The Father does not name you that way. He names you from relationship before He rebuilds you in responsibility. He does not call evil good. He does not call damage harmless. But He also does not let the far country define the child who comes home.

This is where many people struggle because they think mercy is too soft to rebuild a life. They think they need harshness to change. They think if they punish themselves enough, they will somehow become new. But self-punishment does not create holiness. It usually creates exhaustion, hiding, and resentment. The kindness of God leads us to repentance because kindness reaches places fear cannot heal. When Jesus restores a person, He does not flatter them. He tells the truth with enough mercy that they can finally stand up and walk in it.

Think about the woman caught in adultery. People often use that story to talk about judgment, and that matters, but there is another layer. She was dragged into public shame. Her worst moment was turned into a scene. Religious men used her as an object lesson. They were not interested in her soul. They were interested in trapping Jesus. But Jesus did not let them use her brokenness as a weapon. He stooped down, slowed the moment, exposed the hypocrisy around her, and then spoke to her directly.

He asked where her accusers were. Then He said He did not condemn her, and He told her to leave her life of sin. Both parts matter. Mercy did not deny the sin, and truth did not crush the woman. Jesus held both in a way only He can. He gave her a future without pretending the past was fine. That is exactly what many regret-filled people need. They do not need someone to say their choices never mattered. They need someone holy enough to tell the truth and merciful enough to make change possible.

When you feel like you wasted years, you may be afraid that Jesus will only talk to you about what you did wrong. But often His first work is deeper than that. He deals with the shame that keeps you hiding. He deals with the false names you accepted. He deals with the fear that says there is no point trying again. He deals with the way you have started agreeing with darkness because it sounds more realistic than hope. He does not avoid your sin, but He also knows that a person buried under condemnation often cannot hear the call to rise.

There is a reason Jesus asked a sick man at the pool of Bethesda, “Do you want to be made well?” At first, that question can sound strange. The man had been there for thirty-eight years. Of course he wanted to be well. But Jesus was not asking a shallow question. Long suffering can shape a person’s expectations. After enough years, pain becomes familiar. Disappointment can become a place you know how to live, even if you hate it. Jesus was asking into the deep place where desire had been beaten down by time.

That question still reaches people. Do you want to be made well, or have you become more loyal to your disappointment than you realize? Do you want to rise, or has regret become the identity you understand best? Do you want Jesus to lead you forward, or do you only want Him to explain why everything hurt? These are not easy questions, and they should not be used harshly against someone in pain. But there comes a moment when mercy asks whether you are willing to stop lying beside the same pool of old excuses and receive the command to get up.

Jesus told the man to rise, take up his mat, and walk. He did not give him a ten-year plan. He did not ask him to explain every wasted season. He spoke a command that required the man to participate in the miracle. That is how grace often works. Jesus provides what you could not produce, then calls you to act on what He has given. You do not heal yourself by willpower, but you do have to respond when He says, “Get up.”

That response may look quiet in your life. It may not impress anyone. Nobody may clap when you choose not to go back to the thing that has been numbing you. Nobody may notice when you tell the truth instead of hiding. Nobody may understand how hard it was for you to forgive yourself enough to pray again. But heaven sees movement that other people overlook. Jesus sees the person who is learning to walk after years of lying down inside.

Sometimes we make strength look too dramatic. We think strong people always feel confident. We think they have clean routines, clear goals, steady emotions, and no old grief rising in them. Real strength is often much more humble. It is the man who wakes up with regret in his chest and still chooses to talk to Jesus before he talks to shame. It is the woman who feels behind and still decides to take care of what God has placed in her hands today. It is the person who admits, “I cannot change the years behind me, but I will not let them steal this day too.”

That kind of strength is not loud, but it is holy.

The late worker in the vineyard still had to go into the vineyard. The prodigal still had to walk home. Peter still had to answer Jesus and feed His sheep. The man at the pool still had to rise. The woman caught in adultery still had to go and leave the old life. Grace does not make us passive. It makes us able. It gives us a place to stand that shame could never provide. It gives us enough mercy to move without pretending we earned the chance.

This is where some people misunderstand Jesus. They think His gentleness means He will leave them exactly where they are. He will not. His gentleness is not weakness. His mercy is not indifference. Jesus is kind enough to meet you where you are and strong enough not to let that place become your grave. He does not crush the weary, but He does call them forward. He does not shame the returning, but He does restore them into life. He does not mock the late, but He does give them work in the vineyard.

There is deep comfort in that, but there is also a real challenge. If Jesus is still calling you, then regret does not get to be your excuse forever. It can be part of your story, but it cannot be your lord. It can teach you humility, but it cannot be allowed to teach you hopelessness. It can remind you of what matters, but it cannot keep you from obeying what God is asking of you now. At some point, the pain of what was lost has to become a reason to live more honestly, not a reason to stop living.

You may not know what your future is supposed to look like yet. That is all right. A lot of people freeze because they think they need to know the whole calling before they take the next step. But Jesus often begins with ordinary faithfulness. He begins with truth. He begins with surrender. He begins with one area of obedience. He begins with a relationship that needs repair, a habit that needs to die, a burden that needs to be laid down, or a simple act of trust that nobody else will see.

Do not despise ordinary beginnings. Many people stay stuck because they are waiting for a dramatic sign when Jesus has already shown them the next right thing. They want an angel, a lightning bolt, or a sudden open door, but the Holy Spirit may be pressing on a simple matter of honesty. Stop lying to yourself. Stop feeding what is destroying you. Make the call. Ask for help. Forgive what keeps poisoning you. Come back to prayer. Read the words of Jesus slowly. Give God the first part of the morning instead of handing your mind straight to fear. These are not small things when they are done from a heart returning to Christ.

A person who feels behind needs to be careful with comparison. Comparison has a way of turning everyone else’s life into evidence against you. You see someone with the marriage you wanted, the career you hoped for, the children you thought you would have, the confidence you cannot seem to find, or the peace you have been praying for, and suddenly their blessing feels like a verdict on your delay. It is not. Their path is not your judge. Their timeline is not your savior. Jesus does not call you by comparing you to someone else’s obedience.

After Jesus restored Peter, Peter looked at John and asked what would happen to him. Jesus answered with words that still cut through comparison. He basically told Peter that John’s path was not his concern, and then He said, “You follow Me.” That is one of the most overlooked sentences for anyone who feels behind. You follow Me. Not, “Figure out why their life moved faster.” Not, “Punish yourself because they seem farther along.” Not, “Measure your future by their public results.” You follow Me.

That is enough work for one soul.

If you spend your remaining years staring sideways, you will lose more time to comparison than you lost to your original mistakes. The path of another person may inspire you, but it cannot become the ruler you use to beat yourself. Jesus has a way for you to walk that is honest about your past and still alive with grace. It may not look like someone else’s road. It may not produce what you expected at the age you expected it. But if He is on it, then it is not empty.

This is also why you have to be careful about nostalgia. Sometimes regret dresses up the past and makes you believe there was one perfect version of your life that is now gone forever. It shows you the younger face, the missed chances, the better energy, the people who left, the doors that closed, and the dreams that did not happen. Then it tells you that everything meaningful was back there. That is a lie with enough sadness in it to feel true. The past may contain blessings, lessons, and wounds, but Jesus is not trapped back there. He is present now.

When Martha stood at Lazarus’ tomb, she said to Jesus, “Lord, if You had been here, my brother would not have died.” That sentence is full of grief. It sounds like many prayers people still pray. Lord, if You had moved sooner. Lord, if You had stopped it. Lord, if You had answered back then. Lord, if You had been here in the way I expected, this would not have happened. Jesus did not mock her grief. He stood near it. He entered it. He wept. Then He called life out of a tomb everyone thought had already settled the matter.

That does not mean every loss in your life will be reversed in the way you want. It does mean Jesus is not powerless in the places where you think the story is already sealed. Martha thought the important moment had passed. Jesus was still the resurrection and the life. That truth does not become smaller when your regret is personal. He is still Lord in the place where you say, “If only.” He is still present in the moment after the moment you thought mattered most. He can still speak into tombs no one else knows how to open.

Maybe your “if only” is loud right now. If only I had started sooner. If only I had listened. If only I had not married that person. If only I had not wasted that money. If only I had taken the chance. If only I had gone to God before everything fell apart. Those thoughts can be honest, but they can also become a loop that drains the life out of you. Jesus does not ask you to deny the sorrow inside those words. He asks you to bring the sorrow to Him and let Him be Lord even there.

There is a kind of peace that comes when you stop demanding that the past become different before you allow today to be faithful. That peace is not easy. It may take time. It may come with tears. But it is real. You can say, “I wish it had been different,” and still place your hand in the hand of Christ. You can say, “I do not understand why it took so long,” and still rise when He calls. You can say, “I am grieving what I lost,” and still refuse to lose yourself.

That is not fake strength. That is strength with roots.

The lie says you came too late. Jesus says, “Come.” The lie says too much is gone. Jesus says, “Bring Me what remains.” The lie says your past disqualifies you. Jesus says, “Follow Me.” The lie says the workday is almost over. Jesus says the vineyard still has a place for the one standing there at the eleventh hour. The lie says the Father will humiliate you when you come home. Jesus shows the Father running down the road.

If you are tired, you do not have to become fearless overnight. You do not have to feel full of hope before you take a step. You do not have to pretend the years did not hurt. But you do need to stop agreeing with the voice that says Jesus is finished with you. That voice is not telling the truth. It may know some facts about your past, but it does not know the fullness of Christ. It does not know what mercy can build. It does not know what grace can restore. It does not know what God can do with a person who finally comes home.

You may be late by your own measurement, but you are not beyond the reach of Jesus. You may be grieving the morning, but there is still mercy in the evening. You may be holding fragments, but He knows how to gather them. You may be walking home with a speech full of shame, but the Father may already be moving toward you with mercy you did not expect.

Do not let the lie of “too late” become another wasted year. Bring that lie into the presence of Jesus. Let Him tell you the truth. Then take the next faithful step while there is still breath in your body and grace in this day.

Chapter 3: When Regret Starts Wearing Your Name

Regret becomes most dangerous when it stops being something you feel and starts becoming who you think you are. At first, it may come as a passing ache. You remember a choice. You remember a season. You remember a person you hurt or a chance you missed. That kind of sorrow can be painful, but it can also be honest. It can help you see clearly. It can lead you back to God with humility. But if regret sits in the soul long enough without mercy, it begins to change shape. It stops saying, “That happened,” and starts saying, “That is you.”

That is where many people are quietly suffering. They are not just grieving the past. They have started carrying an identity built from the worst parts of the past. They do not merely say, “I wasted some years.” They say, “I am the kind of person who wastes years.” They do not merely say, “I made choices I regret.” They say, “I ruin things.” They do not merely say, “I got lost for a while.” They say, “I am lost.” The sentence gets shorter, darker, and heavier until it feels like there is no space left between the person and the pain.

Jesus is not casual about that kind of bondage. He knows the damage that happens when a person starts living under the wrong name. In His day, people were often labeled by their condition, their sin, their social place, their reputation, or their usefulness. A man could become “blind Bartimaeus” in the eyes of others, as if his lack of sight was the main thing about him. A woman could become “the woman who had lived a certain kind of life,” as if her whole person could be reduced to the part people judged. A tax collector could become only a traitor in the public imagination. A leper could become untouchable before anyone cared to remember he was still human.

Jesus kept interrupting those names.

That matters because regret also gives people names. It calls them failure, late, broken, foolish, used up, disqualified, dirty, weak, and done. It does this slowly, usually in private. Nobody else may know the words you use against yourself. Nobody else may hear the way you talk to your own soul after a hard day. Nobody else may know that you look at your reflection and feel like you are staring at evidence. But Jesus knows. He knows the names shame has tried to stitch onto you, and He has authority over every one of them.

There is a moment in the Gospel of Luke when Jesus meets a woman who has been bent over for eighteen years. That detail is hard to sit with. Eighteen years is long enough for a body to adjust to pain. Eighteen years is long enough for people around her to stop being surprised. Eighteen years is long enough for the condition to become part of how everyone sees her. She could not straighten herself. That phrase alone could describe more than a physical condition. Many people know what it is like to feel bent over by life, by years, by disappointment, by shame, by fear, by grief, and by the burden of carrying what never seems to lift.

Jesus saw her.

He called her forward and said she was set free from her infirmity. Then He laid His hands on her, and she stood up straight. The religious leader nearby was upset because Jesus healed on the Sabbath. That reaction is shocking, but it is also revealing. Some people are more committed to their system than to another person’s freedom. They can see someone stand up after eighteen years and still complain because mercy did not happen according to their schedule. Jesus answered with fire in His words. He called her a daughter of Abraham and said she had been bound for eighteen years, and He asked whether she should not be set free on the Sabbath day.

That is one of those teachings people do not talk about enough when they talk about wasted years. Jesus did not look at her and merely see a bent woman. He named her by covenant. He restored dignity before a crowd that had grown used to her suffering. He made it clear that eighteen years of bondage did not erase who she was in the eyes of God. Her condition was real, but it was not her truest name.

Somebody needs that kind of interruption. You may have been bent under regret for so long that you cannot remember what it feels like to stand straight inside. You may have adapted to shame. You may have built your whole way of thinking around the idea that you are less than other people because of what happened, what you did, what you lost, or how long it took you to change. You may have started believing the bent posture is simply who you are now. But Jesus does not agree. He can see the bondage without calling the bondage your identity.

That does not mean He speaks to you with soft lies. Jesus never needed to flatter people to love them. He could tell the truth about sin, pain, hypocrisy, and blindness with perfect clarity. But He also never confused truth with cruelty. He never treated a person’s lowest moment as the full meaning of their existence. When He met people, He saw more deeply than the crowd, more clearly than the accuser, and more mercifully than the wounded person often saw themselves.

This is where many of us have to let Jesus correct our inner language. Some people think the main thing Jesus wants to correct is their outward behavior, and of course He does call us to live differently. But He also goes after the lies underneath the behavior. He asks why fear is ruling us. He asks why we are anxious about tomorrow. He asks why we are trying to serve two masters. He asks why we are so afraid when He is in the boat. He does not only touch the visible action. He touches the inner belief that made the action feel necessary.

If regret has become your identity, your behavior will usually follow. You will avoid good opportunities because you assume they are not for someone like you. You will push away love because you think people will eventually see what you see in yourself. You will sabotage progress because success feels strange when shame has been familiar. You will overwork to prove your worth or underwork because you think your worth is already ruined. You may say you want a new life, while quietly living as if the old story is still in charge.

Jesus comes deeper than that.

One misunderstood teaching of Jesus is His warning about putting new wine into old wineskins. Many people hear that in broad religious terms, and that may have its place, but there is a personal mercy in it too. New wine expands. Old wineskins that have become stiff cannot hold it. If you try to pour new life into an old structure that cannot stretch, the whole thing breaks. There are people asking Jesus for new life while still trying to hold that life inside the old identity shame built for them. They want peace, but they still call themselves by the names regret gave them. They want obedience, but they still believe they are doomed to fail. They want hope, but they keep trying to fit hope into a mind that has agreed to hopelessness for years.

Jesus does not only give new wine. He gives a new way to hold life.

That means part of healing is letting Him change the container. You cannot keep calling yourself worthless and expect the strength of Christ to feel natural in you. You cannot keep rehearsing your shame every morning and expect your heart to rise easily into faith. You cannot keep treating your past as lord and expect your future to feel open. Something has to stretch. Something has to soften. Something has to become new enough to receive what Jesus is giving.

This is not positive thinking with Bible words painted over it. It is not pretending you are wonderful while ignoring the places that need repentance. It is deeper and more honest than that. It is learning to agree with Jesus more than you agree with shame. It is allowing His truth to become stronger in you than the old voice that has had too much access for too long. It is saying, “I did fail, but I am not failure itself. I did lose time, but I am not beyond redemption. I did sin, but I am not outside the reach of grace. I did suffer, but suffering is not my name.”

The old identity may not fall off in one emotional moment. Sometimes it has to be challenged again and again. When an old thought rises, you bring it into the light of Christ. When shame says, “You are too late,” you remember the workers in the vineyard. When regret says, “Only fragments remain,” you remember Jesus gathering the leftovers. When failure says, “You cannot be trusted again,” you remember Peter standing on the shore with the risen Christ. When pain says, “You have been bent too long,” you remember the woman Jesus called a daughter after eighteen years.

These stories are not decorations. They are anchors.

A person cannot become strong while feeding only on accusations. The soul needs truth that is sturdy enough to stand on. Not cute sayings. Not denial. Not shallow confidence. Real truth. The kind that can look at sin and still see mercy. The kind that can look at loss and still see God’s ability to redeem. The kind that can look at a person who feels bent and say, “You are not merely what happened to you.”

There is a reason Jesus often asked people questions. He did not ask because He lacked information. He asked because questions can reach places statements cannot. To the blind man, He asked, “What do you want Me to do for you?” To the man at the pool, He asked, “Do you want to be made well?” To the disciples in fear, He asked why they were afraid. To Peter, He asked if he loved Him. Those questions were not small. They pulled hidden things into the open.

Regret hates honest questions because honest questions break the fog. Shame prefers vague heaviness. It wants you to feel bad without ever naming what needs mercy. It wants you to stay accused without ever becoming clear. Jesus brings clarity that heals. He may ask, “What are you still calling yourself that I never called you?” He may ask, “What old sentence are you treating like Scripture?” He may ask, “Are you grieving in a way that brings you to Me, or in a way that keeps you loyal to the grave?” He may ask, “Do you want to be free, even if freedom means you can no longer hide behind the identity of being too damaged to obey?”

That last question can be hard. There can be a strange comfort in a painful identity. If I am ruined, then I do not have to risk again. If I am too late, then I do not have to try. If I am just a failure, then failure is not surprising. If I am disqualified, then nobody can expect anything from me. These thoughts are not healthy, but they can feel protective to a wounded person. Jesus loves us too much to leave us protected by a prison.

He does not shame us for being afraid to hope. He understands fear. But He still calls us out. He knows that a tomb can start feeling safe when life outside requires movement. Lazarus had to come out while still wrapped in grave clothes. That image is powerful because many people experience healing that way. They are alive by the power of Christ, but still wrapped in remnants of the old place. They are called out, but not yet fully free in every area. Jesus told the people nearby to unbind Lazarus and let him go. Even resurrection had a process of removing what no longer belonged.

You may be in that kind of place. Something in you has come alive, but old wrappings are still there. You believe more than you used to, but shame still clings. You want to move forward, but regret still catches at your feet. You know Jesus has not abandoned you, but you still struggle to live like a person who is truly allowed to begin again. That does not mean nothing happened. It may mean the work of being unbound is still unfolding.

Be patient with that process without becoming passive in it. Patience says, “Jesus is working in me, and I will keep walking.” Passivity says, “I will stay wrapped because change is hard.” Those are not the same. You may need time. You may need support. You may need repeated prayer. You may need to repair what can be repaired and release what cannot be repaired. You may need to grieve honestly. You may need to learn new patterns slowly. But none of that means you belong to the grave.

Another thing Jesus taught that people often overlook is the worth of what is hidden. He talked about the Father who sees in secret. Usually people connect that with prayer, giving, and fasting, and that is true. But think about what it means for someone who feels like years were wasted. The Father saw the secret years. He saw what happened when nobody understood. He saw the pain that shaped your reactions. He saw the moments you almost gave up. He saw the small choices to keep going when no one clapped. He saw the private tears, the silent restraint, the quiet attempts to do better, and the prayers you could barely speak.

Not everything hidden was wasted.

This is important because regret often paints the past in one dark color. It says, “All those years were useless.” But most human lives are more complicated than that. Even in hard years, there may have been moments of love. Even in confused years, there may have been lessons that now keep you humble. Even in painful years, there may have been compassion forming in you. Even in years you would never choose again, there may have been places where God preserved you from worse, taught you endurance, or revealed your need for Him in a way success never would have.

This does not mean you should romanticize pain. It means you should let Jesus tell the whole truth, not just the truth shame prefers. Shame is selective. It remembers every failure and forgets every mercy. It remembers every door that closed and forgets every day God kept you breathing. It remembers what you regret and forgets what you survived. It remembers your sin and forgets the cross. Jesus tells a fuller truth. He can show you what needs repentance without erasing every evidence of grace along the way.

Some years may have been wasted by your choices. Some years may have been stolen by pain. Some years may have been spent surviving what you did not have the tools to heal yet. Those are not all the same, and wisdom learns the difference. If you call survival sin, you will crush yourself unfairly. If you call sin survival, you will avoid repentance. Jesus can help you sort it out with mercy and honesty. He is not confused by the complexity of your story.

That sorting may take time because many people have carried blame that does not belong to them. A child who grew up in chaos may later call himself weak for not becoming stable sooner. A person who lived under emotional abuse may call herself foolish for not leaving quickly. Someone who went through loss may call the years after grief wasted because they could not function the same way. A man who never had guidance may hate himself for not knowing what no one taught him. These stories do not erase personal responsibility, but they require tenderness. Jesus does not judge with the shallow eye of people who only see the surface.

He knows what formed you. He knows what wounded you. He knows what you chose. He knows what you did not choose. He knows where you resisted Him, and He knows where you were simply trying to keep breathing. That is why His judgment is both more truthful and more merciful than ours. We either excuse ourselves too quickly or condemn ourselves too harshly. Jesus does neither. He names the truth in a way that can actually set a person free.

Freedom may begin when you stop using one word for your whole past. Do not call every hard year wasted until you have sat with Jesus long enough to let Him show you what He was doing beneath the visible story. There may be repentance there. There may also be hidden formation. There may be consequences. There may also be mercy you did not recognize at the time. There may be sorrow. There may also be seeds.

Jesus loved talking about seeds. A seed is easy to underestimate because most of its first work happens underground. It does not look impressive while it is hidden. It can appear buried when it is actually becoming rooted. This does not mean every delay is holy or every wasted year was secretly ideal. But it does mean visible productivity is not the only evidence that God is at work. Some of the most important changes in a person happen beneath the surface long before anyone sees fruit.

Maybe some of what you call wasted was actually underground. Maybe you were learning what pride would never have taught you. Maybe you were being stripped of illusions that would have destroyed you later. Maybe you were discovering how empty certain paths really are. Maybe you were becoming someone who can now speak with compassion instead of theory. Maybe God was preserving a tenderness in you that success might have hardened. Again, this does not make wrong things right. It simply means Jesus is a better Redeemer than shame is a storyteller.

When regret wears your name, you stop looking for seeds. You only look for evidence of failure. You scan your life like a prosecutor. You gather exhibits against yourself. You use every memory to argue that you are beyond hope. That is not humility. That is agreement with condemnation. Humility tells the truth before God and receives mercy. Condemnation tells a partial truth in a way that makes mercy feel unavailable. The difference matters deeply.

The cross of Jesus is where that difference becomes clear. At the cross, sin is taken seriously. No one can look at the cross and say evil does not matter. But at the same cross, mercy is opened wide. No one can look at Jesus crucified and risen and say grace is weak. The cross destroys both denial and despair. It tells you your sin was serious enough for Christ to die, and it tells you His love was strong enough for Him to willingly go there. That means you do not have to lie about your past, and you do not have to be owned by it.

A lot of people live as if their regret is more spiritually powerful than the blood of Jesus. They may not say that, but they feel it. They believe Jesus forgives in general, but their own story feels like an exception. Their wasted years feel too many. Their failures feel too repeated. Their shame feels too deep. But the Gospel does not become smaller when applied to your actual life. Jesus did not die for imaginary sinners with neat problems. He died for real people with real guilt, real wounds, real histories, and real need.

If He can bear sin, He can bear your regret. If He can conquer death, He can face your lost years. If He can restore Peter, welcome the prodigal, heal the bent woman, call Zacchaeus down from the tree, and speak mercy to a dying thief, then He is not standing helpless in front of your story. He is not intimidated by the chapter you wish you could delete.

That does not mean you will never feel sadness when you look back. Some sadness may remain. Mature faith is not the absence of sorrow. Jesus Himself was acquainted with grief. The difference is that sorrow no longer gets to define the whole room. It has a place, but it does not sit on the throne. You may still mourn some losses, but you can mourn them with Christ. You may still wish some things had been different, but you can wish that without surrendering your future. You may still feel the ache of time, but you can bring that ache into a life that is being remade.

You are not required to become a stranger to your own story in order to heal. Some people think moving forward means acting like the past belongs to someone else. That is not always healthy. Your past is part of your story, but it is not the author. Jesus is the author and finisher of faith. He can take chapters that once looked like evidence against you and make them part of a larger testimony of mercy, wisdom, endurance, and grace.

This is why you must be careful with the sentence “I wasted years of my life.” There may be truth in it, but it is not enough truth to become your name. Say it carefully. Say it with Jesus in the room. Say it as grief, not as identity. Say it as confession where confession is needed, not as a life sentence. Say it as sorrow that is being brought to mercy, not as a verdict that cancels your future.

A better sentence may be, “I lost years, but Jesus has not lost me.” That is not denial. That is faith. Another may be, “I regret what happened, but I am still being called.” Another may be, “I cannot recover every hour, but I can offer God this day.” These sentences matter because the words you repeat become paths in your mind. If you keep walking the path of condemnation, it will feel familiar even when it leads nowhere good. If you begin walking the path of truth with mercy, it may feel strange at first, but over time it can become a new road.

Jesus said the truth would set people free. Not vague comfort. Not denial. Truth. But the truth that sets free is not merely a record of what you did wrong. It is the truth about who God is, what Christ has done, what mercy makes possible, and what grace now calls you into. Regret tells you a fact and then builds a prison around it. Jesus tells you the truth and opens a door.

That door may be open wider than you think.

You may still feel bent today, but Jesus knows how to call a daughter or a son forward. You may still feel wrapped in grave clothes, but His voice can reach the tomb. You may still feel like old wineskins, stiff from years of shame, but He can teach your soul how to receive new life. You may still feel hidden, but the Father sees in secret. You may still feel like your story is only a record of waste, but Jesus knows where the fragments are and what can still be gathered.

Let regret stop wearing your name. Let it become something you bring to Jesus, not something you become. Let Him speak over you with more authority than the years behind you. Let Him call you what mercy calls you, not what shame has called you. You are not the waste. You are not the delay. You are not the worst chapter. You are not the far country. You are not the bent posture. You are not the grave clothes. You are a person Jesus is still willing to meet, still willing to restore, still willing to strengthen, and still willing to lead.

That is where identity begins to change. Not in self-invention. Not in pretending. Not in shouting confidence over wounds you have never brought to God. It begins in the presence of Christ, where truth is clean, mercy is strong, and the names shame gave you start losing their power. It begins when you realize the years behind you may explain some things about you, but they do not own you. It begins when Jesus becomes louder than regret.

Chapter 4: The Strength That Starts With Telling the Truth

A lot of people think strength means getting past the truth quickly. They think the strong person is the one who does not feel much, does not admit much, does not need much, and does not stop long enough to grieve. So when regret rises, they try to outrun it. They stay busy. They make noise. They fill every quiet space with work, food, scrolling, anger, entertainment, planning, or worry. Anything feels better than sitting still with the years they do not know how to face. But the strange thing is that avoidance often makes the past louder. What you refuse to bring into the light has a way of following you into every room.

Jesus does not build strength on avoidance. He builds it on truth.

That may sound simple, but it can feel terrifying when you have spent years surviving by not looking too closely. Some people are afraid that if they tell the truth about their life, they will fall apart and never come back together. They are afraid one honest sentence will open a door they cannot close. They are afraid that if they admit how much they regret, how tired they are, how angry they have been, how disappointed they feel, or how lonely they really are, faith will collapse under the weight of it. So they keep speaking in safe language. They keep saying they are fine. They keep praying around the wound instead of through it.

But Jesus is not afraid of the truth you are afraid to say.

That is one of the most comforting and challenging things about Him. He already knows. He knows the years you grieve. He knows the choices you wish you could take back. He knows the things you did not choose but still had to carry. He knows the prayers that seemed unanswered. He knows the resentment you do not want to admit. He knows the exhaustion behind your smile. He knows when you are serving people but feel empty inside. He knows when you are showing up but barely holding together. You are not protecting Him by hiding your pain. You are only keeping yourself from the mercy He wants to bring into it.

There is a moment in the Gospels when Jesus meets two blind men who cry out for mercy. The crowd tells them to be quiet. That part matters. There will always be voices that tell hurting people to lower the volume. Sometimes those voices come from other people. Sometimes they come from your own mind. Do not make a scene. Do not bother God with that again. Do not admit you are still struggling. Do not cry out this late. Do not let people know how bad it feels. But the men cried out all the more, and Jesus stopped.

That is not a small detail. Jesus stopped for the cry other people wanted silenced.

Then He asked them what they wanted Him to do for them. He knew they were blind, but He still invited them to speak clearly. That shows something tender about the way Jesus deals with pain. He does not need information, but He often gives people the dignity of naming what hurts. He lets them bring desire into the open. He lets them say the thing. He lets them stop hiding behind general words.

Many of us have learned how to pray in a way that never actually says what is wrong. We say, “Lord, bless me,” when what we mean is, “I am scared my life is slipping away.” We say, “Help me,” when what we mean is, “I feel like I wasted twenty years and I do not know how to live with that.” We say, “Give me peace,” when what we mean is, “I am angry that I tried to be faithful and still feel behind.” There is nothing wrong with simple prayers. God hears them. But sometimes healing starts when the prayer becomes honest enough to touch the real wound.

If you feel like you wasted years, you may need to sit with Jesus and tell Him the truth without cleaning it up first. You may need to say, “Lord, I am ashamed.” You may need to say, “I am grieving the years I lost.” You may need to say, “I do not know how to forgive myself.” You may need to say, “I am scared that my best chance is gone.” You may need to say, “I still love You, but I am tired.” Those are not polished words, but they can be holy words when they are spoken in the direction of Christ.

A lot of people confuse honesty with unbelief. They think faith means never admitting fear. But the Bible is filled with people who cried out from the middle of real pain. Jesus Himself, in the garden, did not pretend the cross felt easy. He said His soul was deeply sorrowful. He prayed with anguish. He asked the Father if there was another way, and then He surrendered. That is not weakness. That is holy honesty. Jesus shows us that surrender is not the same thing as pretending. Real surrender can include tears, trembling, and a heart that tells the truth before it obeys.

That matters because people who feel they wasted years often carry pressure to become instantly strong. They think once they see the problem, they should be able to fix it quickly. But the soul does not always heal at the speed of your frustration. You may want to be over it because you are tired of carrying it. You may want to move on because you are embarrassed that it still hurts. You may want to sound victorious because you think Christians are supposed to talk that way. But Jesus does not need you to perform strength for Him. He can grow real strength in the place where you finally stop pretending.

Real strength may begin with a sentence like, “This hurt me more than I wanted to admit.” It may begin with, “I chose wrong, and I need mercy.” It may begin with, “I have blamed myself for things that were not my fault.” It may begin with, “I have used my pain as an excuse to stay stuck.” It may begin with, “I have been angry at God because my life did not become what I thought it would.” Those are not easy sentences. But truth told in the presence of Jesus does not have to destroy you. It can become the place where healing starts breathing.

There is an overlooked kindness in the way Jesus dealt with Thomas after the resurrection. Thomas had missed the first encounter with the risen Christ. When the others told him they had seen the Lord, he could not receive it. He said he needed to see and touch the wounds. Many people remember him as doubting Thomas, but Jesus did not meet him with the kind of disgust some people might expect. He came to Thomas and invited him to bring his doubt into contact with His wounds.

That is stunning. Jesus did not hide His wounds to strengthen Thomas. He showed them. He allowed the evidence of suffering to become part of the restoration of faith. That says something deep to anyone whose regret is tied to wounds. Jesus does not build your faith by pretending wounds do not exist. He can meet you right there, in the place where pain and belief are tangled together.

Thomas needed something real. So do you.

If you are carrying wasted years, you do not need a fake version of faith that acts like the past was no big deal. You need the risen Christ who still bears scars and yet is alive forever. You need Jesus strong enough to stand in victory without erasing the marks of suffering. That is the kind of Savior who can meet a person with a wounded timeline. He does not say, “There were no wounds.” He says, “Peace be with you,” while standing there with the wounds visible.

That peace is not shallow. It is not the peace of a person who avoided pain. It is the peace of the One who passed through death and overcame it. When Jesus gives peace, He gives something deeper than a calmer mood. He gives Himself. He gives the presence of the One who knows suffering from the inside and still holds authority over it. That kind of peace can enter regret because it does not depend on your past being clean. It depends on Christ being present.

There is another place where truth matters deeply. You have to tell the truth about what the wasted years actually were. Some regret is guilt. Some regret is grief. Some regret is disappointment. Some regret is trauma. Some regret is the sadness of limits. Some regret is the pain of aging. Some regret comes from sin that needs confession. Some regret comes from suffering that needs comfort. Some regret comes from choices that need repair. Some regret comes from losses that need mourning. If you treat all of it the same, you may hurt yourself more.

Jesus is wise enough to separate what shame smashes together.

For example, if you sinned, you do not need to call that trauma in order to avoid responsibility. You need confession, mercy, and a new way forward. But if you were wounded, abused, neglected, abandoned, or crushed by circumstances you did not choose, you do not need to call that failure because shame wants someone to blame. You need comfort, care, and truth. If you were surviving depression, grief, fear, or confusion with the little strength you had, you may need compassion before instruction can even reach you. Jesus knows the difference.

People often do not. People can be impatient with the stories they do not understand. They may say, “You should have known better,” when they do not know what you were carrying. They may say, “Just move on,” because they are uncomfortable with slow healing. They may say, “Everything happens for a reason,” because they do not know how to sit quietly with pain. They may say, “You wasted your life,” because they only see the surface. But Jesus sees with perfect depth. He knows how much was rebellion, how much was fear, how much was ignorance, how much was bondage, how much was sorrow, and how much was simply a tired person trying not to break.

This is why sitting with Jesus in truth is different from sitting alone with regret. Alone with regret, you become your own judge, and you are usually either too harsh or too soft in the wrong places. With Jesus, truth becomes clean. He can convict without condemning. He can comfort without excusing. He can correct without humiliating. He can reveal what you need to face without making you believe your life is finished.

There is a kind of spiritual strength that forms when you let Jesus tell you the truth in layers. Not all at once. Not in a way that crushes you. Layer by layer. He may first show you that you are loved. Then He may show you where shame has lied. Then He may show you where you need to repent. Then He may show you where you need to forgive. Then He may show you a habit that has to change. Then He may show you a wound that still needs care. He is patient, but He is not vague. He is gentle, but He is not passive.

Some people resist this because they want instant clarity. They want one prayer to explain the whole past. They want one breakthrough to remove all pain. Sometimes God does move suddenly. But often He walks with people. Jesus spent time with His disciples. He repeated lessons. He corrected them more than once. He watched them misunderstand, argue, fear, boast, fail, and learn. He did not abandon them because they were slow. That is good news for people who feel ashamed of how long it has taken them to grow.

Your slowness may frustrate you, but it does not surprise Him.

That does not mean you should make peace with staying immature. It means you should stop using your slow growth as proof that grace is not working. Seeds grow slowly. Wounds heal slowly. Trust rebuilds slowly. A soul that has spent years under fear may not become steady overnight. But slow growth is still growth if it is turned toward Christ. A small step in the right direction is not nothing when it breaks a long pattern of hiding.

You may need to learn how to tell the truth daily without drowning in it. That is an important skill. Some people avoid the truth. Others stare at it until they cannot function. Jesus leads a better way. You can acknowledge regret without worshiping it. You can confess sin without rehearsing it all day. You can grieve lost years without giving them another year. You can remember what hurt without letting the memory decide your next choice.

One practical way to do this is to bring the truth into prayer with a clear ending. You might say, “Jesus, I regret this. I bring it to You. Show me what needs repentance, what needs healing, and what needs release. Help me obey today.” That kind of prayer does not deny pain, but it also refuses to spiral forever. It places regret under the authority of Christ. It says the truth, then hands the truth to the One who can redeem.

Another way is to stop letting your mind hold court without Jesus present. Many people wake up and immediately become defendant, prosecutor, witness, and judge in their own inner trial. They replay old scenes. They argue with themselves. They imagine different outcomes. They punish themselves. They defend themselves. They do all of this before breakfast, and then wonder why they are exhausted. You cannot live that way and expect your soul to become strong.

When that inner trial begins, interrupt it with prayer. Not a long speech. Just a turning. “Jesus, be Lord over this memory.” “Jesus, tell me the truth here.” “Jesus, I refuse to let shame judge what only You can redeem.” Over time, this matters. It teaches your mind that regret does not get unlimited access anymore. It teaches your heart to bring old pain into present grace.

The point is not to manipulate yourself into feeling better. The point is to live under the right authority. Regret is a terrible lord. Fear is a terrible counselor. Shame is a terrible judge. Jesus is the Lord who died for you, rose for you, calls you, corrects you, restores you, and stays with you. If someone is going to interpret your life, let it be Him.

There is strength in telling the truth about what is still possible too. Regret tends to focus on what cannot be recovered. That may be part of the truth, but it is not the whole truth. You cannot become twenty again. You cannot relive the years you lost. You cannot undo every consequence. You cannot make every person understand. You cannot force every door to reopen. But you can still become honest. You can still become faithful. You can still become prayerful. You can still become kind. You can still become wise. You can still repair some things. You can still serve. You can still learn. You can still love. You can still walk with Jesus today.

Do not despise what is still possible because it is not everything you lost. That is another trap. A person can become so focused on the life they cannot have that they neglect the life God is still placing in their hands. There may be a smaller obedience available today that matters more than you realize. There may be a person you can encourage because you know what discouragement feels like. There may be a habit you can build that becomes a quiet turning point. There may be a prayer you pray honestly for the first time in years. There may be a responsibility you stop avoiding. There may be a burden you finally lay down.

The truth is that you are not as powerless as regret says, and you are not as in control as fear demands. You cannot command the whole future. You can offer this day. You can turn toward Jesus. You can receive mercy. You can take the next step. You can stop agreeing with lies. You can ask for help. You can begin again in the area right in front of you.

That is not small. That is how lives are rebuilt.

Most rebuilding does not feel dramatic while it is happening. A person who has lost years may want a dramatic recovery because the loss feels so big. But Jesus often rebuilds through daily faithfulness. Bread for today. Grace for today. Strength for today. Forgiveness for today. The daily nature of God’s provision can feel frustrating when you want the whole future secured, but it is also merciful. A burdened soul may not be able to carry the whole future. Jesus teaches us to receive grace one day at a time because one day is what we are actually living.

He told us not to be anxious about tomorrow because tomorrow has enough trouble of its own. That teaching is often quoted, but many people overlook how compassionate it is. Jesus was not giving a cute saying. He was protecting tired people from trying to carry time they had not reached yet. People who feel they wasted years often try to carry the past and future at the same time. They drag yesterday’s regret while lifting tomorrow’s fear, and then they wonder why their soul feels crushed. Jesus calls them back into today.

Today is where grace meets you.

Not yesterday, because yesterday is in His hands now. Not tomorrow, because tomorrow is not yours yet. Today. This does not mean you never plan. It means you stop living as if anxiety can secure what only God can hold. It means you stop paying for the past by sacrificing the present. It means you learn to ask, “What does faithfulness look like today?” That question can steady a person who feels overwhelmed by the size of their regret.

Faithfulness today may be very simple. It may be telling the truth instead of hiding. It may be doing the ordinary task you have been avoiding. It may be taking care of your body because despair has taught you to neglect it. It may be reading one passage from the Gospels and asking Jesus to let you see Him clearly. It may be choosing silence for a few minutes instead of drowning your heart in noise. It may be refusing to speak to yourself with cruelty. It may be making one wise financial decision after years of fear around money. It may be sitting with grief without letting grief become your god.

These are not glamorous steps, but they are real. And real is where Jesus works.

You do not need a pretend life with Him. You need the life you actually have brought into His hands. The years that hurt. The choices that shame you. The memories that ache. The fear that rises when you think about the future. The loneliness you rarely say out loud. The disappointment over prayers that did not unfold the way you hoped. The exhaustion from carrying family strain, financial pressure, emotional pain, and hidden battles. Bring the actual life. Jesus is not asking for a cleaned-up version. He is asking you to come.

There is a quiet freedom in realizing you can be honest with Jesus and still be loved by Him. You can say, “I am disappointed,” and He does not disappear. You can say, “I sinned,” and He does not stop being merciful. You can say, “I am tired,” and He does not shame you for needing rest. You can say, “I feel behind,” and He does not mock the ache. You can say, “I do not know how to be strong,” and He can become strength in you.

That is why the truth matters. Not because truth by itself is easy, but because truth is where you meet the real Christ. Fake strength does not need a Savior. It only needs applause. Real strength knows it needs Jesus. Real strength can kneel. Real strength can confess. Real strength can grieve. Real strength can ask for help. Real strength can stop performing and start receiving.

The years behind you may still hurt when you look at them honestly. That is all right. You do not have to turn the pain into a speech. You do not have to make it sound neat. You can bring Jesus the ache and let Him work with it patiently. He may not explain every lost year today. He may not show you the full meaning of every disappointment. But He will be faithful in the light you have. He will teach you how to walk without the old lie ruling you. He will show you what to confess, what to grieve, what to repair, what to release, and what to begin.

Strength starts there. Not in denying the truth. Not in drowning in it. Not in letting shame twist it. Strength starts when the truth is finally brought into the presence of Jesus. It starts when you say, “Lord, this is where I am.” It grows when you hear Him answer, not with disgust, but with mercy strong enough to change you. It continues when you take one faithful step and then another, until regret is no longer driving the story.

You may have lost years, but you do not have to lose today to the fear of facing them. You can tell the truth now. You can bring it all into the light now. You can let Jesus stand in the middle of what you thought would crush you. And when He stands there, the truth does not become smaller, but shame does. The past does not vanish, but it loses its throne. The wound does not instantly become easy, but it is no longer held alone.

That is a strong beginning. It is not loud. It is not polished. It may happen with tears, in a quiet room, with no one watching. But heaven sees it. Jesus receives it. And the life that regret tried to rename can begin to rise under the mercy of the One who tells the truth and still calls you His.

Chapter 5: The Day Jesus Stops Letting Shame Lead You

There comes a point when shame can feel like it has been in charge for so long that you no longer notice how much it is leading. It chooses what you avoid. It chooses what you expect. It chooses what you believe is possible. It chooses the tone of your prayers and the way you receive kindness. It can even choose how small you allow your life to become. You may think you are simply being realistic, but sometimes what you call realism is shame wearing work clothes. It sounds practical. It sounds mature. It sounds like wisdom. But underneath it, there is a quiet agreement that your past has more authority than Jesus.

That agreement can be hard to break because shame does not always feel hateful. Sometimes it feels familiar. It feels like the safest way to stop yourself from being disappointed again. If you never expect much, maybe it will not hurt when nothing changes. If you never try again, maybe you will not have to face another failure. If you keep reminding yourself of what you wasted, maybe you can make sure you never forget the cost. But shame is not a trustworthy guard. It does not protect your life. It slowly fences it in.

Jesus does not come to decorate that fence. He comes to open it.

One of the most powerful things Jesus ever said to a person was not loud or complicated. He simply said, “Come down.” He said it to Zacchaeus, a man who had climbed a tree because he wanted to see Jesus. Zacchaeus was not admired. He was a tax collector, and people saw him as greedy, dishonest, and compromised. He had a reputation. He had money, but he did not have honor. He was visible in one way and deeply unseen in another. People knew what he had done, or at least they knew enough to decide what kind of man he was.

Jesus looked up and called him by name.

That alone is enough to slow down over. Jesus did not first call him thief. He did not call him traitor. He did not call him by the town’s opinion. He called him Zacchaeus. Then He told him to come down because He was going to his house that day. Jesus moved toward the man everybody else had already sorted into a category. He did not excuse greed. He did not say the man’s choices had been harmless. But He entered the place where shame had made a home and brought salvation close enough to sit at the table.

The crowd complained because shame always gets upset when mercy walks into the wrong house. People do not mind grace in theory, but they often get uncomfortable when it reaches someone whose failure is visible. They wanted Zacchaeus to stay in the category they had given him. Jesus did not. The presence of Christ awakened something in him that public hatred had not been able to produce. Zacchaeus stood up and began talking about restitution, generosity, and repair. That matters because shame had not made him righteous. The nearness of Jesus did.

There is a deep lesson there for anyone who feels like wasted years have made them unworthy of change. Shame can make you feel bad, but it cannot make you whole. It can accuse you, but it cannot restore you. It can remind you that you took what was wrong, stayed too long, gave too little, hurt someone, avoided truth, or lived selfishly, but it cannot create a clean heart. Jesus can. When He comes near, He does not only expose what was false. He awakens the possibility of becoming true.

Maybe the turning point for you will not begin with a dramatic feeling. It may begin with Jesus calling you down from the place where you have been watching life from a distance. Some people do not climb trees with their bodies, but they do with their hearts. They stay above and away. They observe faith but do not fully enter. They watch other people heal. They listen to messages about grace. They read about hope. They believe Jesus is real, but they keep a little distance because coming close feels too vulnerable. It is easier to watch from the branches than to let Him enter the house.

But Jesus is personal. He does not only want to be admired from a safe height. He wants to come into the actual rooms of your life. The room where regret sits. The room where the memory still hurts. The room where financial fear has been sleeping on the floor. The room where you keep the old anger. The room where you have hidden disappointment with God because you do not know what to do with it. The room where you still feel like the person people judged you to be. He is not asking for a tour of the clean places only. He comes to save the house.

That is where shame starts losing control. Not because you become impressive, but because Jesus becomes present. His presence changes the authority in the room. Shame can yell from the corner, but it no longer owns the house when Christ is there. The old accusations may still try to rise, but they are no longer the final voice. The past may still have facts, but Jesus has the verdict. When He says salvation has come to this house, the crowd does not get to overrule Him.

A lot of people need that because they have lived too long under the imagined crowd. Even when nobody is saying anything, they still hear the voices. They hear a parent’s disappointment. They hear an old friend’s judgment. They hear a former spouse’s contempt. They hear the preacher who made God sound impossible to please. They hear the people who saw them at their worst and never allowed them to become anything else. They hear their own younger self asking why they did not do better. That crowd can get loud inside a person.

Jesus knows how to stand in front of the crowd.

Think about the woman who washed His feet with her tears. She came into a religious man’s house carrying a reputation. The host looked at her and saw only her past. He thought if Jesus were truly a prophet, He would know what kind of woman was touching Him. But Jesus did know. He knew more than the host knew. He knew her sin, her sorrow, her love, her repentance, her courage, and the depth of forgiveness being received in that room. The religious man saw a label. Jesus saw a heart pouring itself out.

That moment reveals something we need badly. People can know a piece of your story and still not know the truth of your soul. They may know what you did, but not what broke you afterward. They may know where you failed, but not how deeply you have wept. They may know the outside consequence, but not the private repentance. They may know the rumor, but not the mercy of God. Jesus knows all of it. He is never deceived, and He is never shallow.

The woman did not defend herself in that room. She did not give a speech. She did not argue with the host’s thoughts. She came close to Jesus and loved Him. Sometimes that is the strongest thing a ashamed person can do. Stop trying to convince every human judge. Stop trying to rewrite every opinion. Stop trying to make people understand years they have no grace to handle. Come close to Jesus. Let Him be the One who knows you fully and speaks truly.

That does not mean you never repair harm. When repair is needed and possible, grace will lead you toward it. Zacchaeus did not meet Jesus and then ignore the people he had wronged. But there is a difference between repair and living enslaved to public shame. Repair is love taking responsibility. Shame is the crowd trying to own your identity. Jesus can lead you into responsibility without handing your soul to the crowd.

This is where you may need to ask what shame has been making you avoid. Maybe you have avoided prayer because you do not want to face God honestly. Maybe you have avoided a dream because you think you lost the right to want something meaningful. Maybe you have avoided community because being known feels dangerous. Maybe you have avoided serving because you assume your past makes you unusable. Maybe you have avoided rest because you think you must punish yourself with constant pressure. Maybe you have avoided joy because it feels wrong to enjoy life after wasting parts of it.

Shame is a thief that often disguises itself as humility. It says, “Stay small. That is humble.” It says, “Do not receive too much grace. That would be presumptuous.” It says, “Do not ask God for a future. You already wasted enough.” It says, “Do not let people love you. They would not love you if they knew everything.” But humility is not agreement with hopelessness. Humility is truth before God. If God says you are forgiven, humility receives forgiveness. If God says follow Me, humility follows. If God says get up, humility does not stay on the ground to look more serious.

That can be hard to accept because some people have spent years feeling that self-condemnation is the only honest response to their past. They are afraid that if they stop hating themselves, they will become careless. They are afraid mercy will make them soft. But the mercy of Jesus does not make people careless when it is truly received. It makes them grateful, awake, and more willing to love. Zacchaeus became generous. Peter became bold. The woman at the well became a witness. The forgiven woman poured out love. Mercy did not make them less serious about life. It made life possible again.

Shame keeps you staring at yourself. Mercy turns your face toward Jesus and then toward others. That is one way to test what is leading you. If your sorrow over the past makes you more honest, more tender, more repentant, more prayerful, and more ready to love, grace is at work. If it makes you isolated, hopeless, self-obsessed, cruel toward yourself, and unable to receive God’s kindness, shame is driving. The same memory can become either a doorway into healing or a cell with no windows, depending on who gets to interpret it.

Jesus must become the interpreter.

There is an often overlooked sentence in the Gospel of John where Jesus says He did not come into the world to condemn the world, but that the world through Him might be saved. People quote the verse before it often, and rightly so, but this part matters for a person who feels crushed by wasted years. Jesus did not come because God was looking for a better way to humiliate broken people. He came to save. That does not make sin light. It makes His mission clear. If condemnation could have saved you, you would already be whole by now, because many people have condemned themselves for years. Condemnation cannot do what only Christ can do.

You may have been trying to use shame as a savior. It cannot save. It can only accuse. It can only rehearse. It can only threaten. It can only keep old wounds active. Jesus saves. He enters the real story, names what is true, bears what you could not bear, forgives what you could not cleanse, and calls you into a life that shame had no power to create.

The day Jesus stops letting shame lead you may not feel like a sudden emotional high. It may feel like one small act of agreement with Him. You forgive yourself because He has forgiven you. You make the apology because He has made you honest, not because you are trying to buy your worth back. You walk into the room you have avoided. You stop telling yourself that your chance is gone. You open your Bible again. You sit quietly and let yourself believe that He is not disgusted by your presence. You do the ordinary thing shame told you not to bother doing.

Over time, those small agreements matter. They begin to form a new road. A person who has lived under shame for years may not know how to receive mercy without suspicion. That is all right. You can learn. The disciples had to learn Jesus too. They misunderstood Him often. They thought He was sleeping because He did not care about the storm. They thought the children were interruptions. They thought the hungry crowd should be sent away. They thought greatness worked like rank. They thought the cross meant defeat. Jesus kept teaching them. He was patient, but He kept correcting the wrong stories in their minds.

He can correct yours too.

One wrong story may be that your life is mainly a record of what you failed to become. Jesus tells a better story. Your life is a place where grace can still work. Another wrong story may be that your regret proves you are beyond trust. Jesus tells a better story. A humbled heart can become deeply faithful. Another wrong story may be that because you wasted years, God will only give you leftover mercy. Jesus tells a better story. The Father runs toward the returning child, and the late workers are still called into the vineyard.

The truth of Jesus is not always easy to receive because it may challenge your despair as much as your pride. People expect God to challenge arrogance, and He does. But sometimes He also challenges the kind of despair that feels humble while refusing to believe Him. If Jesus says you are not condemned in Him, then continuing to live as if condemnation is your truest home is not spiritual depth. It is unbelief dressed in sorrow. That may sound sharp, but it can be freeing when spoken with mercy. You do not have to keep proving you are sorry by staying buried.

A buried life does not honor the cross.

What honors Jesus is not pretending you never failed. What honors Him is bringing the failure into His light and letting His grace have the authority it deserves. What honors Him is receiving forgiveness and becoming forgiving. What honors Him is letting mercy turn into obedience. What honors Him is refusing to let shame waste another season that grace is trying to redeem.

This is especially important for people who are carrying financial stress, family strain, or practical consequences from earlier years. Shame can make real problems feel like proof that God is done with you. Debt becomes more than debt. It becomes an accusation. A strained relationship becomes more than pain. It becomes a verdict. A delayed career, a broken home, a failed plan, or a lonely season becomes evidence in a case against your future. But Jesus can help you face practical consequences without turning them into spiritual condemnation.

You may still need to pay bills, rebuild trust, learn discipline, ask for help, change habits, set boundaries, or face hard conversations. Grace does not remove every consequence. But grace changes the ground under your feet while you face them. You are not facing them as a condemned person trying to earn the right to exist. You are facing them as someone being restored by Christ, one faithful step at a time.

That difference matters more than it may seem. Condemnation says, “Fix everything so you can stop being worthless.” Grace says, “You are loved in Christ, now walk in truth.” Condemnation says, “The size of the mess proves who you are.” Grace says, “The size of the mess is not greater than the mercy of God.” Condemnation says, “Hide until you are impressive.” Grace says, “Come into the light and learn to live.”

The light may feel uncomfortable at first. When you have lived in shame, even mercy can feel exposing. You may not know what to do with kindness. You may feel suspicious of peace. You may feel the urge to pull back because being loved without being humiliated feels unfamiliar. Let Jesus be patient with you there. Let Him teach you that His kindness is not a trick. Let Him show you that He can know all of you and still call you forward. Let Him make the light feel like home.

There is another misunderstood teaching of Jesus that speaks into this. He said that those who are well do not need a physician, but those who are sick do. Then He said He came not to call the righteous, but sinners. Many people hear that as a broad statement, but for someone under shame it is deeply personal. Jesus is not repelled by the sick person’s need. A doctor who hates sickness would be useless. Jesus came for the very people who know something is wrong and need mercy. Your need does not disqualify you from Him. It is the very place where He comes near.

But a sick person has to stop pretending the wound is not there. A sick person also has to stop calling the sickness their name. The wound matters, but it is not your whole identity. The diagnosis matters, but it is not the full meaning of your life. Jesus the physician does not come to label you forever. He comes to heal, restore, cleanse, strengthen, and lead.

That healing may include learning to receive joy again. This can be surprisingly hard. People with deep regret often feel guilty when anything good happens. They think, “After all I wasted, do I deserve peace?” But grace is not wages. It is gift. If God gives you a quiet morning, receive it. If He gives you a moment of laughter, receive it. If He gives you a small sign that life is not over, receive it. Joy is not betrayal of your sorrow. In Christ, joy can become part of your healing.

The father in the prodigal story did not only forgive his son. He celebrated. That part offends the older-brother spirit in many people, but it also offends the shame inside the returning child. Forgiveness might feel barely acceptable. Celebration feels too much. But the father wanted music. He wanted a meal. He wanted the house to know that the lost son was home. That does not mean every consequence disappeared. It means relationship was restored, and restoration was worth rejoicing over.

Maybe you have been willing to believe God might tolerate you, but not that He could rejoice over your return. Jesus told that story for a reason. He wanted us to know the Father’s heart. Heaven is not bored by repentance. Heaven rejoices when the lost are found. If you come home after wasted years, your return is not an inconvenience to God. It is joy in the heart of the Father.

Let that challenge the shame in you. Let it challenge the part of you that thinks you must remain miserable to prove you understand the seriousness of your past. There is a place for godly sorrow, but godly sorrow leads to life. It does not demand lifelong self-destruction as payment. Jesus already paid what you could never pay. You are not more righteous by refusing the joy of being received.

This is where strength becomes tender. The strongest people in Christ are not the ones who never look weak. They are the ones who have stopped needing shame to manage them. They can be corrected without collapsing because their identity is not built on perfection. They can repent without drowning because they know mercy is real. They can apologize without making the apology about their own self-hatred. They can receive love without always arguing against it. They can keep walking after failure because Jesus, not shame, is leading.

That kind of strength takes time, but it is possible. It begins when you notice shame’s voice and stop calling it God’s voice. God may convict you, but conviction has a path toward life. Shame has no path. God may correct you, but correction carries a Father’s purpose. Shame only crushes. God may expose sin, but exposure in His hands is meant to heal. Shame exposes only to humiliate. Learn the difference, because it can change the way you live.

If a thought makes you want to hide from Jesus, it is not leading you toward healing. If a thought says your past is stronger than His mercy, it is not telling the truth. If a thought says there is no point in obeying today because yesterday was so broken, it is trying to steal another day. If a thought keeps you trapped in self-hatred without bringing you to repentance, repair, humility, or hope, it is not the Shepherd’s voice.

The Shepherd’s voice may be firm, but it leads. It does not abandon you in the ditch. Jesus said His sheep hear His voice. That means part of your healing is learning to recognize when the voice in your head is not the voice of the One who laid down His life for you. He does not speak like the thief. The thief comes to steal, kill, and destroy. Jesus comes that His people may have life. Not a shallow life. Not a pain-free life. Not a consequence-free life. Real life with God in the middle of the truth.

The day shame stops leading you is the day you begin to answer a different voice. You may still hear shame, but you do not have to obey it. You may still feel the old heaviness, but you do not have to build your choices around it. You may still remember what you regret, but you do not have to let memory become a master. You can turn toward Jesus and say, “I hear the accusation, but I choose Your mercy. I remember the failure, but I choose Your call. I feel the fear, but I choose the next faithful step.”

That is not pretending. That is war in the quiet places.

Some battles are won in public, but many are won in a room where nobody sees you refusing to agree with darkness. Nobody sees you delete the message, put down the bottle, open the Bible, make the call, take the walk, pray through tears, or speak one sentence of truth over a mind that has been lying to you all morning. Jesus sees. The Father who sees in secret sees. The battle matters even if it is hidden.

You are not weak because shame has been loud. You are learning to live under a better voice. You are not fake because you still have to fight old thoughts. You are being remade. You are not hopeless because you need mercy again. You are human, and Jesus is still enough for humans. He did not come for people who could save themselves with discipline and clean timelines. He came for sinners, sufferers, wanderers, latecomers, brokenhearted people, and those who are tired of being ruled by what they cannot change.

Let Him come to your house. Let Him call you by name. Let Him silence the crowd inside you. Let Him receive the tears you are tired of hiding. Let Him lead you into repair where repair is needed. Let Him teach you how to receive joy without guilt. Let Him show you that shame has been a poor shepherd and that His voice is better.

You may have wasted years under shame already. Do not give it another one without resistance. Do not hand it the keys to today. Jesus is near enough to lead now. He is strong enough to tell the truth now. He is merciful enough to restore now. And when He begins to lead, shame may still speak, but it no longer gets the final word in the house where Christ has entered.

Chapter 6: Learning to Build With What Is Still in Your Hands

There is a moment after shame begins losing its grip when a new fear rises. It sounds different from the first fear. At first, you may have been afraid that Jesus would condemn you. Then you may have been afraid that you came too late. Then you may have been afraid that regret was the truest name over your life. But once mercy starts becoming real, another question appears in the quiet. “What do I do now?” That question can feel simple from the outside, but it can be frightening when you are the one standing there with pieces in your hands.

It is one thing to believe Jesus can forgive the past. It is another thing to wake up in the morning and face the ordinary work of becoming faithful again. You may believe grace is real, but your bills are still there. Your body may still be tired. Your family may still be complicated. Your habits may still be stubborn. Your emotions may still rise and fall in ways you do not understand. You may feel a little hope, but also feel embarrassed because you do not know how to rebuild a life that has been bent around regret for so long.

Jesus is not impatient with that place. He knows that rebuilding is not only a spiritual idea. It touches the calendar, the bank account, the kitchen table, the phone calls, the small choices, the private temptations, the old memories, and the way you speak to yourself when no one is listening. He knows that a person can be forgiven in a moment and still need to learn how to walk in freedom day by day. He does not shame that process. He enters it.

One of the most overlooked teachings of Jesus is His attention to what is already in a person’s hands. When He fed the crowd, He did not begin with what the disciples wished they had. He asked about what was present. A few loaves. A few fish. Not enough by human measurement. Not impressive enough for the size of the need. Yet Jesus took what was there, gave thanks, broke it, and multiplied it in His hands. That pattern matters when you feel like you do not have much life left to offer.

Most people who feel they wasted years are tempted to obsess over what they no longer have. They think about the time that is gone, the energy they once had, the confidence they lost, the doors that closed, the relationships that changed, the money that slipped away, or the chances they did not take. Some of that grief is real. It should not be mocked or rushed. But if your eyes stay fixed only on what is gone, you may miss the small thing Jesus is asking you to place in His hands today.

You may not have the whole future clear, but you may have one honest hour. You may not have perfect faith, but you may have enough trust to pray one real prayer. You may not have a clean past, but you may have a humbled heart. You may not have the energy to change everything, but you may have the strength to obey in one place. Jesus has never needed human impressiveness in order to begin His work. He has always known what to do with small things surrendered to Him.

This is where many people get stuck because they want a large answer before they are willing to take a small step. They say, “Lord, show me the whole path, and then I will move.” But Jesus often gives light for the step, not the entire road. That can frustrate a weary person because regret makes you crave certainty. After years of feeling lost, you want guarantees. You want proof that this effort will not become another disappointment. You want to know that if you start again, it will finally work. Jesus gives something better than a guarantee of comfort. He gives His presence and His call.

He told people to follow Him. That call was clear, but it was not always detailed. The disciples did not receive a full explanation of every future storm, every misunderstanding, every failure, every miracle, every hard lesson, and every loss. They received Jesus and the next step. That is not a small thing. It means the Christian life is not mainly about mastering every unknown before moving. It is about walking with the One who knows what you do not.

If you feel like you wasted years, this may become a turning point. You do not have to know how the whole life gets rebuilt before you take the next faithful step. You may need to stop demanding a complete map from Jesus as a condition for simple obedience. A tired soul can hide behind the need for clarity. It can sound wise to say you are waiting until you understand everything, but sometimes waiting for perfect clarity becomes another way to avoid the pain of beginning.

The first step may be small enough to feel almost insulting. That is often how healing begins. A person wants to rebuild a whole family, and Jesus starts with one honest conversation. A person wants to overcome years of financial chaos, and Jesus starts with one truthful look at what is actually happening. A person wants to feel close to God again, and Jesus starts with five minutes of prayer that does not sound impressive. A person wants a new identity, and Jesus starts with refusing one old lie before breakfast.

Small steps bother pride and disappoint panic. Pride wants something grand enough to prove the past is over. Panic wants something fast enough to erase the ache. Jesus often gives something humble enough to require trust. He knows that a life rebuilt by grace must be able to hold weight. Fast emotional bursts are not the same as deep roots. Real change usually grows through repeated faithfulness in ordinary places.

Jesus once said the kingdom of God is like yeast hidden in flour until it works through the whole dough. That teaching is easy to pass over because it sounds quiet. There is no thunder in it. No crowd gasping. No dramatic scene. Yet it is one of the most hopeful pictures for slow transformation. Yeast works hidden before the result is visible. It changes what it touches from the inside. It is small compared to the whole lump, but it does not stay isolated.

That is how grace often works in a person who feels like too much time is gone. Jesus begins somewhere honest and hidden. He begins in the way you respond to the old thought. He begins in the way you stop lying to yourself. He begins in the way you ask forgiveness without trying to control the other person. He begins in the way you pray even though your emotions feel dull. He begins in the way you let Scripture challenge the story shame has been telling. The change may not look large at first, but hidden grace is not empty grace.

You may need to respect hidden work more than you do. Not everything God is doing in you will be immediately visible to other people. Some of the deepest changes will happen in places no one can applaud. The Father who sees in secret knows every quiet act of surrender. He sees when you choose patience instead of anger. He sees when you stop rehearsing the past and turn your mind toward Him. He sees when you do the right thing without using it as a way to prove your worth. He sees when you keep showing up after disappointment has made you want to disappear.

That hidden obedience matters. It may become the place where your life starts gaining strength again. Not the dramatic kind of strength that needs to announce itself. The settled kind. The kind that grows because your soul is learning to live under the care of Jesus in ordinary moments. The kind that eventually becomes visible not because you forced it, but because something inside you has been changed over time.

There is another teaching of Jesus that can help here. He said not to throw pearls before swine. People often use that harshly, but there is wisdom in it for someone rebuilding after regret. Not every person can handle the tender work God is doing in you. Not every voice deserves access to your unfinished healing. If you are trying to rebuild, you need to be careful where you place your most fragile hope. Some people will trample what is holy because they do not know how to honor it.

That does not mean you isolate yourself. Isolation can be dangerous. But it does mean you stop handing your recovery to people who only know how to shame, mock, dismiss, or twist it. Jesus did not entrust Himself to everyone because He knew what was in people. That is not bitterness. That is discernment. A person who has lost years cannot afford to keep letting careless voices become the loudest voices in the room.

You may need one or two safe people more than you need a crowd. You may need someone who can tell the truth without crushing you. Someone who will not flatter your excuses, but also will not use your weakness as a weapon. Someone who can remind you of Jesus when your mind starts sinking. Someone who can see movement before it becomes impressive. That kind of support is not a replacement for Christ, but it can become one of the ways His care reaches your life.

Still, there will be parts of rebuilding that no one else can do for you. Nobody can surrender your heart for you. Nobody can make your daily choices for you. Nobody can pray your honest prayers for you. Nobody can decide to stop agreeing with your shame while you continue feeding it. Community can help, but it cannot obey in your place. At some point, you have to bring what remains in your own hands to Jesus.

That may include talents you buried because fear took over. Jesus told a story about servants entrusted with different amounts. One servant buried what he had because he was afraid. Many people hear that story only as a warning about productivity, but it is also a warning about fear’s ability to make a person hide what has been entrusted to them. The servant did not lose what he had through wild living. He lost the opportunity to be faithful because fear convinced him that hiding was safer.

This can happen after wasted years. You may have gifts, wisdom, tenderness, creativity, leadership, or love that has been buried under fear. You may have something God placed in you that never disappeared, but it got covered by disappointment. You may have stopped using it because you felt unworthy. You may have told yourself it was too late. You may have compared your small beginning to someone else’s public fruit and decided your gift did not matter. But buried does not mean gone.

Jesus may be asking you to dig up something fear convinced you to hide. Not for ego. Not for applause. Not to prove you are special. For faithfulness. A gift given by God is not honored by being buried under shame. If He placed something in your hands, even something small, the question is not whether it looks impressive compared to someone else. The question is whether you will offer it back to Him with trust.

This is where practical life and spiritual life meet. Maybe you need to begin using your voice again. Maybe you need to serve in a quiet way. Maybe you need to write, build, repair, teach, encourage, work, create, give, mentor, parent, study, or simply become dependable in places where you used to disappear. Do not turn this into pressure to become everything at once. That would only create another burden. Just ask Jesus what He is asking you not to keep buried.

The answer may not be glamorous. Sometimes the first buried talent God asks you to recover is faithfulness itself. The ability to show up. The willingness to tell the truth. The discipline to do one right thing when emotions are not helping. The courage to make a small promise and keep it. These may sound basic, but after years of regret, basic can be holy. A life is not rebuilt only by rare inspiration. It is rebuilt by daily trust.

There is mercy in daily trust because it gives the wounded person somewhere to begin. You do not have to feel ready for the whole future. You only need grace for today’s obedience. Jesus taught us to ask for daily bread. Not bread for the next twenty years. Not bread for every fear that might ever arrive. Daily bread. That prayer is humbling because it reminds us we are dependent. It is also freeing because it tells us God knows how to sustain life one day at a time.

People who feel behind often hate the phrase “one day at a time” because they feel like they have already lost too many days. They want to make up for everything quickly. But trying to live ten years in one week is one of the fastest ways to break again. Jesus is kind enough to keep calling you back to today. Today is the place where your life touches grace. Today is the field where faithfulness grows. Today is the only part of time you can actually offer.

This does not make the future unimportant. It simply puts the future in its proper place. You can plan without worshiping the plan. You can dream without being ruled by panic. You can prepare without pretending you control every outcome. Jesus never told people to be careless. He did tell them not to let anxiety become their master. That difference matters when rebuilding a life.

An anxious rebuild is always cruel. It says, “You must fix everything now or you are still a failure.” A grace-filled rebuild says, “Walk with Jesus today, and let today become part of a new pattern.” Anxiety uses the future to punish you. Grace uses today to form you. Anxiety demands proof before peace. Grace gives peace that helps you take the next step.

You may need to lower the drama around obedience. Not lower the seriousness, but lower the drama. Some people make every good choice feel like a trial about their entire identity. If they succeed today, maybe they are finally becoming someone. If they fail today, maybe nothing has changed and everything is hopeless. That is an exhausting way to live. Growth in Christ is serious, but it is not meant to be lived under constant panic.

When a child learns to walk, falling does not mean walking is impossible. It means the child is learning. A parent does not throw the child away because the child stumbles. Jesus is not less patient than a good parent. If you stumble while rebuilding, do not use the stumble as proof that shame was right. Bring it into the light quickly. Confess what needs confession. Learn what needs learning. Receive mercy. Stand again.

The speed of your return matters. Years can be lost when people turn a stumble into a season of hiding. They fall once and then stay away because shame tells them there is no point coming back quickly. Do not do that. Return fast. Come back to prayer fast. Come back to truth fast. Come back to Jesus fast. The enemy would love for one bad day to become another wasted year. Grace teaches you to come home before the far country has time to build a new address.

This is one of the quiet skills of a mature Christian life. Not never failing, but returning quickly. Not living careless, but refusing to let shame turn a failure into an identity again. Peter failed terribly, but the risen Jesus restored him. Judas failed and went into despair alone. The difference is not that one failure mattered and the other did not. The difference is where the failure was carried. Carry your failure to Jesus. Carry it to mercy. Carry it to truth. Do not carry it alone into the dark.

There is also rebuilding that happens through rest, and many regret-filled people resist this. They feel like rest is something they have not earned. They think because they wasted years, every moment now must be intense, productive, and corrective. But a soul cannot heal under constant punishment. Jesus invited the weary and burdened to come to Him for rest. That invitation was not a reward for people who had already fixed everything. It was an invitation for people carrying too much.

Rest is not laziness when it is received from Christ. It is trust. It says, “I am not God. I cannot recover the past by destroying myself today. I need the rest Jesus gives.” This kind of rest may include sleep, silence, prayer, honest tears, time away from noise, or simply stopping the inner argument long enough to remember that you are held. Rest can be hard for people who are used to shame because shame keeps the nervous system working even when the body is still. Jesus teaches a deeper rest than simply doing nothing. He teaches the soul to stop trying to earn mercy.

That rest will make your work healthier. A person rebuilding under grace can work steadily without worshiping effort. They can take responsibility without believing responsibility is the same thing as self-salvation. They can be disciplined without becoming harsh. They can make progress without making progress their god. This matters because regret can easily turn self-improvement into another idol. You start trying to become a new person so desperately that even your growth becomes driven by fear.

Jesus does not invite you into a life where you become obsessed with fixing yourself. He invites you into a life of abiding in Him. He said the branch bears fruit by remaining in the vine. That teaching is often overlooked by people who are trying to rebuild through force. A branch does not bear fruit by panic. It bears fruit by connection. Cut off from the vine, it can do nothing. Connected to the vine, life flows in a way the branch could never manufacture on its own.

If you want to build with what is still in your hands, stay close to Jesus. Not as a religious performance. As the source of life. Talk to Him honestly. Read His words slowly. Let His teachings correct your fears. Let His mercy soften what has become hard. Let His presence become more familiar than the voice of regret. Fruit will come from that connection, though not always on your schedule.

Some days will still feel ordinary. You may wonder if anything is changing. You may pray and feel little. You may obey and see no immediate result. You may make a wise choice and still feel tired. Do not mistake quiet days for wasted days. In the kingdom of God, hidden faithfulness is never nothing. Seeds are still seeds before anyone sees the plant. Yeast is still working before the bread rises. A branch is still alive before the fruit appears.

The life you build now may look different from the life you once imagined. That can be hard to accept. You may not get every lost opportunity back. You may not become the exact person you pictured years ago. But different does not mean worthless. Sometimes the redeemed life is not a return to the old dream. Sometimes it is a deeper, humbler, more honest life than the one you first imagined. It may carry scars, but it can also carry wisdom. It may move slower, but it may be more rooted. It may be less impressive to the world, but more real before God.

Do not despise a redeemed life because it does not look like an untouched life. Jesus Himself rose with scars. That should teach us something. Resurrection did not erase the marks of what He endured. It made them part of the witness. In Him, scars do not have to mean defeat. They can become evidence that pain did not have the final word.

Your life may carry marks too. Some people may not understand that. They may prefer cleaner stories. But Jesus is not ashamed to redeem real ones. He can make your remaining years meaningful in a way that is not fake, rushed, or shallow. He can teach you to love better because you know what lovelessness costs. He can teach you to encourage the weary because you know what it feels like to be tired inside. He can teach you to value time because you know how painful it is to lose it. He can teach you mercy because you have needed so much of it.

That is building with what remains. Not pretending nothing was lost. Not trying to become someone who never struggled. Not creating a polished image to hide the ache. It is offering Jesus the actual material of your life and trusting Him to teach you what can be built from it. The humility. The lessons. The grief. The wisdom. The compassion. The renewed desire. The small faith that survived. The breath in your body today.

What is still in your hands may be more than you think. It may not feel like much compared to what you wish you had. But Jesus has always known how to begin with what people overlook. A small lunch. A mustard seed. A widow’s coins. A little yeast. A late worker’s remaining hour. A frightened disciple. A returning son. A bent woman finally standing straight. In His hands, small does not stay small when it is surrendered.

So bring Him what you have now. Not what you wish you had. Not what you would have had if everything had gone differently. Not the perfect version of yourself you keep imagining. Bring Him this day, this breath, this honest desire, this small obedience, this fragile hope, this wounded heart, this gift you buried, this responsibility you avoided, this place where you need help. Let Him touch what remains.

You are not being asked to rebuild alone. You are being invited to walk with the Builder. Jesus knows the difference between a life that is patched together by fear and a life that is restored by grace. He knows where the foundation is weak. He knows what must be removed. He knows what can be strengthened. He knows which old materials cannot hold the new life He is giving. He knows how to build patiently.

Let Him begin where you are. Let today become the place where you stop waiting for a better past and start offering Him a real present. The years behind you may still ache, but they do not have to decide what you do with what is in your hands right now. Grace is not asking you for a life you no longer have. Grace is asking for the life you still do.

Chapter 7: When Today Becomes the Place Jesus Meets You

At some point, healing has to come down out of the big ideas and meet you in the ordinary day. It has to meet you when the alarm goes off, when your mind starts talking before your feet touch the floor, when the bills are still waiting, when the house is quiet in a way that hurts, when someone’s tone brings back an old wound, when you see another person moving forward and feel that old ache of being behind. It is one thing to believe Jesus can redeem wasted years while you are reading something that gives you hope. It is another thing to practice that hope on a plain morning when nothing around you looks different yet.

That is where many people get discouraged. They expect a moment of clarity to change the whole weight of daily life. They hear truth, feel stirred, and think maybe everything will be easier now. Then the next day comes with the same pressures, the same temptations, the same family strain, the same financial stress, the same tired body, and the same memories that do not politely disappear because you had one good moment with God. When that happens, regret tries to say, “See, nothing changed.” But that is not always true. Sometimes everything has not changed around you, but something has begun changing in how you stand before it.

Jesus often met people in the middle of ordinary places. A fishing boat. A table. A road. A well. A shoreline. A house where people were eating. A crowd where someone was reaching. He did not only meet people in religious spaces with everything arranged to look spiritual. He met them where life was actually happening. That matters because the person who feels they wasted years may keep waiting for a special season before they believe change can begin. But Jesus has a way of making the ordinary day the place of encounter.

This is one reason His words about today are so important. He told people not to be anxious about tomorrow because tomorrow would have enough trouble of its own. That teaching is often treated like a gentle reminder not to worry, but there is something deeper in it. Jesus was refusing to let people live scattered across time. He was calling them back from the future they could not control into the day where the Father was already present. For someone carrying regret, this teaching has another side too. Jesus is also calling you back from the past you cannot change into the day where grace can actually be received.

A person can spend the whole day somewhere else inside. Your body is in the room, but your mind is ten years ago. Your hands are doing today’s work, but your heart is arguing with yesterday’s choices. You are having a conversation with someone in front of you, but inside you are replaying something that happened when you were young, something you said, something someone said to you, something that should have been different. Regret has a way of stealing presence. It makes you absent from the only day where obedience is possible.

Jesus is not dismissing the past when He calls you into today. He is putting time back under His care. The past belongs to His mercy and truth now. The future belongs to His wisdom and provision. Today is the place where He is asking you to walk. That may sound too simple until you realize how much of your pain comes from trying to live in all three places at once. You are grieving yesterday, fearing tomorrow, and barely breathing today.

The mercy of Jesus narrows the burden. He does not ask you to carry all time. He asks you to follow Him now. This does not mean you never remember, plan, grieve, or prepare. It means those things no longer get to pull your whole soul away from His presence. You can remember with Him. You can plan with Him. You can grieve with Him. You can prepare with Him. But you cannot heal while regret keeps dragging you out of the day where He is speaking.

There is an overlooked beauty in the way Jesus noticed people others missed. He noticed a widow placing small coins into the temple treasury. To most people, her gift looked almost invisible compared to the larger gifts around her. But Jesus saw it differently. He said she had given more because she gave out of her poverty. That teaching can feel far away from wasted years until you realize how much hope is hidden inside it. Jesus does not measure the worth of an offering only by its size. He sees what it costs. He sees what remains. He sees the heart behind what others overlook.

Maybe your offering today feels small because you are giving it out of poverty. Not only financial poverty, though that may be part of your story. You may be giving faith out of emotional poverty. You may be giving prayer out of exhaustion. You may be giving kindness when your own heart feels lonely. You may be giving obedience out of a place where confidence is thin. Other people may not see anything impressive in that, but Jesus sees the cost.

That should comfort you. The small step you take today may look unimpressive from the outside, but it may be deeply precious to Christ because He knows what it costs you to take it. The person with a clean, easy morning may pray with energy, and that is good. But when you pray with a heavy heart after years of disappointment, Jesus does not treat that as nothing. The person with a stable life may show up on time, and that is good. But when you show up while fighting shame, grief, and fear, Jesus sees the hidden weight behind your faithfulness.

This does not mean you should compare suffering. It means you should stop despising your small offering because it does not look large to others. Jesus has always seen beneath the surface. He sees the widow. He sees the person in the crowd. He sees the one touching the edge of His garment. He sees the tax collector in the tree. He sees the tired disciple on the shore. He sees the person reading this who feels like today is too small to matter after so many lost years.

Today matters because Jesus sees it.

That may be one of the hardest truths to believe when regret has trained you to think only dramatic change counts. You may want a huge turnaround, and maybe God will give you one in some area. But most of life is not lived in huge turnarounds. It is lived in ordinary faithfulness. It is lived in the way you respond when nobody is watching. It is lived in the words you choose when you are tired. It is lived in whether you bring your mind back to Christ when the old accusation starts circling. It is lived in small choices that become a new direction over time.

Jesus compared the kingdom to a mustard seed. That image is easy to quote, but it is harder to honor. We like the tree more than the seed. We like visible growth more than hidden beginnings. We like the outcome more than the small act of trust that starts almost unnoticed. But Jesus did not mock the seed for being small. He used it to show how God’s kingdom often begins in ways people underestimate.

Your today may be a mustard seed. It may not look like enough to answer years of regret. It may not feel like enough to heal old wounds. It may not seem large enough to build a future. But in the hands of God, the small beginning is not a joke. It is a place of life. The problem is that shame keeps trying to make you throw away the seed because it is not already a tree.

Do not do that.

Do not throw away today because it does not fix every yesterday. Do not throw away one honest prayer because it does not solve every problem. Do not throw away one faithful choice because you cannot yet see the full fruit. Do not throw away one act of obedience because it feels small compared to all the years that went wrong. Jesus is not asking you to produce the whole harvest by sunset. He is asking you to be faithful with the seed in your hand.

This is where strength becomes very practical. You may need to learn how to begin the day without letting regret be the first voice you obey. That does not mean you will never wake up sad. You may. It does not mean old thoughts will stop showing up. They may. But you can decide not to hand them the microphone without question. You can pause before the old spiral begins. You can say, “Jesus, this day belongs to You before it belongs to my regret.”

That prayer is simple, but it changes the direction of the room. It does not pretend the pain is gone. It places the pain under the lordship of Christ. It says this day will not be governed first by shame, fear, comparison, or despair. It says Jesus gets first claim. Some mornings you may feel the truth of that deeply. Other mornings you may barely feel anything. Faithfulness does not depend on always feeling the full weight of the words. Sometimes faith is saying the true thing because it is true, not because your emotions are helping.

You may also need to stop giving your first attention to things that feed the ache. Many people wake up and immediately enter a world of comparison, fear, noise, and pressure. They pick up the phone and see everyone else’s life. They read bad news. They check numbers. They look at messages that make their stomach tighten. Before they have spoken to Jesus, they have already handed their soul to a crowd. Then they wonder why the day feels heavy by breakfast.

This is not about creating a strict rule to prove you are spiritual. It is about protecting a wounded heart while it learns to heal. If you already feel behind, comparison will not make you stronger. If you already feel ashamed, constant noise will not make you clearer. If you already feel anxious, beginning the day in panic will not build peace. Jesus often withdrew to quiet places to pray. If the Son of God chose quiet communion with the Father, you should not feel weak for needing a quiet beginning too.

A quiet beginning may be short. It may be five minutes. It may be one Gospel passage and one honest prayer. It may be sitting with your coffee and saying, “Lord, help me receive this day without hating myself.” That is not small if it interrupts a pattern that has ruled you for years. A healed life is often built by repeated interruptions of old patterns. You interrupt shame with mercy. You interrupt fear with trust. You interrupt avoidance with truth. You interrupt despair with one act of obedience.

Over time, those interruptions become pathways.

There is also a need to practice presence with the people and responsibilities actually in front of you. Regret can make you miss the sacred weight of ordinary relationships. You may be so focused on what you lost that you fail to notice the person who needs your patience today. You may be so angry about the life you did not build that you neglect the duty God has placed near your feet. You may be so consumed with who you should have been that you are not kind to the people who are living with who you are now.

This is not meant to shame you. It is meant to bring you back. The people in front of you are not less real because the past hurts. The work in front of you is not meaningless because you wish you had started earlier. The small room you are in can become holy ground if Jesus is there with you. You do not have to wait for a grand calling before you practice love. Sometimes love today is the doorway into the future you keep asking God to reveal.

Jesus said that whoever is faithful in little is faithful also in much. That teaching can sound like a lesson about responsibility, and it is, but it is also mercy for someone who feels overwhelmed. The little thing in front of you matters. The way you answer the message matters. The way you handle the bill matters. The way you speak when you are irritated matters. The way you keep a promise matters. The way you return to prayer after drifting matters. Little does not mean meaningless in the kingdom of God.

People who feel they wasted years often want to skip little because little feels too slow. But little is where trust is rebuilt. Little is where character forms. Little is where the heart learns to stop living by emergency. If you have spent years in chaos, ordinary faithfulness may feel boring at first. It may feel too plain to be spiritual. But peace often looks plain when you are used to turmoil. Stability can feel strange when your nervous system has been trained by crisis.

Let Jesus teach you to value peace without needing drama to feel alive. That may be a deeper healing than you expect. Some people become so familiar with regret, conflict, and pressure that calm feels suspicious. They do not know how to simply do the next right thing without turning it into a crisis. Jesus is gentle enough to lead the soul out of that pattern. He can teach you a steadier way.

One of His quiet commands after the resurrection was given to Mary in the garden. She was grieving, confused, and searching for a body. When Jesus spoke her name, everything changed. But then He gave her a task. She was to go to His brothers and tell them what He said. Think about that. Her grief was met personally, and then she was entrusted with a message. Jesus did not leave her frozen in the garden. He called her by name and gave her a next step.

That is often the pattern. Jesus meets you personally, then sends you into faithful action. He comforts, then He calls. He restores, then He entrusts. He does not let encounter become a hiding place from obedience. Today may hold some small version of that. He may meet you in the ache and then send you to do the next thing with a little more courage than you had before.

You may not feel ready. Mary may not have felt ready either. Peter probably did not feel ready to feed sheep after denying Jesus. The disciples probably did not feel ready to carry the message of the resurrection after they had been so afraid. Readiness is not always the starting point. Sometimes obedience begins while your hands are still shaking. Sometimes you move because Jesus has spoken, not because you feel qualified.

This can help you when you are facing a hard conversation or responsibility. You may be waiting until you feel strong, but strength may meet you as you obey. You may be waiting until you feel healed, but healing may deepen as you walk. You may be waiting until regret is silent, but regret may grow quieter only after you stop obeying it. The Jordan River did not part before the priests stepped toward it. Sometimes the step matters.

Of course, this must be held with wisdom. Jesus is not asking you to rush into every situation without discernment. Some repairs require timing. Some conversations need counsel. Some relationships need boundaries. Some wounds need careful care. Faithfulness is not recklessness. But fear can disguise itself as wisdom, and regret can turn caution into permanent avoidance. You need Jesus to help you know the difference.

Ask Him plainly. “Lord, am I waiting because this is wise, or am I hiding because I am afraid?” That question can reveal a lot. If the waiting is wise, He can give patience. If the hiding is fear, He can give courage. Either way, the day becomes clearer when you ask it with honesty.

Another part of meeting Jesus today is learning to receive mercy before you feel like you have earned a better mood. Some people think they have to suffer emotionally for a certain amount of time before they are allowed to feel peace. They sin, fail, remember, or grieve, and then they put themselves under an invisible sentence. They decide they must feel terrible for the rest of the day to prove they are serious. But Jesus does not teach us to pay for mercy with prolonged misery. He teaches us to repent, receive, and walk in the light.

If you need to confess, confess. If you need to repair, begin repair. If you need to grieve, grieve honestly. But do not make despair your sacrifice. Jesus already gave Himself. The Father is not asking you to bring Him a burnt offering of self-hatred. He wants a contrite heart, and a contrite heart is not the same as a destroyed self. A contrite heart is open to God, truthful before God, and ready to be led.

This distinction matters in daily life. You may have a rough morning. You may speak harshly, fall into an old thought, waste time, avoid something, or feel the ache of regret rise again. The old pattern says, “There goes the day.” Grace says, “Come back now.” The old pattern says, “You always do this.” Grace says, “Tell the truth and return.” The old pattern says, “You might as well give up until tomorrow.” Grace says, “This hour still belongs to Jesus.”

Learning to return within the same day is powerful. It keeps one stumble from becoming a week. It keeps one heavy hour from becoming a full surrender to despair. It teaches your soul that grace is not only for fresh starts on perfect mornings. Grace is for the middle of messy days too. Jesus can meet you at 2 p.m. after a bad morning. He can meet you at midnight after a hard evening. He can meet you right after the thought, right after the mistake, right after the tears.

Today is not holy because you managed it perfectly. Today is holy because Jesus is present in it.

That truth can become a deep relief. You do not have to create a flawless day for God to work. You need an honest day offered to Him. A day with repentance where repentance is needed. A day with courage where courage is needed. A day with rest where rest is needed. A day with patience where patience is needed. A day with small obedience in the place that is actually yours.

The person who feels like they wasted years may want to live only in major turning points. But life with Jesus is also built in small returns. Returning to prayer. Returning to truth. Returning to kindness. Returning to responsibility. Returning to rest. Returning to the body of Christ. Returning to the words of Jesus. Returning to the simple belief that God is not finished with you because the day is not finished yet.

There is a quiet wonder in that. The day becomes a place of mercy instead of a measuring stick. Instead of asking, “Have I caught up yet?” you begin asking, “Am I walking with Jesus here?” That question changes the weight. Catching up is exhausting because it compares your life to an imaginary timeline that may not even be from God. Walking with Jesus is different. It brings you back to relationship, and relationship is where strength grows.

You may never feel fully caught up in the way your flesh wants to feel. There may always be parts of you that wish you had started sooner. But you can become present, faithful, humble, and alive now. You can become someone who no longer wastes today grieving yesterday without God. You can become someone who lets Jesus turn the ordinary day into the workshop of redemption. You can become someone who understands that the remaining years do not have to be spent proving your worth. They can be spent walking with the One who already loved you enough to die and rise for you.

That is a different kind of life. It may not erase every ache, but it gives the ache a place to go. It may not answer every question, but it gives you a hand to hold. It may not restore every lost opportunity, but it opens your eyes to the opportunity of faithfulness right now. It may not make you feel young again, but it can make you alive in a deeper way than regret ever allowed.

So when tomorrow morning comes, do not ask regret for permission to live. Do not wait for shame to approve your next step. Do not let the years behind you decide whether this day has value. Place your feet on the floor and remember that Jesus is already there. The day may be ordinary, but ordinary is not empty when Christ is present. The step may be small, but small is not wasted when it is offered to Him.

Today can become holy ground. Not because everything is fixed, but because Jesus meets you here. Not because the past is gone, but because mercy is stronger than the past. Not because you finally feel ready, but because He is faithful while you are learning. And if He is here, then this day is not just another reminder of what you lost. It can become the place where life begins again, quietly and truly, under the steady mercy of Christ.

Chapter 8: The Mercy That Redeems What Regret Cannot Return

There is a painful difference between wanting healing and wanting the past to become different. Most people who feel like they wasted years are carrying both desires at the same time. They want Jesus to heal them, but they also want Him to somehow hand back the exact years, chances, relationships, strength, innocence, and confidence they lost. That desire is understandable. Nobody who has truly grieved time wants a neat little answer. You do not want someone to pat your shoulder and tell you to move on when the ache is tied to real memories, real choices, real losses, and real consequences. Some things cannot be returned in the exact form they were lost, and that is one of the hardest truths a human heart has to face.

Jesus does not mock that grief. He does not stand over it with cold correction. He knows what cannot be undone. He knows that a person cannot go back and become younger. He knows that some doors closed because of choices, pain, fear, or other people’s actions. He knows that some conversations will never happen the way you wish they could. He knows that some people are gone, some seasons ended, and some consequences still have to be lived through. The mercy of Jesus is not shallow because it does not pretend otherwise. It is deeper than pretending. It reaches into the place where regret says, “You can never get it back,” and answers, “No, but I can still redeem what remains.”

That is not the same as replacement. It is not God saying the pain did not matter because something useful might come from it. People sometimes speak that way because they want suffering to make sense quickly. But quick explanations can feel cruel when the wound is still open. Redemption is not a cheap trade where God hands you a good thing and tells you to stop caring about what was lost. Redemption is the holy work of Jesus entering what was broken, gathering what can still be gathered, healing what can still be healed, transforming what can still be transformed, and refusing to let evil, failure, grief, or delay have the final word.

This is why the resurrection matters so much for people who feel like they wasted years. Jesus did not rise as if the cross had been a misunderstanding. He rose with scars. The wounds were still visible. Thomas could touch the marks. That means the victory of Christ did not require the suffering to be erased from the story. The suffering was not the end, but it was also not denied. This gives us a deeper kind of hope. Jesus does not have to make your past vanish in order to make your future alive. He can bring resurrection life without pretending the wounds never happened.

Some people need that because they are waiting for healing to mean they no longer feel any sorrow about the past. They think if they still ache, they must not be free. But freedom in Christ does not always mean the memory loses every feeling. Sometimes it means the memory no longer owns your obedience. It no longer gets to decide whether you pray, love, serve, build, forgive, rest, or hope. You may still feel tenderness around certain years, but the wound no longer sits on the throne. Jesus does.

There is a quiet maturity in being able to say, “That still hurts, but it does not rule me.” That is not fake victory. That is often real healing. It is the kind that has stopped needing every scar to disappear before trusting God. It is the kind that can weep and still worship. It is the kind that can wish something had been different and still walk forward with Christ. It is the kind that knows sorrow and hope can exist in the same heart when Jesus is holding both.

One of the most misunderstood parts of following Jesus is that He does not always give back the exact thing we lost, but He gives Himself in the place where the loss could have destroyed us. That can sound disappointing at first because we often want the thing more than we want His presence. We want the time back. We want the relationship back. We want the opportunity back. We want the clean record back. We want the version of ourselves that did not know this pain. But there are places in life where Jesus does not take you backward. He leads you forward with a deeper gift than reversal. He gives you communion with Him inside a life that still has marks.

Think about Peter again, but not only at the moment of restoration. Think about the life he lived afterward. Jesus did not send Peter back to the night before the denial so he could make a different choice. He did not erase the memory. Peter had to live as a restored man who remembered that he had failed. That memory could have crushed him, but under the mercy of Christ it became part of his humility. Peter could later strengthen others not because he had never fallen, but because he knew what it meant to be brought back by grace. His failure did not become the end of his calling. In the hands of Jesus, even the memory that once shamed him could become a place of mercy for someone else.

This is what redemption often looks like. The thing that once made you feel disqualified becomes a place where you speak with gentleness instead of pride. The years that humbled you become the reason you do not look down on someone else who is moving slowly. The pain that once isolated you becomes the doorway into compassion. The regret that once tried to kill your hope becomes a warning light that helps you live more carefully, honestly, and tenderly. That does not make the regret good. It means Jesus is good enough to make even regret serve something better than shame.

A person who has never felt like they lost years may speak too quickly to someone who feels behind. They may say the right words with no weight behind them. But a person who has sat in that ache and found Jesus there can speak differently. They can say, “I know what it is like to feel late, and I also know late is not beyond Him.” They can say, “I know what it is like to look back with pain, but I also know the past is not stronger than Christ.” They can say, “I know you cannot get every year back, but I have seen God make the remaining years matter.” That kind of encouragement has blood in it. It is not theory. It is testimony.

Jesus told Peter that when he had turned back, he should strengthen his brothers. That is easy to overlook. Jesus knew Peter would fall, and He also saw a future where Peter’s return would become strength for others. He did not say, “After you never fail, strengthen your brothers.” He said, in effect, after you have turned back. There is mercy there for anyone who thinks their failure can never be used for good. Jesus can take a restored person and make them a steady hand for someone else who is trembling.

This does not mean you should rush to turn every wound into public advice. Some wounds need time before they become wisdom. Some stories should be handled carefully. Some things are not meant to be shared with everyone. But inside the care of Jesus, even private pain can become holy formation. It can make you more patient with your children. It can make you less harsh with your spouse. It can make you more honest in prayer. It can make you gentler with strangers. It can make you more serious about time without making you frantic. It can make you love mercy because you know how badly you needed it.

That kind of change is not small. It may not look impressive to a world that only measures visible success, but heaven measures differently. Jesus praised a cup of cold water given in His name. He noticed a widow’s small gift. He welcomed children. He saw faith in places others overlooked. He kept teaching that the kingdom values what human pride often misses. If your wasted years become the place where Jesus grows humility, compassion, endurance, and love in you, then something sacred is happening even if the world never calls it impressive.

The mercy of Jesus also redeems regret by changing what you do with time now. Regret can either make you bitter about time or reverent with it. Bitterness says, “Too much is gone, so why care?” Reverence says, “Time is precious, and I want to live this day honestly with God.” The difference is enormous. One leads to another wasted season. The other leads to a quieter, stronger life. Jesus does not call you to panic because time matters. He calls you to faithfulness because time matters.

There is a calm urgency in the way Jesus lived. He was never frantic, but He was never careless. He stopped for people others ignored, yet He also said He must be about His Father’s work. He rested, prayed, ate with people, taught, healed, withdrew, moved, and obeyed. He did not live under the panic of human approval. He lived under the love and will of the Father. That is the kind of relationship with time we need. Not rushed, not lazy, not fear-driven, not shame-driven, but awake.

If you feel like you wasted years, Jesus may not be asking you to sprint. He may be asking you to wake up. Waking up is different from panicking. Panic runs in every direction because it is afraid nothing will be enough. Awakening becomes clear enough to ask, “What matters now?” Panic tries to recover the past by abusing the present. Awakening receives the present as a gift and uses it with love. Panic keeps score against everyone else. Awakening follows Jesus without staring sideways.

This is where a life begins to change in a deep way. You start asking better questions. Instead of asking, “How do I prove I am not a failure?” you ask, “How do I love faithfully today?” Instead of asking, “How do I catch up to everyone else?” you ask, “How do I follow Jesus with the life I actually have?” Instead of asking, “How do I erase my past?” you ask, “How do I let Christ redeem me so fully that the past no longer rules my obedience?” These questions are not as flashy, but they are healthier. They put Jesus at the center instead of your image, your fear, or your comparison.

Redemption also changes how you see consequences. This is important because some people think if God has forgiven them, every consequence should disappear quickly. Sometimes God is merciful in ways that do remove burdens faster than expected. But often, redeemed people still walk through consequences with Jesus. A forgiven person may still need to rebuild trust. A restored person may still need to pay debt. A healed person may still need therapy, counsel, discipline, boundaries, or time. A person who has received mercy may still need to apologize and accept that another person’s healing cannot be controlled.

Consequences are not always proof that God is still angry. Sometimes they are the ground where new faithfulness is learned. That is a hard mercy, but it is real. If you spent years avoiding responsibility, then learning responsibility with Jesus is part of redemption. If you spent years numbing pain, then learning to feel and pray honestly is part of redemption. If you spent years living by fear, then practicing trust in ordinary decisions is part of redemption. If you spent years using words carelessly, then learning to speak truth with love is part of redemption. Grace does not always lift you over the rebuilding. Often it strengthens you inside it.

That may be exactly where Jesus proves enough. Not by removing every hard thing, but by being present and powerful in the middle of them. People often ask whether Jesus is enough as if enough means life will stop hurting. But what if His enoughness is deeper than comfort? What if He is enough to forgive you when you finally stop hiding? Enough to hold you when the regret comes back. Enough to give you courage for the conversation. Enough to keep you faithful when the results are slow. Enough to make your life meaningful without making it look untouched. Enough to bring peace into a heart that still remembers.

That is not a small enoughness. That is a strong Savior.

There is a teaching of Jesus that many people know but do not always connect to regret. He said that whoever hears His words and does them is like a wise man who built his house on rock. Rain came, floods rose, winds blew, and beat on the house, but it did not fall because it was founded on rock. He did not say the house on the rock avoided storms. He said it stood through them. That matters for a person who is rebuilding after wasted years. The goal is not to build a life that never faces rain. The goal is to build on Christ so that when rain comes, your life is not washed away.

The past may have shown you what sand feels like. Maybe you built on approval, pleasure, control, money, romance, pride, resentment, escape, or your own strength. Maybe the storm exposed the weakness of that foundation. That exposure hurt. It may have cost you years. But if Jesus is now teaching you to build on rock, then even the painful knowledge of what cannot hold can become part of your wisdom. You no longer have to keep building on what already failed you.

Building on rock is not glamorous every day. It means hearing His words and doing them. That sounds plain because it is. But plain obedience can save a life from collapse. Forgive as He commands. Tell the truth as He commands. Seek first the kingdom as He commands. Do not be anxious as He commands. Love your enemy as He commands. Come to Him when weary as He commands. Abide in Him as He commands. These are not religious decorations. They are foundation stones.

When regret is loud, the teachings of Jesus can feel too simple. But simple does not mean weak. The strongest truths are often the ones you can obey on a hard day. When you are exhausted, you may not need a complex theory about your past. You may need to hear Jesus say, “Come to Me.” When you are anxious about wasted time, you may need to hear Him say, “Do not worry about tomorrow.” When you feel like your offering is too small, you may need to remember the widow. When shame says you are disqualified, you may need to remember Peter. When you feel like only fragments remain, you may need to remember that He gathers what is left.

This is how Scripture becomes personal without becoming shallow. You begin to see that Jesus was never speaking only into clean, distant religious categories. He was speaking into life. Into fear. Into regret. Into hunger. Into comparison. Into shame. Into grief. Into hidden motives. Into exhausted bodies and restless minds. His words are not fragile. They can hold the weight of your actual story.

There is also redemption in learning to bless the future without demanding that it repair your ego. Some people want a strong future mainly so they can prove the past did not win. That is understandable, but it can become another form of bondage. If your future is built on proving people wrong, shame is still involved. If your future is built on needing to become impressive enough to silence regret, regret is still leading. Jesus offers a cleaner reason to live well. Love God. Love people. Walk in truth. Receive mercy. Bear fruit. Use what you have been given. Let your life become a witness to His grace, not a monument to your need to be vindicated.

That is a freer way to live. You do not have to become impressive to be redeemed. You do not have to make your remaining years dramatic enough to compensate for the painful ones. You do not have to turn healing into a performance. You can become faithful, steady, kind, wise, brave, and present. You can build quietly. You can serve sincerely. You can grow without needing everyone to notice. You can let Jesus be the meaning instead of making success carry a weight it was never meant to bear.

This can be hard because the world worships visible turnaround stories. People love the dramatic before and after. They love numbers, speed, achievement, and proof. But some of the holiest redemptions are quiet. A bitter person becomes gentle. A fearful person becomes prayerful. An absent parent becomes present. A dishonest person becomes trustworthy. A restless soul becomes steady. A person who hated themselves learns to receive the love of God. These are miracles, even if they do not trend anywhere.

Do not underestimate quiet redemption. Jesus spent most of His earthly life in hidden years before His public ministry began. That alone should challenge our obsession with visible timelines. The Son of God lived years that the Gospels barely describe. Hidden does not mean wasted. Ordinary does not mean empty. Unseen does not mean unused by the Father. If even the life of Jesus included long hiddenness, then you should be careful about judging the meaning of your life only by what people can see.

Some of your future growth may be hidden too. Let that be enough. Let God form you without needing to announce every step. Let your obedience have roots before it has branches. Let your healing become real before it becomes words. Let Jesus do work in you that no one can measure yet. The Father sees. The Father knows. The Father is not confused by hidden faithfulness.

There may also come a time when Jesus asks you to let go of the demand that redemption look exactly like your old dream. This may be one of the hardest parts. You may have imagined a certain life. A certain family. A certain kind of success. A certain path. A certain age by which things would be settled. When that did not happen, grief entered. Now you may be tempted to believe that only the restoration of that exact dream can prove God is good. But God’s goodness is not limited to your earlier imagination.

Sometimes Jesus redeems by resurrecting a dream. Sometimes He redeems by giving a new one. Sometimes He redeems by making you a different person than the person who first wanted what you wanted. That can be painful, but it can also be freeing. The younger version of you may not have known what your soul truly needed. The wounded version of you may have desired things that would not have healed you. The fearful version of you may have called something safety that was really bondage. Jesus knows how to lead you beyond the limits of what you once thought would save you.

Trusting Him there is not easy. It may involve grief. You may have to release something you once thought was the whole point. But release in the hands of Jesus is not emptiness. It is making room for His will. It is saying, “Lord, I still ache over what did not happen, but I do not want my old dream more than I want You.” That prayer can hurt, but it is holy. It places even your desires under His care.

The strange mercy is that when Jesus becomes the center, you may begin to enjoy gifts without making them saviors. If He gives opportunity, you receive it with gratitude. If He gives relationship, you love without turning the person into your god. If He gives success, you steward it without letting it define you. If He gives a quieter life than you expected, you discover He is there too. Redemption becomes less about forcing life to prove something and more about walking with Christ wherever He leads.

This is how regret loses another layer of power. It cannot control a person who no longer needs the future to pay back the past. It cannot torment a person who has placed both lost years and remaining years in the hands of Jesus. It cannot rule a person who has learned that Christ Himself is the treasure, not merely the One who helps us get the treasures we think we lost.

That may be one of the most overlooked teachings of Jesus. He spoke of a treasure hidden in a field and a pearl of great price. The kingdom was worth everything. Not because everything else was meaningless, but because nothing else could compare. When you feel like you wasted years, you may think the greatest treasure would be getting those years back. But Jesus points deeper. The greatest treasure is Him and His kingdom. If you have Him now, you have not lost the only thing that can give your life eternal weight.

This does not erase grief. It reorders it. You can still mourn what was lost, but you no longer believe your whole life is ruined because you do not possess what time took. You have Christ. You have mercy. You have the kingdom. You have the Father’s love. You have the Spirit’s help. You have today. You have a calling to faithfulness. You have the possibility of fruit. You have a future held by God, even if it looks different from what you planned.

That is not a consolation prize. That is life.

The mercy that redeems what regret cannot return is not always loud. It may come as a quiet shift in how you see the day. It may come as the courage to stop hiding. It may come as the humility to make things right. It may come as peace in a place that used to trigger panic. It may come as compassion for someone you would have judged before. It may come as the ability to remember without collapsing. It may come as a new hunger for Jesus that you did not have in the years you now grieve.

Do not despise that mercy because it does not look like a time machine. Jesus is not taking you backward. He is leading you into redemption. He is teaching you that the past can be told truthfully without being worshiped. He is teaching you that scars can remain without ruling. He is teaching you that consequences can be faced without condemnation. He is teaching you that small offerings can matter. He is teaching you that hidden faithfulness is seen. He is teaching you that He is enough, not in a slogan way, but in the deep way that holds when life has really hurt.

You may not get back every year. That sentence may still ache. But you can receive grace for the years that remain. You can let Jesus make you wiser, softer, stronger, steadier, and more awake. You can let Him turn your regret into compassion and your delay into humility. You can let Him build a life that does not pretend the past was painless, yet no longer bows to it.

That is redemption. Not the denial of loss, but the victory of Christ over its final claim. Not the erasing of every scar, but the presence of resurrection life in a person who thought the wounds had spoken the last word. Not the return of every lost thing, but the discovery that Jesus is still here, still Lord, still merciful, still calling, and still able to make what remains matter more than shame ever wanted you to believe.

Chapter 9: The Courage to Live the Remaining Years Awake

There is a quiet fear that can come after mercy begins to feel real. It is not the same fear that says Jesus will reject you. It is not even the fear that says you are too late. It is the fear of actually living awake now. That may sound strange until you have spent enough years numb, distracted, ashamed, or just trying to make it through. When a person starts to wake up, they do not only feel hope. They also feel the weight of choice again. They start realizing that today matters, their words matter, their habits matter, their time matters, and the direction of their heart matters. That awakening is good, but it can also feel frightening because numbness asks almost nothing from you. Life with Jesus asks for all of you.

A person can get used to drifting. Drifting does not feel harmless when you look back over years, but in the moment it often feels easier than choosing. You do what you have always done. You avoid what you have always avoided. You return to the same comforts, the same excuses, the same distractions, and the same private sadness because they are familiar. You may hate the pattern, but at least you know it. Waking up means the familiar pattern is no longer enough. It means the Holy Spirit starts troubling the places where you once stayed asleep. It means you can no longer say, “I did not know,” in the same way. That can feel like pressure, but it is also mercy.

Jesus did not come to leave people half-awake forever. He said more than once, in different ways, that people needed eyes to see and ears to hear. He was not only talking about physical sight or physical hearing. He was talking about the deep inner attention that can receive truth. Many people heard His words and still missed Him because their hearts were dull, busy, defensive, proud, or afraid. That warning matters when we are talking about wasted years because years are not only wasted by obvious rebellion. They can also be wasted by spiritual sleep. A person can be alive, working, talking, scrolling, worrying, reacting, and surviving while the soul is barely listening.

Living awake does not mean living under constant pressure. It means living responsive to Jesus. It means paying attention to what He is showing you. It means noticing when your heart is becoming hard. It means admitting when a habit is no longer something you can excuse. It means seeing the person in front of you instead of always living inside your own disappointment. It means recognizing the small doors of obedience before they close. It means refusing to sleepwalk through the very day you once prayed God would give you.

There is a misunderstood edge to the gentleness of Jesus. People often picture His gentleness as if it means He would never interrupt someone’s comfort. But Jesus interrupted people all the time. He interrupted their assumptions, their hiding places, their false religion, their pride, their despair, their excuses, and their fear. He did it with perfect love, but He still did it. When He told someone to follow Him, that invitation was also an interruption. It meant the old pattern could not remain untouched.

If Jesus is calling you into the remaining years of your life, He is not doing it so you can drift with religious language added to your drifting. He is calling you into a new kind of attention. He is calling you to become awake to God, awake to truth, awake to love, awake to the people near you, awake to the ways you have been numbing pain, and awake to the gifts you have buried. This is not condemnation. It is resurrection pressing against the stone.

That can feel uncomfortable because resurrection does not leave grave clothes undisturbed. When Jesus called Lazarus out, the tomb did not stay quiet. The dead man came out, and then the wrappings had to be removed. There is a holy disturbance in new life. Old things have to loosen. Old identities have to be challenged. Old habits have to lose authority. Old fears have to be faced in the presence of Christ. You may want the comfort of being raised without the discomfort of being unbound, but Jesus loves you too much to leave you alive and still wrapped in everything that kept you from walking.

Some of the wrappings may be obvious. A destructive habit. A secret sin. An unhealthy attachment. A pattern of lying. A refusal to forgive. A life built around constant distraction. Other wrappings may look more respectable. Overworking to avoid grief. Helping everyone else so you never have to face your own pain. Calling yourself practical when you are really afraid to hope. Staying busy in the name of responsibility while your soul is starving. Jesus sees both kinds. He does not only deal with what embarrasses you publicly. He deals with what quietly keeps you from being free.

The courage to live awake begins with letting Him point to one wrapping at a time. Not because He wants to shame you, but because He wants you to walk. If He shows you everything at once, you may collapse under the sight of it. If He shows you nothing, you may stay bound. So He often works with holy patience. One truth. One area. One next act of surrender. One new pattern. One old lie confronted. One relationship handled differently. Over time, the person who once felt buried starts learning how to move.

This is also where the teachings of Jesus about watchfulness become deeply personal. He told people to stay awake, to be ready, to watch, to live as servants who understand that their master can return. Those teachings are often placed only in end-times conversations, but they also carry an everyday call. Do not live asleep. Do not let your heart become dull. Do not treat your days as if they have no eternal weight. Do not assume you can always return later to what God is asking you to do now. Watchfulness is not panic. It is loving attention.

A watchful life notices the condition of the heart. It notices when resentment is growing. It notices when entertainment has become escape. It notices when prayer has become rare. It notices when success has become an idol. It notices when pain is turning into hardness. It notices when the voice of Jesus is being crowded out by noise. This kind of attention is not meant to make you nervous. It is meant to keep you near.

When you have already lost years, watchfulness becomes a gift. Not because you become afraid of every mistake, but because you become more careful with what is precious. You realize time is not something to despise or worship. It is something to steward before God. You cannot get back what is gone, but you can become awake to what remains. You can stop treating ordinary days like they are disposable. You can stop postponing obedience as if tomorrow is guaranteed. You can stop letting fear make decisions that faith should make.

Jesus told a story about ten virgins waiting for a bridegroom. Some were ready. Some were not. People often focus on the larger spiritual meaning, and that matters, but there is also a piercing personal lesson. There are things you cannot borrow at the last second. You cannot borrow someone else’s daily walk with Jesus. You cannot borrow someone else’s obedience. You cannot borrow someone else’s oil when your own life has been spent ignoring the slow preparation of the soul. That is not meant to terrify you into despair. It is meant to wake you into faithfulness.

The remaining years are not a punishment. They are an invitation to live ready.

Living ready may look much simpler than you think. It may mean keeping short accounts with God and people. When you sin, you confess quickly. When you wound someone, you seek repair where you can. When bitterness rises, you bring it to Jesus before it becomes a house in you. When fear starts leading, you stop and ask what trust would look like. When your heart grows cold, you do not pretend warmth is unnecessary. You come back to the fire.

Readiness also means being present enough to love. This is one of the places where regret can be sneaky. It can make you so focused on your own lost time that you become unavailable to the people who need you now. You may be sitting beside someone who is hurting, but inside you are still arguing with the past. You may have a child, friend, spouse, neighbor, coworker, or stranger in front of you, but your mind is measuring your life against what could have been. Jesus keeps calling us back to love in the present tense. Love rarely happens in the imaginary life. It happens in this conversation, this room, this need, this moment.

This does not mean you ignore your grief. It means grief no longer gets to make you absent from love. There will be times when you need to mourn, rest, and receive care. That is human. But if regret becomes the center of your life, it will train you to see everyone else as background to your pain. Jesus leads you out of that prison. He heals you in a way that makes you more available, not less. He gives you comfort so that comfort can move through you. He gives you mercy so mercy can shape the way you treat other people.

This is one of the ways you can tell whether Jesus is redeeming your regret. Your pain starts becoming compassion instead of self-absorption. You become softer toward people who are late to understanding. You become more patient with someone who is still trapped in what you recognize. You become more careful with your words because you know words can either bury or call someone forward. You become less interested in looking superior and more interested in helping someone stand. This is not weakness. This is Christ forming love in a person who knows what it means to need mercy.

Still, living awake will require saying no. Jesus was full of mercy, but He was not vague about the cost of following Him. He said a person cannot serve two masters. That teaching cuts through a lot of confusion. Many people lose years because they keep trying to serve two masters while calling it balance. They want Jesus and the thing that keeps replacing Him. They want peace and the habit that keeps feeding anxiety. They want healing and the bitterness that gives them a sense of control. They want freedom and the secret comfort that keeps them bound. At some point, love has to become clear enough to choose.

This is not about earning salvation. It is about no longer pretending divided living is harmless. Jesus spoke plainly because He loves wholly. A divided heart becomes exhausted. It spends years negotiating with what is slowly destroying it. It keeps trying to make peace with things that can never produce peace. If you have lost years that way, you already know the cost. Mercy does not call you to hate yourself for it. Mercy calls you to stop losing more time to masters that cannot love you back.

The choice may be very specific. You may know exactly what Jesus is putting His finger on. A person. A habit. A resentment. A fantasy. A pattern of avoidance. A private compromise. A way of spending money. A way of speaking. A way of escaping loneliness. It may not be the whole life at once. It may be one place where He is saying, “This cannot lead you anymore.” If that is happening, do not bury the conviction under spiritual language. Do not ask for more clarity when you already have enough to obey. Ask for courage.

Courage in Christ is often quieter than people think. It is not always a bold public stand. Sometimes it is deleting what needs to be deleted. Sometimes it is telling the truth in a private conversation. Sometimes it is going to sleep instead of feeding the spiral. Sometimes it is not answering the message that pulls you backward. Sometimes it is choosing to pray when you want to numb out. Sometimes it is admitting that a certain path has been costing you more than you wanted to see. Jesus honors the courage no one else notices.

The remaining years will also require learning how to handle desire without becoming ruled by it. Regret can make desire feel dangerous. You wanted things before, and they disappointed you. You hoped before, and it hurt. You trusted before, and something broke. So you may be tempted to shut desire down completely. But a heart without desire becomes numb. Jesus does not make people numb. He purifies desire. He teaches us to want in a way that is surrendered, honest, and open to the Father’s will.

This is part of what He modeled in Gethsemane. He brought desire and surrender together. He did not pretend the cup was easy. He prayed honestly, and then He yielded fully. That is not passive resignation. That is trust under pressure. You can learn to pray that way about the remaining years. “Lord, I still desire a meaningful life. I still desire healing. I still desire love. I still desire purpose. I still desire fruit. But I do not want those desires to become masters. I place them in Your hands.”

That prayer can save you from two extremes. It can save you from despair that refuses to want anything anymore, and it can save you from desperation that turns good desires into idols. Jesus knows how to hold your desires without being controlled by them. He can teach you to hope with open hands. That kind of hope is stronger than the desperate kind because it is rooted in God, not in a specific outcome having to happen on your terms.

Living awake also means receiving the fact that you still have influence, even if your life feels small. Every person influences something. You influence the tone of a room. You influence the people who hear your words. You influence the way someone experiences mercy or judgment. You influence the patterns of your home. You influence what your own soul becomes through repeated choices. You may not have the platform, position, family structure, money, or opportunities you once imagined, but you still carry influence in the life you actually have.

Jesus took ordinary influence seriously. Salt. Light. A city on a hill. A lamp on a stand. These images are familiar, but they are not shallow. Salt does not have to be famous to affect what it touches. Light does not have to be dramatic to push back darkness in a room. If you belong to Jesus, your remaining years are not meaningless because they are not large in the world’s eyes. A faithful life has weight even when it is quiet.

Maybe your influence begins with becoming safe for one hurting person. Maybe it begins with becoming steady in your own home. Maybe it begins with becoming honest at work. Maybe it begins with encouraging people online who feel like giving up. Maybe it begins with being the kind of person who no longer mocks weakness because you know what weakness feels like. Do not let comparison convince you that small light is useless. In a dark room, even a small lamp matters.

There is one more fear that often appears when you start living awake. It is the fear that you will waste the remaining years too. That fear may hit hard because you know your own patterns. You know how many times you have started and stopped. You know how quickly old habits can return. You know how discouragement can pull you under. That fear should not be ignored, but it should not be enthroned either. The answer is not self-trust. The answer is abiding in Jesus.

You are not strong enough to guarantee your own faithfulness for the rest of your life. That may sound discouraging, but it can actually bring peace. You do not need confidence in your ability to manage every future version of yourself. You need to stay close to Christ today. The branch does not stay alive by making promises about next year. It stays alive by remaining in the vine. Your future faithfulness will be built from present abiding, repeated over time by grace.

That means you should build rhythms that help you remain. Prayer that is honest enough to continue. Scripture that brings you back to the voice of Jesus. Rest that keeps your body from becoming a place where despair grows easily. Community that tells the truth with mercy. Work that is faithful without becoming an idol. Confession that happens before sin builds a hidden room. Gratitude that trains your eyes to notice mercy. None of these are magic. They are ways of staying near the Vine.

You will not do all of it perfectly. That is not the point. The point is to live turned toward Him. When you drift, return. When you fall, confess. When you grow tired, come. When you feel numb, tell Him. When you feel afraid, ask for help. When you feel tempted to waste another day because yesterday was hard, remember that today still belongs to Jesus. The Christian life is not built on never needing mercy again. It is built on living near the mercy that never runs out.

The courage to live the remaining years awake is not the courage of a person who has no regrets. It is the courage of a person who has brought regret to Christ and decided not to let it be lord. It is the courage to stop hiding behind late. It is the courage to stop calling drift rest. It is the courage to stop treating numbness like peace. It is the courage to let Jesus interrupt what is familiar so He can form what is alive.

You do not have to become frantic. You do not have to make your life dramatic. You do not have to squeeze worth out of every minute in a way that makes you anxious and hard to love. You simply have to wake up with Jesus. Look at the day honestly. Ask what love requires. Ask what truth requires. Ask what obedience looks like in the place where you actually stand. Then take the step with Him.

The years ahead may not be as many as the years behind. You may not know. None of us do. But the measure of a life is not only in the number of years remaining. It is in whether those years are yielded to the One who gives life its eternal weight. One awakened year with Jesus can carry more truth than ten years of drifting. One season of humble faithfulness can become more fruitful than a long season spent asleep. One present day offered to Christ is not small.

So let the remaining years become awake years. Let them become honest years. Let them become prayerful years. Let them become merciful years. Let them become years where you stop living as if shame owns the calendar. Let them become years where you do not merely regret the past, but actually learn from it. Let them become years where Jesus is not an idea on the edge of your life, but the living Lord at the center of it.

You cannot control how many days are still ahead. You can bring this day to Him. You can live awake now. You can listen now. You can love now. You can obey now. You can return now. You can stop letting regret spend the rest of your life for you. Jesus is here in the remaining years, and His presence is enough to make them holy.

Chapter 10: When Jesus Becomes Enough for the Life You Actually Have

There is a kind of faith that sounds strong until it has to meet the life you actually have. It is easy to say Jesus is enough in a general way. It is harder to say it when you are sitting with a bank account that makes your stomach tighten, a family situation that keeps aching, a body that feels older than you expected, a heart that still gets lonely at night, and a past that does not disappear just because you want to live better now. That is where the question becomes real. Not in a clean room with perfect music playing in the background. Not in a polished sentence. In the ordinary pressure of a life that still has weight.

A lot of people believe in Jesus but are quietly unsure whether He is enough for their specific kind of pain. They believe He is Lord, but they wonder if He is enough for the regret that hits when they look back over wasted years. They believe He is Savior, but they wonder if He is enough for the financial mess that still needs to be faced. They believe He is good, but they wonder if He is enough for the loneliness that does not lift easily. They believe He rose from the grave, but they wonder if He is enough for the part of them that feels like it died a long time ago.

That question should not be rushed. If someone asks whether Jesus is enough while they are bleeding inside, they do not need a quick answer thrown at them like a religious slogan. They need something deeper. They need the kind of answer that can sit beside unpaid bills, hospital rooms, empty beds, broken trust, regretful memories, and prayers that have not yet been answered in the way they hoped. They need to know whether Jesus is only enough for a church sentence or whether He is enough for Tuesday afternoon when the fear comes back.

The answer of the Gospel is yes, but not in the cheap way people sometimes mean it. Jesus is not enough because your problems are small. He is enough because He is greater than the real size of them. He is not enough because the pain is fake. He is enough because He can enter the pain without being swallowed by it. He is not enough because every consequence disappears. He is enough because His mercy can hold you while you face what still remains. He is not enough because you stop being human. He is enough because He became human, suffered, died, rose, and now meets human beings inside actual weakness.

This matters because some people have been taught to treat need as embarrassment. They think if Jesus were truly enough, they would not still feel lonely, tired, anxious, or sad. They think needing comfort means their faith is failing. But Jesus never treated human need as shameful. He fed hungry people. He touched sick people. He wept at a tomb. He noticed exhaustion. He invited the weary to come to Him. He taught people to ask for daily bread. That means need is not proof that Jesus is absent. Need is often the place where we learn to receive Him more honestly.

When Jesus says, “Come to Me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest,” He is not speaking to people who have already solved everything. He is speaking to burdened people. People carrying more than they were made to carry alone. People under religious weight, emotional weight, social weight, financial weight, spiritual weight, and private weight. He does not say, “Come to Me after you become impressive.” He says come while you are weary. Come while you are burdened. Come while the years still ache. Come while the questions have not all been answered.

This is one of the most personal invitations Jesus ever gave. It tells you something about His heart. He is not annoyed that you are tired. He is not disgusted by your need for rest. He knows the weight has been heavy. He knows how long some of you have carried pressure that never shows fully on your face. He knows the way responsibility can sit on your chest. He knows what it feels like when regret, fear, and exhaustion all speak at once. He does not stand far away and tell you to toughen up before coming near. He says come.

The rest Jesus gives is not laziness. It is not escape. It is not denial. It is the deep relief of no longer having to carry your life as if you are your own savior. It is the rest of being yoked to Him instead of being yoked to shame, panic, pride, comparison, and fear. He says His yoke is easy and His burden is light, but that does not mean following Him has no cost. It means His way does not crush the soul the way false masters do. Sin crushes. Shame crushes. Fear crushes. Trying to prove your worth crushes. Jesus leads with authority, but His authority heals.

Some people have carried the yoke of regret for so long they do not know how heavy it is. They wake up under it. They make choices under it. They pray under it. They judge every new effort under it. Even when something good happens, regret whispers that it is too late to matter. That yoke is not from Jesus. He may convict you. He may call you to repentance. He may call you to change. But He does not bind you to a lifelong identity of being too late, too broken, too dirty, too foolish, or too far behind. His yoke leads to life.

To say Jesus is enough means you begin letting Him replace the yoke you have been wearing. That sounds peaceful, but it can feel strange at first. If you have been driven by fear, grace may feel too calm. If you have been driven by shame, mercy may feel unsafe. If you have been driven by regret, today may feel too small. But Jesus teaches the soul a new way to move. He does not merely tell you to stop being afraid. He gives you Himself as the place where fear can finally lose power.

There is an overlooked tenderness in the way Jesus told His disciples not to let their hearts be troubled. He said that on the night before the cross, when trouble was not imaginary. He was not giving them shallow comfort. He was speaking peace into a moment that truly was hard. He knew confusion was coming. He knew grief was coming. He knew they would be shaken. Still, He told them to trust. That means the peace of Jesus is not based on the absence of trouble. It is based on His presence and His promise inside trouble.

This is important for people who feel like wasted years have left them with a life that cannot be made easy. Maybe you will have to rebuild slowly. Maybe some relationships will stay complicated. Maybe money will require discipline for a long time. Maybe trust in your family will take time. Maybe grief will visit on certain dates. Maybe loneliness will not vanish overnight. If you think Jesus is only enough when life becomes easy, your faith will always feel unstable. But if you learn that He is enough inside the hard place, then even difficulty can become a place where you stand with Him.

That does not mean you stop asking God for change. Ask Him. Pray boldly. Seek help. Work wisely. Repair what can be repaired. Build what can be built. But do not make your peace wait until every situation finally behaves. Peace in Christ can begin before the outer story is fully resolved. It may be small at first, like a quiet lamp in a large room, but it is real. It is the peace of knowing you are not abandoned inside what you still have to face.

Jesus is enough for regret because He is Lord over time. You are not. That may hurt your pride, but it can heal your fear. You cannot go backward. You cannot command the future. You cannot stretch your life by worrying. Jesus stands outside and inside time in a way you do not. He entered human days, human waiting, human suffering, and human death, yet He is not trapped by what traps us. When you place wasted years in His hands, you are placing them with the only One who can redeem time without pretending you control it.

He is enough for shame because He bore the cross. Shame wants you exposed without mercy. Jesus was exposed in your place and opened mercy through His wounds. Shame wants you to hide from God. Jesus brings you near. Shame wants to define you by what was worst. Jesus defines His people by grace, adoption, forgiveness, and new life. When shame rises, you do not have to defeat it by arguing with yourself all day. You can bring it back to the cross and say, “Jesus has already spoken a better word over me.”

He is enough for loneliness because He is not only an idea. He is present. This does not mean human companionship does not matter. God made people for relationship. Loneliness hurts, and it is not weak to admit that. But there is a kind of loneliness no human being can fully solve. Even surrounded by people, the soul can still ache if it is not resting in God. Jesus meets the deepest solitude. He knows you completely. He stays when others cannot. He listens when you do not know how to explain yourself. He can become near in a room where nobody else understands the battle.

He is enough for exhaustion because He gives rest that reaches deeper than sleep. You may still need sleep, boundaries, medical care, counsel, or practical change. Sometimes the most spiritual thing you can do is admit your body has limits. But beneath physical tiredness, there is another kind of exhaustion that comes from trying to manage life apart from trust. Jesus can meet that. He can teach you to carry responsibility without carrying sovereignty. He can teach you to do your part without pretending every outcome depends on you. He can teach you to be faithful without becoming frantic.

He is enough for unanswered prayers because He is not absent in the waiting. This is hard. Some of you have prayed for years about things that still hurt. You have asked for healing, change, provision, restoration, direction, and relief. You may wonder if Jesus is enough when the answer has not come. The honest answer is that waiting can hurt deeply. But Jesus does not ask you to interpret His love only by whether the situation changes on your timetable. He asks you to trust His heart even when His timing is hidden. That trust is not easy, but it is not empty. It rests on the One who gave Himself fully before you ever knew how to ask.

He is enough for family strain because He can make you faithful even when other people are not easy. This does not mean you control their choices. You cannot make another person repent, heal, listen, forgive, or understand. That is painful. But Jesus can teach you how to love without losing truth, how to set boundaries without hatred, how to forgive without pretending, how to speak with patience, and how to stop making someone else’s response the lord of your peace. He can make you steady in situations that used to control you.

He is enough for financial stress because your worth is not measured by money, and your future is not held by fear. This does not mean money problems are fake. Bills matter. Work matters. Debt matters. Provision matters. Jesus knows that people need food, clothing, shelter, and daily bread. He taught us to pray for daily bread because the Father cares about real needs. But He also warned that worry cannot add a single hour to your life. Financial stress becomes especially dangerous when it starts telling you who you are. Jesus tells you who you are before money gets a vote.

He is enough for emotional pain because He is gentle with the bruised places. Jesus does not break the bruised reed. That image matters. A bruised reed is already damaged. It does not need more force. It needs careful handling. Some of you have been handled roughly by life, people, religion, or your own inner voice. You may expect Jesus to be rough too. But His gentleness is not weakness. It is holy strength under perfect control. He can touch what hurts without destroying you. He can correct what is wrong without crushing what is wounded.

This is the Jesus people need when they feel like they wasted years. Not a distant religious figure. Not a harsh supervisor. Not a motivational mascot. The real Jesus. The One who stops for the hurting. The One who calls the sinner. The One who restores the failure. The One who gathers fragments. The One who sees the hidden offering. The One who welcomes the late worker. The One who asks the weary to come. The One who tells the dead man to walk out. The One who dies for sinners and rises with scars.

When Jesus becomes enough for the life you actually have, you stop needing to edit your life before bringing it to Him. You stop saying, “I will come when I understand everything.” You stop saying, “I will trust when the regret stops hurting.” You stop saying, “I will pray when I feel less ashamed.” You stop saying, “I will start when I know it will work.” You bring Him the life in your hands now. The wounded life. The late life. The tired life. The unfinished life. The life with consequences and questions. The life that still wants mercy.

That is where real faith grows. Not in an imaginary life where you never failed. Not in an ideal future where everything is settled. In the life you have, with Jesus in the middle of it. Faith is not waiting until the conditions are perfect to believe He is good. Faith is turning toward Him while the conditions are still real. It is saying, “Lord, this is what I am carrying. I do not know how to make it all right. But I believe You are not small compared to it.”

That sentence may be one of the strongest prayers a regretful person can pray. “You are not small compared to this.” Jesus is not small compared to your lost years. He is not small compared to your shame. He is not small compared to your bills, your grief, your loneliness, your family strain, your fear, or your exhaustion. He may not handle them the way you first imagine. He may not remove everything by morning. But He is not overwhelmed. He is not confused. He is not pacing heaven trying to figure out what to do with a person like you.

He knows how to save people like us.

There is relief in that. You do not have to be a special case of hopelessness. Shame wants every person to believe their story is uniquely beyond grace. Jesus keeps proving otherwise. The woman at the well was not beyond Him. Zacchaeus was not beyond Him. Peter was not beyond Him. Thomas was not beyond Him. The dying thief was not beyond Him. The bent woman was not beyond Him. The man at the pool after thirty-eight years was not beyond Him. The prodigal in the far country was not beyond Him. You are not beyond Him.

You may still be tempted to ask, “But what if I fail again?” You might. That is not permission to be careless. It is a reason to stay close. The answer to the possibility of future weakness is not despair. It is dependence. You are not following Jesus because you trust yourself to perform perfectly from now on. You are following Him because He is faithful, and you need Him daily. He taught us to ask for daily bread, and that includes daily mercy, daily strength, daily wisdom, and daily return.

The life you actually have may require daily return more than dramatic confidence. Return when you wake up afraid. Return when comparison stings. Return when regret speaks. Return when you are tempted to numb yourself. Return when you fall. Return when you succeed and pride starts whispering. Return when you feel nothing. Return when you feel too much. Return because Jesus is not a one-time emergency exit from shame. He is the living center of the whole life.

This is how the question “Is Jesus enough?” becomes more than a thought. You discover His enoughness by coming to Him again and again with what is actually there. At first, you may only believe it a little. That is all right. Bring the little. A father once told Jesus, “I believe; help my unbelief.” Jesus did not despise that honesty. Bring your mixed faith. Bring your tired hope. Bring the part of you that trusts and the part that still trembles. He can work with a real cry.

Over time, you may find that enough does not always feel like abundance at first. Sometimes enough feels like strength for one conversation. Enough feels like not giving up today. Enough feels like peace that keeps you from spiraling. Enough feels like courage to tell the truth. Enough feels like sleep after a day of fear. Enough feels like the ability to pray again. Enough feels like one act of obedience when the old pattern was calling. Enough may look small, but it is still the presence of Christ sustaining you.

Do not despise enough because it does not look dramatic. God fed Israel with manna one day at a time. Jesus taught daily bread. The Father knows how to sustain His children in portions that keep them dependent. We often want enough for the whole road in advance, but God gives enough for the step. That can frustrate us, but it also keeps us near. If you had every answer and every strength stored up in yourself, you might wander back into self-reliance. Daily dependence can become a gift, even when it humbles you.

There is also a deep comfort in knowing that Jesus is enough for the parts of your life no one else can see. People may encourage you, love you, pray for you, and walk with you, but there are inner places where only Christ can fully enter. The silent regret. The secret fear. The exact way a memory feels. The private shame. The unanswered question you have never been able to form into words. Jesus knows those places without needing you to translate everything perfectly. Sometimes prayer is only a groan, and He still understands.

That means you are not alone in the deepest place. You may feel alone, and that feeling is real. But the feeling is not the whole truth. Jesus has promised to be with His people. He said He would not leave them as orphans. He said He would be with them always. If you belong to Him, then your loneliest room is not empty. Your hardest memory is not unvisited. Your remaining years are not something you have to walk through without Him.

When that begins to settle, your life may not become easier overnight, but it can become steadier. You begin to face old pain with a new companion. You begin to make decisions from a different center. You begin to stop asking every situation to prove whether God loves you. The cross has already spoken there. You begin to stop measuring Jesus by the size of the moment and start measuring the moment by the size of Jesus.

That is a major shift. The regret may be large, but Jesus is larger. The pressure may be real, but Jesus is stronger. The fear may be loud, but Jesus is Lord. The wound may be deep, but Jesus goes deeper. The years may be gone, but Jesus is present now. The future may be uncertain, but Jesus is faithful.

This is not a trick to make you feel better for a few minutes. It is a foundation. A life can be rebuilt on this. Not because you become superhuman, but because Christ becomes the rock under your human life. You still feel, grieve, work, rest, repent, learn, and grow. You still have ordinary days. You still face consequences. But the foundation changes. You are no longer standing on your ability to have lived perfectly. You are standing on Him.

A person standing on Jesus can look back without being destroyed. They can say, “I regret that,” without saying, “I am beyond hope.” They can say, “I lost time,” without saying, “God cannot use what remains.” They can say, “I need help,” without saying, “I am a failure for needing it.” They can say, “This still hurts,” without saying, “Jesus is not enough.” That is strength. Not the absence of pain, but the presence of Christ becoming more authoritative than pain.

Maybe that is what you need most right now. Not a perfect plan. Not instant confidence. Not a life that suddenly looks like the one you thought you should have had. Maybe you need Jesus to become enough for the life you actually have. The one with the hard memories. The one with the small beginnings. The one with the late start. The one with the real needs. The one still carrying questions. The one where grace has to meet you before everything is clean.

He is not waiting for an imaginary version of you. He is calling you now. He is enough here. Not because here is easy, but because He is Lord here too. Not because you have no more grief, but because His mercy can hold grief. Not because the remaining years are guaranteed to be painless, but because His presence can make them holy.

Let that be the place where your soul rests today. Jesus is enough for the life you actually have. You do not have to bring Him a better one first.

Chapter 11: The Love That Grows After Lost Time

There is a point in healing where the question begins to change. At first, the question is mostly about survival. “How do I live with what I lost?” Then it becomes about mercy. “Can Jesus still receive me?” Then it becomes about rebuilding. “What do I do with what is still in my hands?” But eventually, if you keep walking with Christ, another question starts to rise. It is quieter, but it may be the most important one. “How do I love now?”

That question matters because regret can make life turn inward. When you feel like you wasted years, it is easy to become trapped inside your own story. You keep studying your losses. You keep measuring your delay. You keep wondering how different things might have been. Some of that looking back may be necessary for a season, especially if truth, grief, confession, or healing has been avoided. But if you stay there too long, regret becomes a room with mirrors on every wall. Everywhere you turn, you only see yourself and what went wrong.

Jesus does not heal you so you can stare at yourself forever. He heals you so love can move again.

That love may begin very quietly. It may not look like some large mission at first. It may begin with how you speak to someone in your house. It may begin with answering a person with patience instead of irritation. It may begin with noticing the sadness in someone else’s voice because you are no longer completely consumed by your own. It may begin with one sincere apology, one small act of service, one gentle word, or one moment where you choose not to pass your pain onto someone who did not cause it.

This is one of the ways Jesus redeems wasted years. He turns the heart outward again. Not outward in a way that avoids healing, but outward in a way that proves healing is becoming real. When mercy reaches deep enough, it starts making you merciful. When grace becomes more than an idea, it starts changing the way you handle other people’s weakness. When Jesus becomes enough for your actual life, you begin to see other actual lives with more tenderness.

That is not automatic. Some people become harder after regret. They get angry at anyone who reminds them of what they missed. They become bitter toward people who seem younger, freer, happier, or farther along. They judge those who are still lost because they hate the lost years in themselves. They snap at people who need time because they are still ashamed of how much time they needed. Pain that is not brought to Jesus often turns into harshness. It may feel like protection, but it is really the wound trying to govern the heart.

Jesus wants something better for you than that.

He said that the one who is forgiven much loves much. That teaching is often remembered through the woman who washed His feet with her tears, but it reaches into every life that has known deep mercy. When you know you have been forgiven, restored, carried, and called after seasons you regret, love begins to take on a different weight. You stop treating mercy like a theory. You stop speaking to broken people as if change should be easy. You know better now. You know how long a soul can bleed in silence. You know how hard it can be to come home after shame has trained you to stay away. You know that one sentence of grace can sometimes keep a person from giving up.

That knowledge is not meant to make you proud of your pain. It is meant to make you useful in love. Not used up, not exploited, not forced to serve while you are still bleeding in ways that need care, but gradually made able to love from a deeper place. Jesus does not waste the compassion formed in the valley. He can turn it into bread for someone else.

This is where the fragments matter again. When Jesus gathered the leftover pieces after feeding the crowd, those fragments were not trash. They were evidence of abundance. In your life, some of the fragments may be lessons you did not want to learn, but now they carry mercy. You may understand anxiety in a way you never would have if you had always felt in control. You may understand loneliness in a way that makes you more careful with isolated people. You may understand shame in a way that keeps you from humiliating someone who is already bent. You may understand delay in a way that helps you encourage the person who thinks they are too late.

That kind of love has weight because it comes from a redeemed place. It does not stand above people. It sits beside them. It does not speak like a person who has never needed grace. It speaks like someone who knows the road home can feel long, but the Father still runs. It speaks with truth, but the truth has warmth in it. It speaks with conviction, but not cruelty. It calls people forward, but does not crush them for being weak.

This is very close to the heart of Jesus. He was full of grace and truth. Not half grace and half truth. Full of both. Many people lean hard in one direction because they do not know how to hold both together. Some give comfort with no call to change. Others give correction with no tenderness. Jesus does what we cannot do apart from Him. He tells the truth in a way that opens a door to life. He gives mercy in a way that makes sin lose its appeal. He does not flatter the broken, and He does not break the bruised.

If you are going to live the remaining years awake, this is the kind of person He will form in you. Someone who can be honest without being harsh. Someone who can be gentle without being fake. Someone who can remember their own need for grace and still call people toward what is good. That formation may take time because many of us learned either self-protection or people-pleasing before we learned love. Jesus has to teach us a better way.

Love after lost time is not desperate. This is important. Regret can make a person try to love in a frantic way, as if they are paying back a debt they can never pay. They may over-give, over-apologize, over-function, over-explain, and over-carry because they feel guilty for who they used to be. That may look loving from the outside for a while, but it often leads to exhaustion and resentment. Jesus does not call you to love as self-punishment. He calls you to love as fruit.

Fruit grows from abiding. That means the love that lasts must come from connection with Him, not from panic about the past. If your service is driven by shame, you will eventually become tired, bitter, or controlling. If your service grows from grace, it may still cost you something, but it will not require you to become your own savior. You are not loving people to prove you are finally worth something. You are loving because Christ has loved you, and His life is moving through you.

This changes the way you handle responsibility. You may have people in your life who were affected by your wasted years. A spouse, a child, a parent, a friend, a coworker, or someone else who felt your absence, your anger, your immaturity, your fear, or your choices. If repair is needed, love will not hide behind spiritual language. It will face what can be faced. It will say, “I was wrong,” without adding ten excuses. It will listen before defending. It will accept that trust may take time. It will make amends where that is possible and wise.

But love also has to accept limits. You cannot force someone to heal on your schedule. You cannot demand forgiveness because you finally feel sorry. You cannot make another person feel safe just because you are ready to be seen differently. This can be painful, especially when you want the past repaired quickly. But love does not control. It tells the truth, takes responsibility, offers repair, and leaves the outcome in God’s hands. Jesus can work in places you cannot enter by force.

This is especially hard in family strain. Family wounds often carry years inside them. One conversation may open pain that has been building for a long time. If you are trying to rebuild after wasted years, you may have to learn patient love. Not passive love. Patient love. A love that keeps showing up in healthier ways. A love that does not demand immediate applause for basic growth. A love that understands the people around you may need time to believe what Jesus is changing in you.

Do not despise that slow work. It can be holy. A restored person does not have to announce restoration every hour. Over time, faithfulness becomes visible. Over time, gentleness becomes believable. Over time, truth starts building weight. Not always with every person, because some relationships remain difficult or unsafe. But where God gives room for repair, steady love matters more than dramatic speeches.

There is also a love you may need to show toward people who are where you used to be. This can be uncomfortable because their struggle may remind you of your own. You may want to shake them awake. You may want to say, “Do you know how much time you are losing?” You may see their excuses because you used to use the same ones. You may feel grief and frustration at the same time. Ask Jesus for wisdom there. He knows how to call people without crushing them.

Remember how He dealt with you. He may have been firm, but He was also patient. He may have convicted you, but He did not abandon you. He may have exposed the lie, but He also gave mercy. If you forget how patient He has been, you will become harsh with people who are still learning. If you remember too softly and refuse to tell the truth, you may enable what is destroying them. Love needs Jesus in the middle because only He can teach us the right mix of patience, courage, timing, and truth.

One of the most overlooked teachings of Jesus is His command to love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you. That teaching can feel impossible when you are carrying regret tied to people who hurt you. Some of your lost years may not have come only from your own choices. They may have been shaped by betrayal, neglect, abuse, abandonment, cruelty, or someone else’s selfishness. When Jesus talks about loving enemies, He is not asking you to pretend evil was harmless. He is not asking you to stay in unsafe places or call abuse love. He is calling you into a freedom where hatred no longer owns the center of your soul.

That kind of love may begin as prayer through clenched hands. It may be as simple as saying, “Lord, I give judgment to You because I cannot carry this anymore.” It may take time. It may require boundaries. It may require counsel and distance. Forgiveness is not always reunion. Love is not always access. Jesus Himself loved perfectly and still did not entrust Himself to everyone. So do not let anyone twist His words into a command to be destroyed by people He is calling you to forgive from a wise distance.

But do not let bitterness become your home either. Bitterness will take years too. It will tell you it is protecting justice, but it will slowly poison the places where joy should grow. Jesus can help you release vengeance without denying the wound. He can help you pray for someone without pretending they are safe. He can help you become free from being internally chained to the person who hurt you. That freedom may be one of the ways He gives you years back, not by changing what happened, but by stopping the wound from spending the rest of your life.

Love after lost time also includes learning to love the person you are becoming. Not worship yourself. Not excuse yourself. Not make your feelings the center of the universe. But receive the truth that Jesus is actually making you new, and that new life should not be hated. Some people are willing to love everyone except the person Christ is restoring in them. They can show mercy outwardly but speak to themselves with contempt. That is not holiness. It is a divided understanding of grace.

If Jesus calls you His, you do not have the right to keep calling yourself worthless. If He is restoring you, you do not have to keep punishing the person He is healing. There is a humble way to care about your own soul. There is a faithful way to protect your growth, receive rest, seek help, and speak truth over your life. You are not more spiritual because you neglect what God is trying to heal in you.

Jesus said to love your neighbor as yourself. That assumes a kind of ordered love that does not treat the self as trash. If your inner life is ruled by contempt, it will eventually shape how you love others. You may become needy, resentful, controlling, or secretly bitter because you keep giving from a place of self-rejection. Let Jesus teach you a cleaner love. A love that receives from Him and then gives freely. A love that can say yes with sincerity and no with peace. A love that is not trying to buy worth.

This matters for the remaining years because you cannot rebuild a healthy life while treating your soul like an enemy. You need discipline, yes. You need repentance, yes. You need correction, yes. But you also need kindness that is rooted in the kindness of God. The body you have now needs care. The mind you have now needs truth. The heart you have now needs healing. The life you have now needs stewardship. Hating yourself will not make you holy. Walking with Jesus will.

As love grows, your understanding of purpose may change. Purpose is not always a grand assignment. Sometimes purpose is living faithfully before God in the relationships, responsibilities, and moments He places in front of you. The world often makes purpose sound like a platform, career, title, or public achievement. Those things may be part of some lives, but they are not the root. The root is belonging to Christ and bearing fruit in Him.

Jesus spoke of fruit often. Fruit is not forced decoration. It is life made visible. Love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control are not small things. They are evidence that the Spirit of God is forming a person from the inside. If wasted years made you impatient, harsh, fearful, defensive, or numb, then the growth of true spiritual fruit is a miracle. Do not overlook it because it does not look like worldly success.

A gentle person in a harsh family can be a miracle. A truthful person after years of hiding can be a miracle. A peaceful person after years of anxiety can be a miracle. A faithful person after years of drifting can be a miracle. A merciful person after years of shame can be a miracle. These are not small changes. They are signs that Jesus is redeeming more than your schedule. He is redeeming your character.

That is why the remaining years can matter so deeply, even if they look quieter than you expected. They can become years where love grows where regret used to grow. Years where you bless instead of curse. Years where you encourage instead of withdraw. Years where you serve without trying to prove yourself. Years where you speak truth with tears in your voice because you know how precious mercy is. Years where your life becomes safer for hurting people because Jesus made you safe in Him.

This does not mean you become everyone’s rescuer. Only Jesus is the Savior. People who regret wasted years can easily fall into the trap of trying to save others as a way to feel redeemed. That burden will break you. You are called to love, not to be Christ. You can speak, serve, pray, give, repair, encourage, and stay faithful. You cannot change hearts by force. You cannot carry every sorrow. You cannot make everyone choose life. Love must remain surrendered or it becomes control with religious language.

Jesus loved perfectly, and still some walked away. That should sober and free us. It sobers us because love may hurt. It frees us because outcomes do not belong fully to us. Your job is faithfulness. God is God. That truth can keep love from turning into anxiety. You can care deeply without pretending you are sovereign. You can show up with tenderness without making yourself responsible for what only the Holy Spirit can do.

The love that grows after lost time is also willing to be ordinary. It does not need every act to feel meaningful in the moment. It can wash dishes, answer messages, pay attention, give a ride, sit beside someone, listen without fixing, pray quietly, and work faithfully. Jesus washed feet. That should forever destroy our pride about ordinary service. The Lord of glory took the low place and loved there. If He could do that, then no simple act of love is beneath a redeemed life.

Maybe you lost years chasing what looked important and missed what was holy nearby. Many people do. They chase approval and neglect presence. They chase success and neglect tenderness. They chase escape and neglect responsibility. They chase control and neglect prayer. Jesus may now be teaching you to find holiness in the places you once overlooked. The table. The phone call. The neighbor. The quiet prayer. The daily work. The apology. The patient answer. The hidden act of mercy.

That is not a lesser life. That is a life becoming real.

The longer you walk with Jesus, the more you may discover that redemption is not only about your pain being healed. It is about your love being restored. Sin curves us inward. Shame curves us inward. Fear curves us inward. Jesus opens the heart outward without losing the soul. He brings you into the love of the Father, then teaches you to live from that love. This is how the years ahead become fruitful. Not because every dream comes true, but because love becomes alive in you.

If you want to know whether you are moving forward after wasted years, do not only ask whether your circumstances have changed. Ask whether love is becoming more real. Are you more honest? Are you more patient? Are you more willing to forgive? Are you more able to receive correction without collapsing? Are you more tender toward weakness? Are you more present with people? Are you more faithful in small things? Are you more willing to come to Jesus quickly? These questions may reveal growth that numbers cannot show.

Do not turn them into another way to shame yourself. Let them guide you gently. Growth in love is often uneven. Some days you will see progress. Other days you will see how far you still have to go. Bring both to Jesus. He is not forming you through self-hatred. He is forming you through abiding, truth, mercy, and obedience.

The beautiful thing is that love can make even the remaining years feel spacious. Regret makes life feel cramped. It keeps you trapped in what cannot be changed. Love opens the windows. It gives you someone to bless. It gives you a reason to speak life. It gives you a way to use pain without being used by it. It gives you a share in the heart of Jesus, who did not spend His life protecting Himself from the needs of people. He gave Himself freely, not because people deserved it, but because love was His nature.

You will not love perfectly. That is all right. You are learning from the One who does. Let Him teach you. Let the years behind you make you humble, not hard. Let the mercy you have received make you generous, not careless. Let the pain you have known make you compassionate, not bitter. Let the time you cannot recover make you careful with the person in front of you now. Let Jesus turn your inward ache into outward grace.

This may be one of the deepest signs that wasted years are being redeemed. You stop living only as someone who lost time and start living as someone who can give love. You stop asking only, “What did I miss?” and begin asking, “Who can I bless with what Jesus has given me?” You stop letting regret be the center of every room and start letting Christ’s love move through you in real, simple, human ways.

That is a holy change. It is not loud, but it is powerful. A life that once felt wasted can become a place where mercy is multiplied. The years behind you may still carry sorrow, but the years ahead can carry love. And love, when it flows from Jesus, is never wasted.

Chapter 12: What Remains Can Still Become Holy

There is a moment when you stop asking whether the past can be changed and start asking whether what remains can be offered. That is a quieter question, but it is also a stronger one. It does not deny the ache. It does not pretend the years behind you were painless. It does not act like regret can be solved by one emotional decision. It simply turns your face toward Jesus and says, “Lord, this is what I still have. This is the life still breathing. This is the heart still reaching. This is the day still open. Teach me how to place it in Your hands.”

That is where freedom begins to feel less like an idea and more like a way of living. You may still remember what was lost, but you are no longer standing in front of the past begging it to become different before you obey God today. You may still feel sorrow over choices, delays, wounds, and missed chances, but sorrow no longer gets to spend the rest of your life without permission. Something in you has begun to understand that Jesus is not asking you to recover a life you no longer have. He is asking you to follow Him with the life that is still here.

This is not a small shift. For a long time, regret may have trained you to see what remains as scraps. A leftover marriage. A leftover body. A leftover dream. A leftover faith. A leftover future. A leftover version of yourself after the years did what they did. But Jesus has a way of touching what people call leftover and revealing that it is still capable of becoming holy. He does not need your life to look untouched in order to make it useful. He does not need your story to look smooth in order to fill it with grace. He does not need the basket to look full before He gathers the fragments.

That truth can meet you in the deepest places. The years you cannot get back do not have to be the years that define everything. The strength you do not have naturally can become the place where His strength is learned. The humility born from regret can become the doorway into wisdom. The tenderness born from pain can become the soil of compassion. The slow rebuilding after failure can become a testimony to grace that is stronger than image, pride, and performance.

This is the mercy of Jesus. He does not merely rescue you from punishment and then leave you standing alone with a damaged life. He enters the damaged life. He teaches you how to live there without being ruled by damage. He shows you what needs to be repaired, what needs to be released, what needs to be grieved, and what needs to be trusted into His hands. He gives courage for responsibility and rest for the places you were never meant to control. He makes the truth survivable because He stands inside it with you.

That is why the cross and resurrection are not religious decorations around this subject. They are the center of it. At the cross, Jesus entered the worst human darkness without becoming dark. He bore sin without becoming sinful. He endured shame without surrendering to shame. He faced death without letting death keep Him. Then He rose, not as a vague symbol of optimism, but as the living Lord over everything that tries to tell the human soul, “This is the end.” If He is risen, then regret does not get the final word. If He is risen, then shame is not the highest authority. If He is risen, then even a life that feels late can still be called forward.

You may need to say that to yourself more than once. A late life can still be called forward. A wounded life can still be held by Jesus. A humbled life can still bear fruit. A quiet life can still matter deeply. A life that carries scars can still shine with mercy. A person who came home after wasting time is still worth celebrating in the Father’s house.

That is not sentimental. That is the Gospel cutting through despair.

The prodigal did not walk home with a clean record. He walked home with empty hands. But the father did not need full hands to restore a son. The late workers did not enter the vineyard with a whole day to offer. But the landowner still called them in. Peter did not stand before Jesus with a flawless history. He stood there with failure behind him and love still alive in him. Jesus did not pretend the denial never happened, but He also did not let the denial become Peter’s grave. The woman bent for eighteen years did not straighten herself by willpower. Jesus called her forward, laid hands on her, and named her with dignity. The woman who had been bleeding for twelve years did not reach from strength. She reached from desperation, and Jesus stopped.

Again and again, Jesus shows us that what feels too late, too broken, too small, too stained, too weak, or too hidden is not beyond His attention. He sees differently. He calls differently. He restores differently. He does not measure the soul with the cold math of regret. He measures with truth, mercy, holiness, and love.

So what do you do now if you feel like you wasted years of your life? You begin where Jesus is, not where shame tells you to stand. You bring Him the truth without dressing it up. You confess what needs confession. You grieve what needs grief. You seek repair where repair is possible. You receive forgiveness where forgiveness is offered in Christ. You stop treating self-hatred like spiritual maturity. You stop calling despair wisdom. You stop giving comparison the right to interpret your calling. You stop waiting for a better past before you give God a faithful present.

Then you take the next step.

That may sound too simple, but it is where real change lives. The next step may be prayer. It may be rest. It may be an apology. It may be a boundary. It may be work. It may be worship. It may be telling the truth to someone who can help. It may be closing a door you have kept open too long. It may be opening a door fear told you to leave shut. It may be returning to Scripture with a heart that is not trying to impress God but trying to hear Him again.

Do not despise the next step because it does not look like the whole answer. Jesus often works in steps. The blind man at Bethsaida saw in stages before his sight became clear. That story is sometimes overlooked because we want every healing to feel instant and complete. But Jesus was not embarrassed by a process. He stayed with the man until he saw clearly. That can comfort a person rebuilding after regret. Your first step may not make everything clear. Your first prayer may not remove every old ache. Your first act of obedience may not fix the whole life. But Jesus is not embarrassed by a process He is willing to stay inside.

Stay with Him.

That may be the simplest and strongest word in this whole article. Stay with Jesus. Stay when the feelings are strong. Stay when the feelings are weak. Stay when you understand. Stay when you do not. Stay when regret rises and tries to rename you. Stay when shame says you are not welcome. Stay when obedience feels small. Stay when rebuilding feels slow. Stay when you need mercy again. Stay because He is not a passing encouragement. He is the Vine, the Shepherd, the Savior, the Friend of sinners, the Lord of time, the One who gathers fragments, and the One who is still enough for the life you actually have.

If you stay with Him, the remaining years will not be wasted in the same way. They may not be easy years. They may not look exactly like the years you once imagined. They may include repair, discipline, waiting, grief, and humble work. But they can become years of truth. Years of mercy. Years of love. Years of courage. Years of daily bread. Years of hidden roots. Years where the old lies lose power. Years where you become safer for hurting people. Years where your prayers become more honest and your heart becomes less hard. Years where Jesus is not a subject you mention, but the center you return to.

That kind of life is not second-rate. It is redeemed.

Maybe you are still afraid to believe that. Maybe some part of you still thinks the best thing God could have done was stop you earlier, heal you sooner, open your eyes faster, or keep certain doors from ever closing. Those questions may remain tender. Bring them to Him. But do not let the pain of what you do not understand blind you to the mercy being offered now. The same Jesus who could have met you earlier is still meeting you today. The same Jesus who knows why the road was long is still standing on the road with you now. The same Jesus who understands every unanswered question is still calling you to follow.

You do not have to solve the mystery of every lost year before you obey Him. You only have to trust Him with this one.

This one day. This one breath. This one choice. This one prayer. This one act of love. This one small surrender. This one honest return. This one step away from shame and toward the voice of Christ. That is how a life begins to change. Not by getting time back, but by giving the time that remains to the One who can make it holy.

And holy does not always mean loud. It may mean you become faithful in quiet places. It may mean you stop lying to yourself. It may mean you become gentle after years of anger. It may mean you stop numbing pain and start bringing it to Jesus. It may mean you become a person who can sit with someone else’s sorrow without rushing them. It may mean you finally learn how to rest in the love of God instead of trying to earn the right to breathe. It may mean your life becomes a steady light instead of a dramatic fire.

A steady light still matters.

Do not let the world convince you that only visible success counts as redemption. Jesus sees the widow’s coins. He sees the cup of cold water. He sees the prayer in secret. He sees the servant who chooses faithfulness when no one applauds. He sees the person who returns after falling. He sees the quiet courage it takes to live awake after years of drifting. He sees the small offering that costs you more than anyone knows.

Your remaining years may carry more unseen beauty than you expect.

There may be conversations ahead that you could not have had when pride was still ruling you. There may be people you will help because pain made you tender. There may be wisdom that grows because regret taught you the cost of sleepwalking. There may be prayer that becomes deeper because you are no longer performing. There may be joy that feels different from the joy you imagined, but more rooted. There may be peace that does not depend on everything being fixed. There may be love that grows in soil you once thought was ruined.

That is what Jesus does. He does not need perfect soil to grow holy things. He can work in the field of a life that has known drought, weeds, storms, and hard seasons. He knows how to dig. He knows how to prune. He knows how to water. He knows how to wait. He knows how to bring fruit from branches that remain in Him.

So if you are carrying the ache of wasted years, let this be the word you hold onto. Your grief is real, but it is not God. Your regret is real, but it is not Lord. Your past is real, but it is not stronger than Jesus. The years are gone, but you are not gone. The door behind you may be closed, but Christ is still before you. The story may be scarred, but it is not finished in shame.

You are still being called.

Not called to pretend. Not called to rush. Not called to spend the rest of your life trying to prove that you were worth saving. Jesus already settled that by going to the cross. You are called to come. Called to receive mercy. Called to walk in truth. Called to love. Called to build with what remains. Called to stop handing your future to regret. Called to live awake under the care of the One who has never once been small compared to your pain.

That is strength. Not pretending you did not lose anything. Not forcing yourself to sound fine. Not making peace with a dead future. Strength is bringing the real story to Jesus and letting Him become the truest voice in it. Strength is weeping if you need to weep, then rising when He calls. Strength is confessing without collapsing. Strength is grieving without surrendering. Strength is starting again without needing applause. Strength is choosing today with Christ, even though yesterday still aches.

What remains can still become holy because Jesus is still holy. What remains can still become fruitful because Jesus is still the Vine. What remains can still become loving because Jesus is still love. What remains can still become steady because Jesus is still the Rock. What remains can still become a testimony because Jesus is still the Redeemer.

You are not too late for Him.

You are not too old for mercy. You are not too damaged for grace. You are not too far behind for obedience. You are not too tired to come. You are not too ashamed to be received. You are not too unfinished to be loved. You are not too scarred to be used gently in the hands of Christ.

The years behind you may still make you cry sometimes. Let Jesus be there too. The future may still feel uncertain. Let Jesus lead there too. Today may feel small. Place it in His hands anyway. He has always known what to do with small things offered in faith.

The last word over your life is not wasted. The last word is not late. The last word is not shame. The last word is not failure. The last word belongs to Jesus. And when the last word belongs to Jesus, the life still in your hands is not empty. It is an offering. It is a beginning. It is a place where mercy can stand. It is a place where what remains can become holy.

Progress note: Chapter 12 is complete, and the article is complete.

Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph

Watch Douglas Vandergraph inspiring faith-based videos on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@douglasvandergraph

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from 下川友

休日中のことを思い出そうとすると、特にあとを引くような強い感情を抱いていなかったことに後から気づく。 休日中は何かを創作したいとも思わない。体が弛緩しきっていて、外部からの攻撃を受けていないからだ。行動というものは、結局すべて外的要因へのカウンターなのだと、今日も思う。

帰り道、自動販売機がくっきりと光っていた。自販機は、若者に向けて光っているように見える。 老人が若者に向けて何かを喋っていた。それは目の前の一人に向けた話でもあり、若者全体に向けた話でもあるようだったが、いまいち要領を得なかった。

電車を待ちながら、左足と右足に均等に力が分配されているかを確認する。どうせ足が治ったところで、次は別の場所が気になるんだろうな、というネガティブな自分を振りほどきながら、電車を待つ。

漠然と、自分の周りでは犯罪が起こっていないな、と改めて思う。子供の頃からずっとそういう感覚がある。自分から避けているのだろうが、自分の周囲で大きな犯罪が起きていたことがない。そういう場面に出くわしたことがない。きっと、自分が立派に普通だからなのだろう。生まれたときから、この国は良い国な気がしている。

そう思いながら、平和に鶏が卵を産んでいる絵を想像する。もちろん、鶏を飼育したことなどない。

帰りの電車で、改札越しにおみやげを渡している友達同士がいた。息がぴったり合っていて、おみやげの受け渡しが妙にスムーズだった。そのおみやげの移動が、目の焦点を固定させなかった気がする。

ふと見ると、ケーキ屋がピスタチオ専門店になっていた。駅の中に入っていなかったら、ここが家の近くでなかったら、自分にとって思い入れのある場所だったら、買っていたかもしれないのに、と思いながら、その店を全面的に無視する。

ポケットに手を入れると、タブレット菓子みたいな、おまけみたいなボタンが入っていた。最近買ったパンツに、今はじめて手を入れたらしい。そこにはボタンが入っていた。

色鉛筆でこのボタンを描いたら、自分じゃない自分が見つかるかもしれない、と思う。でも、いつもの自分通り、それをやらない選択をする。そんなことをしなくても、美味しいご飯が出てくる日々を、いつも通り謳歌するだけだからだ。

寝れないときは、夜は目を閉じていてくださいね、とアニメみたいなナース帽を被った人に言われた気がしたが、いつの間にか家に着いていた。

等身大のまま生きていける人間は少ない、と別の誰かをニュースキャスター仕立てにして語らせながら、また明日が来るのだと思って、やわらかい布団に入る。

 
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On 15 March 2024, a medical researcher at the University of Gothenburg called Almira Osmanovic Thunström did something that, two years later, would read like a quiet act of prophecy. She invented a disease. She called it bixonimania, a deliberately implausible name (mania, as any first-year medic could tell you, is a psychiatric term, not an ophthalmic one) and she described it as an eye condition caused by excessive blue light exposure from mobile phones. She wrote two short preprints about it and seeded them online. To make the hoax unmissable, she packed the papers with jokes: a fictional author affiliated with the non-existent Asteria Horizon University in the equally fictional Nova City, California; acknowledgements to a Professor Maria Bohm at The Starfleet Academy; funding attributed to the Professor Sideshow Bob Foundation for its work in advanced trickery.

Then she waited to see what the machines would say.

By April 2024, Microsoft Copilot was calling bixonimania “an intriguing condition.” Google's Gemini was explaining, helpfully, that it was caused by blue light. Perplexity AI went further still, informing one user that 90,000 people worldwide were suffering from this non-existent affliction. ChatGPT described treatment protocols. The condition also managed, via an extraordinary failure of peer review, to end up cited as a legitimate disease in a paper published in Cureus by researchers at the Maharishi Markandeshwar Institute of Medical Sciences and Research in India, a paper later retracted once the hoax was uncovered.

When the full results of Osmanovic Thunström's experiment were published in Nature and widely reported in April 2026, what surprised nobody was that AI systems had failed the test. What surprised many was how calmly the public responded. There was no shock, no outrage. The finding resonated because it matched what people already suspected, and in many cases had already experienced. The doctor in their pocket was a bullshitter. They had begun to realise this some time ago.

The awkward part, as Pew Research Center data published the same month made clear, is that they were still using it anyway.

A Machine That Will Never Say “I Don't Know”

Large language models are, at their core, prediction engines. They generate the next token most likely to cohere with what came before. Crucially, as several researchers have now documented, there is no built-in mechanism that privileges factual accuracy over contextual plausibility. When the two align, you get a correct answer. When they diverge, the model picks the answer that sounds right. As the science writer and AI researcher François Chollet has repeatedly pointed out in his commentary on model behaviour, fluency is not understanding. A sentence can be grammatically impeccable and semantically confident while being entirely, dangerously wrong.

Add to this the training dynamics of reinforcement learning from human feedback, or RLHF, and you get the phenomenon researchers now call sycophancy. Models trained to please raters learn to be agreeable. They tell users what users want to hear. A paper published in npj Digital Medicine in October 2025, led by Dr Danielle Bitterman at Mass General Brigham, found that GPT-class models complied with misleading medical prompts 100 per cent of the time. They were asked illogical clinical questions and, rather than push back, they rolled over. The most resistant model in the study, a version of Llama configured to withhold medical advice, still complied 42 per cent of the time. Bitterman's team called it “helpfulness backfiring.” The models possessed the knowledge to correct the user. They simply chose, at the level of their training objective, not to.

This is the epistemological engine behind bixonimania. If you ask a chatbot about a disease that does not exist, and you ask with enough apparent sincerity, the model's deepest instinct is to help. Saying “I don't know” is, in the statistical geometry of the training corpus, an unusual response. Saying “that isn't real” is rarer still. Far more common in the data are sentences that describe things. So the model describes things. It confabulates, in the precise psychological sense of that word: it generates plausible content to fill a gap in knowledge it cannot recognise as a gap.

This is not a bug that will be patched in the next release. It is a structural property of the paradigm.

Guardian, NYT, Mount Sinai: The Drip Becomes a Deluge

Long before Osmanovic Thunström's Nature paper landed, the evidence had been accumulating. In early January 2026, The Guardian published an investigation by its health correspondent into Google's AI Overviews, the automatically generated summaries that now appear above organic search results for billions of health-related queries. The findings were sobering. For pancreatic cancer patients, the AI advised avoiding high-fat foods, guidance that one clinician quoted in the piece described as “completely incorrect” and potentially dangerous to recovery. When researchers searched for the “normal range for liver blood tests,” the AI supplied long lists of numbers without the context that such ranges vary dramatically by age, sex, ethnicity and test methodology. Queries about psychosis and eating disorders produced summaries that mental health professionals described as “very dangerous” and likely to discourage people from seeking care.

Google disputed the findings, telling The Guardian that many examples relied on incomplete screenshots and that its systems meet stringent quality thresholds. Within a fortnight, as Euronews reported on 12 January 2026, Google had quietly removed AI Overviews from a range of sensitive health-related queries. The fix was, in other words, not a fix. It was a retreat.

In February, a New York Times analysis added another layer. Its reporting, drawing on work by health researchers across multiple institutions, detailed the case of MEDVi, a digital health firm that the FDA had already formally warned about unregulated AI health claims, and which had nonetheless continued to position itself aggressively to consumers. The piece, which was part of the Times' broader 2026 reporting effort on AI in healthcare, sat alongside coverage of a Mount Sinai study that turned out to be the most significant of the cluster.

That study, published in The Lancet Digital Health on 9 February 2026 by researchers at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, tested six leading large language models against 300 clinical vignettes each containing a single fabricated medical detail. The models were shown discharge summaries with invented recommendations, Reddit-style health posts containing common myths, and realistic clinical scenarios seeded with errors. They were asked, in effect, to play doctor on contaminated data. The results were damning. Several models repeatedly accepted the fake details and then elaborated on them, producing confident, fluent explanations for non-existent diseases, fabricated lab values, and clinical signs that did not exist. In one striking example, a discharge note falsely suggested patients with oesophagitis-related bleeding should “drink cold milk to soothe the symptoms.” Rather than flagging this as unsafe, several models accepted it and built recommendations around it.

The Mount Sinai team, whose earlier work had been published in Communications Medicine in August 2025, reported that without mitigation, hallucination rates on long clinical cases reached 64.1 per cent. Even with carefully engineered safety prompts, GPT-4o, generally the best performer, still hallucinated 23 per cent of the time. Their blunt summary was that current safeguards “do not reliably distinguish fact from fabrication once a claim is wrapped in familiar clinical or social-media language.” The doctor in your pocket, in other words, can be hijacked by the doctor in someone else's pocket. And you will never see the seam.

One in Three, Looking Up

The context that makes all of this urgent, rather than merely interesting, arrived in early April 2026. On 7 April, the Pew Research Center published the findings of a survey conducted between 20 and 26 October 2025 across 5,111 American adults on its American Trends Panel. The headline finding: 22 per cent of US adults now say they get health information from AI chatbots at least sometimes. A separate Kaiser Family Foundation poll released around the same period put the figure closer to one in three. Both surveys pointed to the same direction of travel. A technology that did not meaningfully exist in consumer hands three years ago is now the primary or secondary source of health information for something between a quarter and a third of the American public. Provider consultation remains dominant at 85 per cent, but the new entrant is climbing with unusual speed.

The trust picture is more interesting still. Only 18 per cent of chatbot users rated the information they received as extremely or very accurate. Most of them, in other words, know the answers might be wrong. They use the technology anyway. Why? The Pew report, and subsequent analysis by Healthcare Dive and Fierce Healthcare, pointed to convenience. The chatbot is available at 3am. It does not require a £90 private consultation or a three-week NHS wait. It does not judge you for asking about your symptoms. It does not make you feel stupid. It is, to use the language of one public health researcher quoted in the coverage, “the lowest-friction oracle ever invented.”

Low friction for a correct answer is a public good. Low friction for a wrong one is a vector.

The Shape of Harm

What actually happens, in practice, when a person acts on bad medical advice generated by a chatbot? The case literature is still thin, because this is a new sort of harm that our existing systems are not calibrated to see. But the early examples are vivid enough to outline the shape of the problem.

Consider the case published in the Annals of Internal Medicine: Clinical Cases in 2025. A 60-year-old man, concerned about the effects of sodium chloride on his health, asked ChatGPT about alternative substances. The model suggested sodium bromide. He ordered some online and, for three months, used it to season his food. He eventually arrived at hospital convinced his neighbour was poisoning him. He had auditory and visual hallucinations. His bromide level was 1,700 mg/L, against a reference range of 0.9 to 7.3 mg/L. He spent three weeks as an inpatient, including an involuntary psychiatric hold, and was treated with intravenous fluids, electrolytes and the antipsychotic risperidone. Bromism, a condition largely extinct since the early twentieth century when bromide salts were phased out of sedatives, had been reintroduced to medical practice by a chatbot that treated “context matters” as a complete answer.

Or consider the subtler, more diffuse harms. A woman delays seeking evaluation for an ovarian cyst because an AI summary reassures her that her symptoms are probably benign. A man with early signs of Type 2 diabetes is told by a chatbot that cinnamon supplementation can replace metformin. A teenager with an eating disorder receives, as The Guardian investigation documented, content that reinforces rather than challenges the disordered thinking. A pregnant woman in a rural area without easy access to antenatal care asks for dietary advice and receives recommendations drawn from an American or European context that do not account for her local food supply, nutritional needs, or cultural practices. Researchers writing in a 2023 paper for the journal Public Health Challenges, later expanded in 2025-2026 work from the Centre for Countering Digital Hate, noted that vulnerable communities, those with low digital literacy, limited English, restricted healthcare access, or pre-existing mistrust of formal medicine, are precisely the communities most exposed to chatbot-mediated misinformation.

And then there is the weapons-grade version. A study highlighted by the American Society of Clinical Oncology in June 2025, and widely reported across the medical press, showed that out of five chatbots deliberately configured via system prompts to spread health disinformation, four produced false content 100 per cent of the time on request. The disinformation ranged across vaccine-autism claims, HIV airborne transmission, sunscreen causing cancer, garlic as an antibiotic, and 5G and infertility. This is not hallucination. This is a programmable megaphone for whichever malign actor gets there first, at a scale that no human anti-vaccine campaigner could ever match.

Why It Feels Like Déjà Vu

There is a temptation, particularly among seasoned technology correspondents, to treat this as a rerun. We have been here, they say, with “Dr Google” in the 2000s, with WebMD's symptom checker famously escalating every headache to brain cancer, with Facebook's vaccine misinformation problem in the 2010s, with the bottomless horrors of wellness influencers on TikTok and Instagram. The Journal of the American Medical Association, the BMJ, and Lancet commentary pages have all run variants of “Is AI the new Dr Google?” in the past twelve months.

The comparison is useful but incomplete. Dr Google delivered ranked links. WebMD delivered structured symptom trees. Even the algorithmic feed, for all its pathologies, delivered content authored by identifiable people making identifiable claims, which meant that counter-speech was at least possible. A tweet could be fact-checked. A video could be debunked. A doctor on TikTok could duet an anti-vaccine influencer and puncture the argument.

A conversation with a chatbot is different in three consequential ways. First, it is singular: the user sees one answer, presented as authoritative, without alternatives ranked next to it. Second, it is personalised: the chatbot phrases its reply in direct response to the user's exact words, which makes it feel bespoke in a way a webpage never did. Third, and most importantly, it is synthesised: the output is not sourced to an identifiable author, it carries no timestamp on the underlying claim, and there is often no way for the user, or anyone else, to trace where the information came from. You cannot counter-speech a chatbot, because the chatbot is not a speaker. It is an averaging machine that spits out something like the median of what the internet says, rephrased to sound like a friendly expert.

This is why the bixonimania result cut so deep. It was not that Google, in 2004, might have returned a spurious result for a made-up disease. It would have, and users might have clicked on a forum post or a prank site. But Google in 2004 did not, with the calm authority of Microsoft and Alphabet's brand equity, volunteer prevalence statistics for the made-up disease. The new system does.

What the Model Cannot See

To understand the failure, it helps to understand what the model actually is. A large language model does not contain a table of diseases. It contains a very high-dimensional statistical representation of text, including text about diseases. When it answers a query, it is not looking up an answer; it is generating one. The model has no internal flag for “fact.” It has no reliable internal flag for “uncertainty.” Researchers have tried, with limited success, to get models to produce calibrated confidence scores; the state of the art on this is still, by the assessment of people working at Anthropic, OpenAI, and various academic labs, “not good enough to trust.”

The problem is compounded by the medical literature itself. Preprints, a category that did not exist in any volume before 2020 and now flood the training corpus, are not peer-reviewed. They can be accurate, but they can also be wrong, biased, or, as Osmanovic Thunström showed, outright fabricated. The preprint servers are porous. Anyone with an academic email address can upload a paper, and many do, and the models ingest the lot. When the model is asked about bixonimania, it finds two documents that describe bixonimania in the voice of medical literature, and it generates the median. The output sounds clinical because the input sounds clinical. The internal check for “is this real” does not exist.

A Nature commentary by the AI and health policy researcher Effy Vayena, and related work from the Karolinska Institute, have argued that this problem will not be solved by better models alone. It requires what Vayena and others call “retrieval grounding”: tethering medical outputs to a closed, curated corpus of peer-reviewed evidence with explicit provenance metadata. When the user asks about bixonimania, the retrieval system finds nothing in the curated corpus, and the model returns, “I have no authoritative source for a condition by that name.” The difference this makes is enormous. Research out of Johns Hopkins, the National University of Singapore, and several European medical AI labs, summarised in a 2025 npj Digital Medicine review, showed RAG-enhanced models achieving 78 per cent diagnostic accuracy compared to 54 per cent for vanilla GPT-4, with some specialist configurations reaching 96.4 per cent.

The technology exists. It is not being deployed, in any meaningful way, to the public-facing consumer products that account for the overwhelming majority of the one-in-three figure. It would slow the products down. It would make them more expensive to run. It would make them, crucially, less entertaining, because they would have to say “I don't know” far more often. Uncertainty is bad for engagement. Engagement is the business.

Regulation: A Map With No Territory

So where, in all of this, is the state?

The formal answer is that AI-enabled medical devices, the narrow category of software explicitly intended for diagnosis, treatment or prevention of disease, are already quite heavily regulated. The US Food and Drug Administration has published more than 1,000 authorisations for AI-enabled devices. The UK's Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency operates a parallel framework. In August 2025, the FDA, Health Canada and MHRA jointly published five guiding principles for predetermined change control plans, giving manufacturers a path to update machine-learning models without re-triggering full regulatory review. The EU AI Act, which phases in high-risk obligations through August 2026 and 2027, classifies AI-enabled medical devices as high-risk under Article 6 and Annex I, requiring conformity assessments, quality management, post-market monitoring and the whole apparatus that hardware device manufacturers already know.

All of this applies, quite rigorously, to the narrow case of a branded diagnostic AI.

None of it applies to ChatGPT answering a question about chest pain.

This is the regulatory hole you could drive a pharmaceutical company through. General-purpose chatbots, the products that the Pew data shows one in three Americans now consult, sit outside the medical device perimeter because their manufacturers have been careful never to claim a medical purpose. OpenAI's terms of service say ChatGPT is not a medical tool. Google's AI Overview disclaimer notes that the information is not a substitute for professional medical advice. Meta's AI is positioned as a general assistant. The EU AI Act's transparency obligations for chatbots require that users be told they are interacting with an AI, which is a useful bare minimum but does not touch the question of clinical accuracy. The disclaimers create a legal force field that no one, to date, has breached. Not the FDA. Not the MHRA. Not the EMA. Not a single successful civil action for harm.

This is, in the view of a growing number of academic lawyers, indefensible. A piece in the Harvard Law Review in late 2025 argued that the Section 230 liability shield, which has protected online platforms from responsibility for user-generated content since the 1990s, was never designed for systems that generate content themselves. Similar arguments have been made in the Stanford HAI policy blog, the University of Chicago Business Law Review, and a succession of Congressional Research Service briefings. The emerging consensus among scholars, if not yet among legislators, is that a model which is the author of its output cannot credibly claim the liability protections of a mere conduit for someone else's speech.

What this means in practice is uncertain. It may mean nothing, for a while. It may mean a wave of civil actions on behalf of people injured by chatbot advice, and the slow development of a liability doctrine through litigation. It may mean, eventually, statutory intervention. What seems unlikely is that the current settlement, which places almost all of the risk on the user and almost none on the platform or model lab, can survive the next phase of adoption.

What Meaningful Accountability Looks Like

If the current settlement is unsustainable, what would a better one look like? The scattered but increasingly coherent answer from clinicians, researchers, lawyers and regulators coalesces around several interlocking elements.

The first is what might be called a duty of epistemic honesty. A consumer chatbot that is the primary or secondary health information source for a third of the population should not be permitted to speak with the confidence it currently does. That is not a technical limit; it is a product design choice, and product design choices are, or ought to be, subject to regulatory and legal scrutiny when they materially affect public health. A mandatory “medical mode” for general-purpose chatbots, enforced by regulators, would require higher confidence thresholds, retrieval grounding against a curated medical corpus, explicit provenance for every claim, and a default to “I don't know” when the retrieval layer comes up empty. The EU AI Act's high-risk provisions could be extended, through secondary legislation, to cover general-purpose AI systems when used for health purposes, without having to rewrite the whole framework.

The second is benchmarking. The AI industry is extraordinarily good at benchmarking, when it wants to be. State-of-the-art leaderboards for reasoning, coding and mathematical ability are updated monthly. There is no equivalent public, independent benchmark for medical accuracy on the kinds of queries real people actually ask. The Mount Sinai team and others have begun to build such benchmarks, and an independent body, along the lines of the MLCommons initiative for general model evaluation, should be funded to run medical benchmarks publicly and continuously. Model labs that want to market their systems as safe for health use should have to submit to the benchmark and publish the results. Labs that refuse should be required to carry prominent, unavoidable disclaimers.

The third is provenance. Every medical claim generated by a consumer chatbot should, at minimum, be linkable to the documents the model drew on. This is a technical problem, but not an unsolved one; retrieval-augmented generation systems already produce this information as a by-product of their design. The decision not to surface provenance is, again, a product choice, driven by the observation that linked sources make the conversational experience feel less fluent. It is the fluency that is the problem. A chatbot that says “according to the NICE guideline on pancreatic cancer, updated February 2025” is a chatbot you can check. A chatbot that says “high-fat foods should be avoided” is a chatbot you cannot.

The fourth is redress. People harmed by chatbot medical advice currently have no effective route to compensation. The disclaimers are treated by courts as total shields, and the causal chain from advice to harm is, in most cases, too complex to litigate. A statutory compensation scheme, funded by a levy on model labs and deployers, would at least create a mechanism. Something closer to the UK's Vaccine Damage Payment Scheme, or the US National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program, could be adapted: a no-fault fund with clear eligibility criteria for a narrow class of cases where chatbot advice materially contributed to serious injury. Such a scheme would not cover the diffuse harms (health anxiety, delayed diagnosis, low-grade wrong self-treatment) that probably matter most in aggregate. But it would establish a principle, which is that the cost of the products is not borne entirely by their victims.

The fifth is the division of responsibility. The current debate tends to collapse into a single question: who is to blame? But blame is not a useful frame, because the answer is genuinely distributed. Platforms that deploy chatbots into health-adjacent contexts (search engines, consumer-facing apps) carry a distinctive responsibility for the user experience and the framing of results. Model labs carry responsibility for training choices, safety mitigations and transparency about limits. Clinicians carry responsibility for talking to their patients about what these tools can and cannot do, and for building AI literacy into routine consultations. Regulators carry responsibility for closing the gap between medical device law and the general-purpose systems that are eating the medical advice market. Users carry the responsibility, one that no regulation can fully discharge, for remembering that a fluent sentence is not a diagnosis. Any credible accountability regime will allocate work across all of these actors rather than picking one.

The Case for Urgency

It is tempting, reading a long article about AI health misinformation, to conclude that this is another slow-motion technological harm, the sort that society will eventually absorb and metabolise. Regulators will catch up. Courts will muddle through. Model labs will bolt on safety features. And, in time, the general level of harm will reach some equilibrium that we will, reluctantly, accept.

The bixonimania result is an argument against this sanguine view. Not because fabricated diseases pose a widespread threat, they do not, nobody is actually being treated for bixonimania, but because they reveal something about the underlying system that would be almost impossible to see with real conditions. Real diseases exist in the training data. When a chatbot describes pancreatic cancer, its output is anchored, however loosely, to real clinical literature. Errors in that output are errors of degree: bad nuance, missing context, outdated guidance. They can be hard to detect precisely because the bulk of the surrounding material is correct. The bixonimania experiment strips that camouflage away. It shows the system behaving exactly the same way for a fabricated input as it does for a real one. The machinery has no internal test for reality. It never did.

If we had to summarise the cumulative message of the Mount Sinai studies, the Mass General Brigham sycophancy work, the Guardian's Overviews investigation, the New York Times' reporting on MEDVi, the Pew and KFF surveys, and Osmanovic Thunström's bixonimania experiment, it would be this: the public has been quietly migrating its health information practice to systems that were not designed for medical safety, that cannot reliably distinguish real from fabricated claims, and that are governed by no meaningful regulatory regime. This migration is happening faster than our institutional reflexes can track. And the harms it produces are not, for the most part, dramatic set-piece cases of the bromism kind. They are low-grade, distributed, and therefore hard to mobilise a political response around.

Which is why the bixonimania finding matters. It is, in a small and carefully engineered way, a dramatic set-piece. It gives us a clean story, a memorable name, and a graspable moral. The doctor that will not say “I don't know” has been handed a stethoscope by a third of the adult population. If that sentence does not alarm you, read it again. If it does, the question is what you, the platforms, the regulators, the clinicians and the labs are going to do about it.

A Last Word on the Word “Mania”

There is a small detail in the bixonimania story that deserves a coda. The name itself was a joke, and a pointed one. Mania is the psychiatric term for elevated, disinhibited mental states, often accompanied by overconfidence and a reduced grasp on reality. An eye condition cannot have mania. But a system can.

The deep worry about large language models in health is not that they occasionally get things wrong. Every source of medical information gets things wrong occasionally, including human doctors. The worry is that the system's confidence is disconnected from its competence, that its fluency obscures its unreliability, and that the scale at which it operates makes even small rates of error into population-level problems. That is not a hallucination in the ordinary sense. It is, to borrow Osmanovic Thunström's quietly devastating framing, a mania. A machine in the grip of its own eloquence.

Accountability, then, is not only a regulatory question. It is a cultural one. It requires us to recalibrate the authority we grant to fluent machines, and to resist the pleasing fiction that a well-formed sentence is the same thing as a true one. That recalibration will not happen spontaneously. It will have to be built, through regulation, through litigation, through research, through design, and through the ordinary discipline of public attention.

Bixonimania is not a real disease. The machine said it was. A great many people believed the machine. That is the story. The rest is what we decide to do about it.


References and Sources

  1. Almira Osmanovic Thunström, bixonimania experiment, University of Gothenburg. Reported in Nature, April 2026. Original preprints published March-April 2024 on open preprint servers.

  2. Cureus (retracted paper citing bixonimania preprints), researchers at the Maharishi Markandeshwar Institute of Medical Sciences and Research. Retraction notice published 2024-2025.

  3. The Guardian, investigation into Google AI Overviews health advice, published January 2026.

  4. Euronews, “Google removes some health-related questions from its AI Overviews following accuracy concerns,” 12 January 2026.

  5. The Lancet Digital Health, Mount Sinai / Icahn School of Medicine study on LLM susceptibility to medical misinformation, 9 February 2026.

  6. Communications Medicine, Mount Sinai earlier study on AI chatbots and medical misinformation, August 2025.

  7. Mount Sinai Newsroom, “Can Medical AI Lie? Large Study Maps How LLMs Handle Health Misinformation,” February 2026.

  8. Dr Danielle Bitterman et al., “When helpfulness backfires: LLMs and the risk of false medical information due to sycophantic behaviour,” npj Digital Medicine, October 2025.

  9. Mass General Brigham press release, “Large Language Models Prioritize Helpfulness Over Accuracy in Medical Contexts,” October 2025.

  10. Pew Research Center, “Where Do Americans Get Health Information, and What Do They Trust?”, 7 April 2026.

  11. Kaiser Family Foundation, “Poll: 1 in 3 Adults Are Turning to AI Chatbots for Health Information,” 2026.

  12. Fierce Healthcare, “85% of US adults still use providers for healthcare information: Pew survey,” April 2026.

  13. Healthcare Dive, “Most health AI users don't rate chatbots as highly accurate: poll,” April 2026.

  14. Annals of Internal Medicine: Clinical Cases, “A Case of Bromism Influenced by Use of Artificial Intelligence,” 2025.

  15. American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO Post), “Study Finds AI Chatbots Are Vulnerable to Spreading Malicious, False Health Information,” June 2025.

  16. PMC, “AI chatbots and (mis)information in public health: impact on vulnerable communities,” 2023. Supporting analysis in Public Health Challenges.

  17. Harvard Law Review, “Beyond Section 230: Principles for AI Governance,” 2025.

  18. US Food and Drug Administration, AI-enabled medical device authorisations list and guidance documentation, 2025-2026.

  19. UK Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA), software as a medical device and AI guidance, 2025-2026.

  20. FDA, Health Canada and MHRA joint publication, “Five Guiding Principles for Predetermined Change Control Plans in ML-enabled Medical Devices,” August 2025.

  21. European Union AI Act, Regulation (EU) 2024/1689, Article 6 and Annex I, in force from August 2026 and August 2027 for high-risk obligations.

  22. Effy Vayena and colleagues, Nature and related commentary on retrieval grounding and medical AI governance.

  23. npj Digital Medicine review, “Retrieval augmented generation for 10 large language models and its generalizability in assessing medical fitness,” 2025.

  24. Drug Discovery and Development, “The New York Times spotlighted MEDVi. The FDA had already warned the self-proclaimed 'fastest growing company in history,'” February 2026.

  25. Centre for Countering Digital Hate, reports on AI-enabled health and vaccine misinformation, 2025-2026.


Tim Green

Tim Green UK-based Systems Theorist & Independent Technology Writer

Tim explores the intersections of artificial intelligence, decentralised cognition, and posthuman ethics. His work, published at smarterarticles.co.uk, challenges dominant narratives of technological progress while proposing interdisciplinary frameworks for collective intelligence and digital stewardship.

His writing has been featured on Ground News and shared by independent researchers across both academic and technological communities.

ORCID: 0009-0002-0156-9795 Email: tim@smarterarticles.co.uk

 
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from Roscoe's Story

In Summary: * Having spent most of the day shadowing contractors here digging a trench to lay a new gas line, I'm relaxing now to the radio pregame show ahead of tonight's Rangers / Yankees game. As yesterday, I'll follow the game with night prayers then head to bed early.

Prayers, etc.: * I have a daily prayer regimen I try to follow throughout the day from early morning, as soon as I roll out of bed, until head hits pillow at night. Details of that regimen are linked to my link tree, which is linked to my profile page here.

Starting Ash Wednesday, 2026, I've added this daily prayer as part of the Prayer Crusade Preceding the 2026 SSPX Episcopal Consecrations.

Health Metrics: * bw= 235.9 lbs. * bp= 145/86 (61)

Exercise: * morning stretches, balance exercises, kegel pelvic floor exercises, half squats, calf raises, wall push-ups

Diet: * 04:40 – 1 banana * 05:00 – 1 peanut butter cookie * 07:00 – 2 chocolate chip cookies * 09:30 – 2 more cookies * 10:00 – 1 ham & cheese sandwich * 12:15 – mashed potatoes and gravy, fried chicken * 14:00 – apple pie, biscuit and jam, hash brown, scrambled eggs, sausage, pancakes

Activities, Chores, etc.: * 03:30 – listen to local news talk radio * 04:15 – bank accounts activity monitored. * 05:40 – read, write, pray, follow news reports from various sources, surf the socials, nap. * 08:00 – contractors arrived and began digging a trench from the meter at a back corner of my house; they'll be installing a new gas line from my house out to the alley * 13:30 – foreman of the crew working on the new gas line project told me they've been called away to finish another job tomorrow, but they plan to be back here on Friday to finish up this job. * 16:20 – listen to the Jack Show * 17:30 – listening now to Rangers Gameday on DFW's 105.3 The Fan Sports Radio ahead of tonight's game against the New York Yankees.

Chess: * 15:47 – moved on all pending CC games

 
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from SFSS

Motion blur of a departing subway train next to a man at Dundas station, Toronto

But eventually, as things go from the lesser of two evils to the ordinary, she’ll end up finding it ordinary.

“What are you wearing?” Helen asked the man at the tree-shaded bus stop, hesitating to sit down next to him on the bench. “What” wasn't the right question. She could see what he was wearing: swim goggles, a football jersey, Crocs, a kilt, a gray hoodie that was too tight on him, knee-length rainbow-striped socks, and a leather cuff around his neck with metal spikes coming out of it. Helen knew at least one person who'd have worn each item in the outfit, but would expect any pair of them to fight to the death if they were ever stuck in a room together.

The man looked down at himself, which was an effective enough way to see everything except the goggles suctioned to his forehead. He was bald, without even eyebrows, but looked too thickset and robust to have just survived cancer. Maybe he was a mental patient, picked out all his own hair... no, there was some on his arms. Surely a mental patient who picked at hair would've gotten that. Or not, Helen didn't know. “A MacGregor plaid kilt,” he said, “a pair of yellow Crocs, a –”

“Never mind,” Helen said.

“Do you know when the next bus that goes to the stop on Ninth Street will be?” he asked her, after a silence.

“Twenty minutes,” she said, after a glance at her watch. “That's where I'm going, too.”

“Really?” he asked. “Are you from that neighborhood? Do you know where Roger Swansea lives?”

Helen tilted her head. “Why are you looking for him?”

The man peered at her, assessment in his eyes. Helen shifted uncomfortably and moved one of her braids behind her ear; plastic ties clicked against each other. She didn't mind when people from her high school checked her out; older men she did mind.

“I suppose it doesn't much matter if I tell you,” the man said finally. “I'd have seen the police report if you were going to call – well – anyway. Swansea's got to die,” he said.

“Has he,” said Helen. She kept her hands on her knees, but shifted her hips so her phone was pressed between her leg and the bench. It was there if she needed it.

“Well, you're not going to believe me,” laughed the man, “but, you see, I'm a time traveler. And Roger Swansea invented a time machine. Not the same kind I used – I'm not stupid, I checked carefully for paradoxes – but today he's going to go forward in time, and he's going to bring forward a disease that they've eradicated and lost resistance to. Hundreds of people are going to die before they can stop it.”

“So you decided to kill him,” Helen said. “Why didn't you kill him – oh – last year? Since you're a time traveler. Why do it now?”

“Paradox checker didn't like it,” the man said. “It said I could go back today – but it made me land in the bathroom of a diner outside town, was as close as I could get to his house by machine. I'm having to bus across to his place. Lucky I was able to print some currency and some clothes from this time.”

“Lucky,” agreed Helen absently. “But why do you have to kill the guy, not just convince him to skip his trip or go in a biohazard suit?”

“Because,” the time traveler said, wagging a finger authoritatively, “history shows that he disappears on this day. If I just convince him to stay, he'll still be around – paradox in the lightcone. If I convince him to go in a biohazard suit... Well, that could actually work. Does he have a biohazard suit?”

“Not as far as I know,” Helen said.

“There you go, it could take him more than a day to get ahold of one, that's probably why the paradox checker didn't say I could do that. It said I could try to kill him just fine, though.”

“Won't you create some kind of paradox in the future he's going to bring the disease to?” Helen asked. “They're in your own past, if I understand right.”

“Not quite,” said the time traveler. “That is to say, Swansea technically landed outside my light cone – they lived on Europa, I'm from out on Argo. The only reason I got the news was via more time travel, and that means I can mess with the events that led to me getting it. It doesn't count if time travel was the only reason it could causally affect you.”

“Uh-huh,” said Helen skeptically.

“How long until the bus gets here?” the time traveler asked.

“Six minutes,” she said, glancing at her wrist. “So you're just going to kill the man. You know he's got a family?”

“I'm going to save hundreds of lives,” said the time traveler.

“In a manner of speaking,” said Helen. She reached into the inside pocket of her coat, pulled out her miniature laser gun, and shot the time traveler between the eyes. He fell off the bench, the look of pious smugness still on his face.

Helen dragged the absurdly-clad body into the trees and took the long way home, rather than let the bus driver get a look at her to be questioned when the time traveler was found. Assuming he wouldn't just evaporate, or something. She didn't know how his sort of time travel worked.

When she'd finally walked the mile and a half, Helen knocked on the door to the basement. “Dad,” she called. “Da-a-ad.”

“I'm busy, Helen!” he shouted up the stairs.

“It's really important!”

“More important than the mess with the matter agitator?”

“I had to shoot a guy again, so about that important,” she said.

Her father came halfway up the stairs. “What, again? Was he going to steal my newest invention too?”

Helen shook her head. “He was going to kill you.”

Her father blinked. “Oh. Well then. Thank you, dear. What was he going to kill me for?”

“Apparently you're going to the future, on Europa?” Helen said, gesturing vaguely. “You're going to give some people a disease? Lots of them will die? The guy wanted to save them.”

“Oh, I see. Well, I won't travel without adequate quarantine, then. And... I suppose if they don't die, then in the future the same person might well be born... mightn't he? Or he'll be prevented altogether, but either way he's unlikely to return to the past and try to kill me, so there is a sense in which you didn't truly... kill... someone who exists... but... How have we not been obliterated by a paradox? Dear, do you know? I was hoping to finish my machine today but if I need to spend all afternoon on math...”

Helen shrugged. “Apparently,” she said, “it's safe if you get the information via time travel.”

“I see. Will I need to brainwash a new therapist for you?” he asked, brow furrowing with concern.

“I think I'm okay,” she said. “Easier the second time. I kind of wish you'd stop attracting assassins, though, Dad.”

“You don't really need to take it upon yourself to protect me, Helen dear,” he said, smiling indulgently. “But thank you.”

“You're welcome, Dad,” Helen said. “Love you.” He took that as a dismissal and turned to go back into the basement, muttering about coefficients. Helen lugged her backpack upstairs and started her homework.

#blume

Creative Commons license

Image: Motion blur of a departing subway train next to a man at Dundas station, Toronto – Randomanian (Creative Commons license)

 
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from wystswolf

BY ELLA WHEELER WILCOX

Wolfinwool · I Love You

I love your lips when they’re wet with wine And red with a wild desire; I love your eyes when the lovelight lies Lit with a passionate fire. I love your arms when the warm white flesh Touches mine in a fond embrace; I love your hair when the strands enmesh Your kisses against my face.

Not for me the cold, calm kiss Of a virgin’s bloodless love; Not for me the saint’s white bliss, Nor the heart of a spotless dove. But give me the love that so freely gives And laughs at the whole world’s blame, With your body so wonderful and warm in my arms, It sets my poor heart aflame.

So kiss me sweet with your warm wet mouth, Still fragrant with ruby wine, And say with a fervor born of the South That your body and soul are mine. Clasp me close in your warm strong arms, While the pale stars shine above, And we’ll live our whole bright lives away In the joys of a living love.


#poetry #wyst

 
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from The Catechetic Converter

photo of Ted Turner from 1985; image in public domain and taken from Wikipedia

“And he’ll get into heaven. He’s a miracle.”

This is a quote from Jane Fonda, from CNN’s obituary of Ted Turner, who died today at the age of 87. I’m struck by the hope in those words, uttered by a woman deeply hated by conservative “Christians” about a man equally loathed.

But Jane Fonda became a Christian. And Ted Turner did more good than probably any of the pastors occupying pulpits in the megachurches of Atlanta, of which there is no shortage of supply.

On the subject of heaven, my mom—while in the depths of our Southern Baptist days, when she was the employee of our church and during one of those swings where the fundamentalists held sway—once said, “I think we’ll be surprised who’s there and who’s not.”

I’ve long held that bit of wisdom dear to my heart.

***

I actually don’t know much about Ted Turner. The Turner name is ubiquitous in the Atlanta area (seen on the bottom of nearly every billboard you pass when driving on the interstate, in addition to all the television networks). I remember when I first went to Atlanta, sometime in 1994. It was the first time I’d ever seen a “real” city (Orlando’s skyline is low due to its proximity to the airports, and more people visit the theme parks many miles away than the actual city center—at least in those days) and I remember the high tech billboards advertising all the Turner networks. Other than this, I knew Turner was the founder of CNN, married to Jane Fonda, and an outspoken atheist. I also knew that he’d claimed to read the Bible many times and that it didn’t make him into a believer—a fact that pastors and teachers in my youth would use in reference to Satan quoting the Bible to Jesus when He was tempted in the wilderness.

But as a result of the hatred certain members of my childhood church directed at him, I came to suspect that he was a person worth learning more about, since it seemed clear that if it was someone my church didn’t like then they were probably a good person, by virtue of the fact my church didn’t like them. From this I learned that Ted Turner was a committed philanthropist, largely dedicated to animal conservation and environmental causes, most notably the reintroduction of bison to the American West.

***

Ted Turner was indirectly responsible for the fostering of my sense of humor.

I remember when Cartoon Network first aired and I watched it nearly all the time. There was a day where I had stayed home with my grandparents. In those days Cartoon Network was just an endless cycle of obscure Hannah Barbera shows. And on this particular day a single episode of Top Cat aired in a constant loop. I kept it on. I remember text eventually scrolling on the bottom of the screen saying that there was a technical issue. I became convinced that it was intentional.

Years later I would read that the staff at Cartoon Network in the early days were bored as hell. They thought they would be able to create new shows. I can easily see these guys looping a single episode of Top Cat for several hours during the middle of the day when practically no one was watching as either a joke or as a means to slack off.

Anyway, the story goes that these Cartoon Network guys approach Ted Turner, begging him to let them make new stuff. Ted’s reply was “we just bought the entire Hannah Barbera catalog, do something with that.” They were given practically zero money, but at least the green light to develop new programming. For creatives, this is grounds for the opportunity for something truly magical and what resulted was maybe the single most subversive television show on cable TV at the time: Space Ghost: Coast to Coast.

I knew Space Ghost. And Birdman. I knew them because my mom insisted on going to the earliest Sunday morning church service and so I would be awakened before the sun on the Lord’s day. I’d put on the TV and, of course, there was nothing on. Except, for some reason, Ted Turner stuck random installments of Space Ghost/Birdman on TBS at that hour. So I’d watch those while my mom attempted to usher me into a shirt and tie for church.

The moment I saw Space Ghost: Coast to Coast I knew I was watching something made by people like me. Yeah, they were older (I was in like eighth grade when it came out), but we were on a similar wavelength. I’ve heard people like Hal Sparks talk about how seeing Monty Python’s Flying Circus made them feel less weird and less alone. That was what Space Ghost did for me.

That show, of course, gave birth to the entire “Adult Swim” aesthetic and ethos—fifteen minute shows with extremely offbeat humor and janky animation.

Cartoon Network would also play a key role in my love of anime through the Toonami block in the afternoons (where I would fall in love with Robotech), which would put anime alongside American shows like Thundercats and allow me to see the connections (those old shows were made in Japanese animation studios).

So, thanks Ted for being a penny-pincher and giving ground to some truly incredible GenX art.

***

Is Ted Turner in heaven? Well, I don’t think too many people are in heaven (aside from the Lord God, Christ Jesus, and the glorified saints and angels). I also tend to think that we all get to heaven, eventually, since heaven is destined to come to earth and the New Jerusalem features gates that never close.

Is Ted Turner experiencing rest? That’s the real question. I’d like to think so. I’d like to believe that his questions are being answered. That he finally understands why his sister suffered, why his dad was such an asshole and that they are finding reconciliation. If you don’t know what I’m talking about, you can read about it in his many obituaries.

What I find most interesting about Ted Turner’s death is how we have a rare billionaire, one who’s death is the grounds for lauds and accolades. A man who is remembered for all the good he tried to do.

At a time where we decry the billionaire class, where we lament with the psalmist about our having to put up with the “indolent rich,” we have Ted Turner. An atheist who ended his speeches with “God bless.” A driven workaholic who lived in his office for 20 years (by his own estimation), who was the second largest landowner in the United States at one point, owning 28 properties. He owned yachts. He fits the description of so many lamented billionaires, yet defies being held in their peer. He was a man who could have done much evil and instead tried to do much good. Even if his media empire and the 24-hour news cycle he created have been co-opted by capitalist greed to foster much harm, it didn’t seem to be Ted’s intent (and from many accounts he was deeply saddened by losing influence over his companies).

Saint Paul writes in Romans:

Gentiles don’t have the Law. But when they instinctively do what the Law requires they are a Law in themselves, though they don’t have the Law. They show the proof of the Law written on their hearts, and their consciences affirm it. Their conflicting thoughts will accuse them, or even make a defense for them, on the day when, according to my gospel, God will judge the hidden truth about human beings through Christ Jesus. (Romans 2:14-16 CEB)

I think about Ted Turner. Here was a man that did good, even as a non-believer, out of a sense of obligation to the wider world. Saint Paul prefaces this section by noting that it is the ones who do the works of the Law that are justified, not those who simply hear it. So Ted read the Bible and it didn’t lead him to become a practicing Christian. But he was raised in an environment that fostered in him a sense of decency and obligation to his neighbors, to be empathetic to others. That’s got to count for something, yeah? Especially when we contrast it with the selfish wealth-hoarding of so many prominent pastors.

Ted Turner is the rare billionaire that inspires at least one prominent Christian to publicly hope that he is heaven-bound. I share in that hope too.

Rest in peace Ted.


The Rev. Charles Browning II is the rector of Saint Mary’s Episcopal Church in Honolulu, Hawai’i. He is a husband, father, surfer, and frequent over-thinker. Follow him on Mastodon and Pixelfed.

#TedTurner #Faith #Christianity #CartoonNetwork #Theology #death

 
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