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Roscoe's Story
In Summary: * One happy, surprisingly sports-heavy Wednesday moves right along. This afternoon I followed two games simultaneously: 1.) The IU Hoosiers Women's Basktball Team played their first game in the Big Ten Championship Tournament and came back from a twenty point deficit to beat Nebraska 72 to 69. and, 2.) My Texas Rngers played the Brazil National Team in an exhibition game ahead of the World Baseball Classic and won by a score of 13 to 2. I'm now listening to the pregame show ahead of the IU Hoosiers Men's Basketball Senior Night Game against the Minnesota Golden Gophers. This game will take me very close to my bedtime.
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= 230.49 * bp= 142/85 (68)
Exercise: * morning stretches, balance exercises, kegel pelvic floor exercises, half squats, calf raises, wall push-ups
Diet: * 06:10 – ½ ham and cheese sandwich, 2 cookies, 1 banana * 06:55 – pizza, cole slaw * 10:00 – 2 more cookies * 12:00 – garden salad, white cake
Activities, Chores, etc.: * 04:15 – listen to local news talk radio * 05:00 – bank accounts activity monitored * 05:10 – read, pray, follow news reports from various sources, surf the socials, and nap * 11:00 – listen to the Markley, van Camp and Robbins Show * 13:00 – prayerfully read the Pre-1955 Mass Propers for today's Mass for St. Casimir, Confessor, March 04, 2026. * 13:30 – listen to relaxing music * 14:05 – Now following the Brazil National Team vs the Texas Rangers MLB, World Baseball Classic Exhibition Game. No broadcast available, no audio available, all I have are the game stats and text summaries presented live via the MLB Gameday screen. Interesting. Game is tied 1 to 1 in the bottom of the 1st inning now. * 16:35 – Rangers win! Final score: Brazil 2 – Rangers 13. GO RANGERS! * 16:40 – tuned in now to the Flagship Station for IU Sports ahead of the men's basketball game tonight between the IU Hoosiers and the Minnesota Golden Gophers.
Chess: * 10:20 – moved in all pending CC games
from Douglas Vandergraph
There are seasons in life when everything feels quiet, heavy, and strangely unresolved, as if the story you thought would move forward has paused in a long and uncomfortable silence. Many people know exactly what this feels like, because they have lived through nights that seemed longer than they should have been, nights where effort was poured out but nothing seemed to come back in return. You can work hard, pray hard, and believe deeply, yet still find yourself standing in the middle of a moment where the nets appear empty and the future appears uncertain. These are the moments when doubt begins whispering questions into the back of your mind, asking whether anything meaningful is actually changing at all. Yet when we look carefully at the patterns woven throughout Scripture, we begin to see something extraordinary that most people overlook while they are living through their difficult seasons. The moments that appear empty are often the moments God is quietly preparing something larger than we could have imagined. What feels like a pause to us is often preparation to Him, and what feels like a delay to us is often divine alignment unfolding in ways we cannot yet see.
The story of Peter on the Sea of Galilee is one of the most powerful examples of this pattern, because it begins exactly where many people find themselves today. Peter was not standing on a stage delivering a sermon when his breakthrough came, and he was not experiencing a moment of spiritual triumph when everything changed. Instead, Peter was exhausted, discouraged, and finished with a night that had produced absolutely nothing. The waters that normally provided his livelihood had betrayed his expectations, and the nets that normally brought life and provision into his boat had come up empty again and again. Anyone who has worked hard toward something understands the weight of that kind of disappointment, because effort without reward can begin to feel like failure. Peter and his companions had spent the entire night doing what they knew how to do best, and when morning arrived they had nothing to show for it. They were not celebrating success when Jesus approached the shoreline that morning. They were washing empty nets, preparing to put away the tools of a night that had delivered nothing.
It is fascinating that Jesus often steps into people’s lives at precisely that moment, when they believe the opportunity has already passed and the work has already been completed. Jesus did not show up while Peter was still fishing with confidence under the stars. He appeared when the night was already over and when Peter had already concluded that the effort had failed. That detail alone reveals something profound about the way heaven operates, because God is never limited by the timeline that human frustration tries to impose. Peter believed the fishing season for that night had ended, yet Jesus saw a moment that was only beginning. When Jesus stepped into Peter’s boat, He was not responding to success. He was responding to exhaustion, to disappointment, and to a man who had every reason to believe the opportunity was gone. What Peter did not realize in that moment was that heaven had already issued an announcement over his life, even though the shoreline still looked ordinary and the nets still looked empty.
Many people today are standing exactly where Peter stood that morning, although their boats and nets look different in modern life. Some people have been working toward a dream that feels as though it has stalled in the water. Others have been praying for change that seems to take longer than expected. Some have been carrying quiet burdens that nobody else sees, waking up day after day with faith in their hearts but questions lingering in their minds. When you walk through seasons like this, it is easy to believe that nothing significant is happening behind the scenes. Yet the story unfolding on the Sea of Galilee reminds us that the silence of the moment does not mean heaven has forgotten your name. Often the most powerful turning points in life are already forming long before anyone recognizes them.
When Jesus asked Peter to push the boat back out into the water, the request must have sounded strange at first. Professional fishermen understand the patterns of the lake, and Peter had already spent the entire night working those patterns without success. The daylight hours were not normally the time when fishermen expected to catch anything significant, especially after an unsuccessful night. Yet Jesus asked Peter to do something that required trust beyond the evidence of the moment. Peter’s response reveals a beautiful mixture of honesty and faith, because he did not pretend the situation made sense. He acknowledged that the night had produced nothing, yet he still chose to obey the voice standing in his boat. That small decision to try again, even when logic suggested otherwise, became the doorway to one of the most dramatic moments in the Gospel narratives.
There is something deeply meaningful about the fact that Peter obeyed even though he was tired. Faith is often portrayed as a heroic emotional surge, but in real life it frequently looks much quieter than that. Sometimes faith simply means choosing to move forward when your emotions are worn out and your understanding is incomplete. Peter was not overflowing with confidence when he pushed the boat back onto the water. He was responding to a voice he trusted, even though the circumstances around him had not changed. That single act of obedience positioned him directly in the path of a miracle he could not have created on his own.
The moment that followed became unforgettable, because the nets that had hung empty through the entire night suddenly became impossibly full. Fish filled the nets to such an overwhelming degree that the fabric began to strain under the weight of abundance. Boats that had been sitting quietly near the shore suddenly rushed out to help, because the catch was too large for one vessel to carry alone. The same lake that had felt silent and unproductive only moments earlier suddenly erupted into one of the greatest catches Peter had ever seen. In a single instant, the story of that night transformed from frustration into overflow.
What is remarkable about this moment is that the miracle did not begin with new fishing skills or a different location on the lake. It began with timing that only Jesus could see. Peter had spent hours doing everything he knew to do, yet the breakthrough arrived when he followed a voice that understood the deeper rhythms of creation itself. That moment reminds us that our effort is important, but the true shift in life often comes when heaven aligns circumstances in ways we cannot predict. There are moments when God simply decides that the season of waiting has completed its work.
Many people spend years believing their empty nets represent failure, when in reality those empty nets were part of preparation. Imagine if Peter had experienced success earlier that night before Jesus arrived. He might have returned to shore satisfied with a normal catch, never realizing that a divine encounter was waiting for him just beyond his disappointment. The empty nets positioned Peter exactly where he needed to be when Jesus stepped into his boat. What looked like a frustrating night was actually the setup for a moment that would change his life forever.
This pattern appears again and again throughout the story of God’s work in human lives. Joseph experienced betrayal and imprisonment before stepping into leadership that saved nations from famine. David spent years tending sheep and running from danger before sitting on the throne of Israel. Moses spent decades in the quiet wilderness before leading an entire people toward freedom. In each case, the waiting seasons were not wasted years. They were preparation seasons that shaped the hearts and character required for what came next.
The same truth continues to unfold in the lives of believers today. You may not be standing on the shore of the Sea of Galilee with nets draped across your shoulders, but you may be standing in a season that feels remarkably similar. You may have poured effort into something that did not yet produce the results you hoped for. You may have prayed for doors that have not opened on your preferred timeline. You may even feel like Peter did that morning, quietly washing the nets and wondering whether the night meant anything at all. Yet heaven often works through exactly those moments, because God knows how to transform the end of a frustrating chapter into the beginning of a completely different story.
The announcement from heaven rarely arrives with thunder or spectacle in the beginning. It often arrives as a quiet invitation to try once more, to step back into the water, or to trust a direction that does not fully match the evidence in front of you. That invitation may appear small at first, but it carries the potential to unlock something extraordinary. When God declares that your life is about to move into a new season, the shift often begins with a single act of faith that places you back into the water.
Peter could not see the fish gathering beneath the surface when he lowered the nets again. The lake still looked exactly the same from the outside. The water did not glow with visible signs of abundance, and the horizon did not announce what was about to happen. From Peter’s perspective, the conditions appeared unchanged. Yet beneath that surface, something had already shifted.
That is how many divine turning points unfold. Long before the breakthrough becomes visible, the conditions beneath the surface have already been rearranged. God often begins moving pieces into place while life still looks ordinary to everyone else. The nets may still appear empty in the moment, but heaven may already be filling the waters with something that will soon change everything.
As the nets sank beneath the surface that morning on the Sea of Galilee, Peter had no visible proof that anything different would happen this time. The water did not suddenly sparkle with signs of a miracle, and the horizon did not shift to signal a dramatic moment about to unfold. Everything about the scene still looked ordinary to the human eye. Yet beneath that calm surface, something had already begun to change in ways Peter could not possibly see. Fish were gathering in numbers that defied explanation, drawn into a moment that heaven had already decided would become unforgettable. The lake that had seemed empty for an entire night was quietly preparing to release an abundance that would overwhelm the very nets Peter had just finished cleaning. That moment reminds us of a truth that runs through every page of Scripture and every chapter of real life: the most important movements of God often begin long before the evidence becomes visible. By the time the miracle appears in front of you, heaven has usually been working behind the scenes for longer than you realized.
There is a profound spiritual lesson hidden inside that simple fishing scene, because many people walk through seasons where nothing on the surface appears to be changing. You can pray faithfully, work diligently, and continue believing with all your heart, yet life sometimes still feels like that long night Peter experienced on the water. It can feel as though the nets are being lowered again and again with little to show for the effort. During those seasons, the mind begins asking difficult questions about timing and purpose. The human heart naturally wonders whether the breakthrough will ever arrive or whether the silence will continue indefinitely. Yet the story of Peter’s overflowing nets reminds us that God’s timing operates on a completely different rhythm than our frustration. The night of emptiness was not proof that Peter’s future would remain empty. It was simply the final chapter of one season before the opening line of another.
When the nets finally tightened with the sudden weight of fish, the transformation was immediate and undeniable. What had begun as a reluctant act of obedience quickly became a moment of astonishment that rippled across the water. The fishermen struggled to pull the nets upward as the catch threatened to tear the ropes apart. Boats that had been resting peacefully near the shore were suddenly summoned into action, racing toward Peter’s vessel to help manage the overwhelming abundance. The same lake that had refused to yield a single catch during the entire night suddenly released more fish than the fishermen could comfortably carry. That dramatic shift was not just about fish filling nets. It was a visible demonstration that heaven can change a situation faster than human expectations can adjust.
Imagine the emotions that must have surged through Peter in that moment. Only minutes earlier he had been cleaning his nets, preparing to close the chapter on a disappointing night. Now he was watching the very same nets strain under a blessing so large it threatened to break them apart. The difference between those two moments was not hours or days. It was the presence and direction of Jesus. One moment Peter was operating on his own understanding of the lake, and the next moment he was participating in something orchestrated by heaven itself. That sudden transformation carries a message that still echoes across generations of believers today. God can shift the trajectory of a life in a moment when the time for breakthrough arrives.
Many people underestimate how close they may be to that kind of turning point. It is easy to believe that nothing meaningful is happening when the nets keep coming up empty. Yet the truth is that God often uses those quiet seasons to shape the character required for the blessings that follow. Waiting has a way of deepening humility, strengthening perseverance, and refining faith until it becomes something steady and resilient. Those qualities are not wasted experiences. They become the foundation that allows someone to carry greater responsibility and greater influence when the doors finally open. Peter’s night of disappointment did not disqualify him from the miracle. It prepared him to recognize the significance of what Jesus was doing in his boat.
Another remarkable element of this story is the way Peter responded when the miracle unfolded in front of him. As the fish filled the nets and the boats struggled under the weight of abundance, Peter did not begin boasting about his fishing skills. Instead, he fell to his knees in awe of the One who had orchestrated the moment. That response reveals something essential about the heart that God is able to elevate into greater purpose. When someone understands that the breakthrough comes from heaven, humility naturally replaces pride. Peter realized that the overflowing nets were not simply about fish. They were a sign that the man standing in his boat carried authority far beyond the waters of Galilee.
That moment of humility opened the door to an even greater transformation in Peter’s life. Jesus looked at the fisherman who had spent his life casting nets into the sea and spoke words that would reshape his entire future. From that day forward, Peter would no longer spend his life chasing fish through the water. Instead, he would become a fisher of people, drawing hearts toward the message of hope that would spread across the world. The miracle of the nets was not the final destination of Peter’s story. It was the doorway that led him into a calling far greater than anything he had imagined while washing his nets on the shore.
The same principle continues to unfold in the lives of believers today. Sometimes the breakthrough you are praying for is not merely about the blessing itself. It may also be preparing you for a calling that extends far beyond what you originally envisioned. The promotion, the opportunity, the restoration, or the open door may be part of a larger purpose that God intends to unfold through your life. Just as Peter’s overflowing nets led him toward a life of influence that would shape the early church, your own moments of breakthrough may position you to impact people in ways you cannot yet foresee. God often uses visible blessings as stepping stones toward deeper assignments.
That is why the waiting seasons carry so much significance, even when they feel frustrating in the moment. During those quieter chapters, God is often strengthening the internal qualities that will allow someone to handle the next level of responsibility. Character, humility, patience, and faith are not developed overnight. They are forged through experiences that stretch the soul and teach the heart to trust beyond what the eyes can see. When heaven finally releases the next chapter, the person who has walked through that preparation season stands ready to carry the weight of what is coming.
Think again about the moment when Peter first lowered those nets at Jesus’ instruction. The water still looked the same, the lake still felt quiet, and the circumstances still appeared unchanged. Yet beneath that surface, something extraordinary had already begun gathering. That same reality may be unfolding in your life right now. You may be standing in a season that looks ordinary from the outside, yet heaven may already be arranging circumstances that will soon bring a shift you did not expect. The breakthrough may not announce itself with warning. It may arrive suddenly, just as the nets tightened in Peter’s hands.
The message woven through this story is one of hope for anyone who has been waiting through a difficult season. If you have walked through pain, endured uncertainty, or spent nights wondering whether your efforts matter, the story of the Sea of Galilee carries a powerful reminder. The night does not have the final word in the life of someone who continues listening for the voice of Jesus. What looks like an ending may actually be the final preparation before the morning of overflow. What looks like empty nets may simply be the moment before they are filled beyond expectation.
There are moments in life when heaven quietly declares that a new chapter is about to begin. Those declarations are not always accompanied by dramatic signs in the beginning, but they unfold through circumstances that shift in ways only God can orchestrate. The doors that once seemed closed begin to open. Opportunities appear that did not exist before. Strength returns where exhaustion once lived. Direction emerges where confusion once lingered. When that shift arrives, it becomes clear that the waiting season was never wasted time. It was preparation for something greater.
If you are standing in a moment where the nets still feel empty, do not assume that the story has reached its conclusion. The same God who filled Peter’s nets in a single moment still moves in ways that surprise the people who trust Him. The seasons of waiting often carry hidden purpose, shaping the heart and positioning the soul for what comes next. The night may have been long, but the morning of overflow can arrive faster than you expect.
Your life may be standing at the edge of a moment very similar to the one Peter experienced that morning. Heaven may already be preparing the waters beneath the surface, gathering the circumstances that will soon create a shift you did not see coming. The announcement from heaven may already be echoing quietly over your future: get ready, because the next chapter is about to begin. The empty nets will not define your story forever. The waiting will not last forever. The same God who turned a night of failure into a moment of overflowing abundance still knows how to do the same thing today.
When that moment arrives, you may look back on the nights of struggle with a completely different perspective. What once felt like disappointment may reveal itself as preparation. What once felt like delay may reveal itself as divine timing unfolding exactly when it needed to. The lake may have seemed silent for a while, but heaven never stopped working beneath the surface. The nets that once hung empty may soon be filled beyond what you thought possible.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph
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from Douglas Vandergraph
When people first read Hebrews chapter six, many of them feel an immediate tension rising inside their hearts because the words seem unusually serious, almost startling in their tone compared with the comforting passages many believers are used to hearing. This chapter does not simply offer encouragement or poetic reassurance. Instead, it reaches directly into the deeper territory of spiritual responsibility, maturity, and the quiet but very real danger of remaining spiritually stagnant. The writer of Hebrews is speaking to people who have already encountered the truth of Christ, people who are not beginners in the sense of having never heard the message of salvation, yet who have somehow found themselves lingering in a middle ground between spiritual infancy and full spiritual maturity. That middle ground is where the message of Hebrews six unfolds, and it is a place that many modern believers unknowingly occupy. It is not the place of open rebellion against God, nor is it the place of vibrant, growing faith. Instead, it is the place of hesitation, delay, spiritual laziness, and the quiet assumption that hearing the truth is the same as growing in it. Hebrews six steps into that dangerous territory and speaks with a clarity that refuses to soften the truth, because the stakes involved in spiritual maturity are far greater than most people realize.
To understand what the writer of Hebrews is doing in this chapter, it helps to remember what has just happened in the previous chapter. In the closing portion of Hebrews five, the author gently but firmly confronts the audience for remaining spiritually immature even though they have had enough time to grow. The metaphor used there is the difference between milk and solid food. Milk is for infants, the beginning stage of nourishment when someone is still learning the basics, still forming their earliest understanding of truth. Solid food, however, belongs to those who have matured, those who have trained their senses through experience to recognize what is good and what is evil. When the writer moves into Hebrews six, he does not abandon that metaphor. Instead, he builds directly upon it, almost like a teacher who is gently but firmly guiding a class forward into deeper understanding. The message begins with a call that is both simple and profound. The writer urges the readers to leave behind the elementary teachings about Christ and move forward into maturity. This does not mean abandoning foundational truths. It means building upon them rather than endlessly circling around them.
There is something deeply revealing about the specific foundational teachings that are mentioned in the opening verses of Hebrews six. The writer lists things like repentance from dead works, faith toward God, instruction about baptisms, the laying on of hands, the resurrection of the dead, and eternal judgment. These are not minor ideas within the Christian faith. They are the building blocks of the entire structure. Yet the writer treats them as foundational principles that believers are meant to move beyond in their development. This does not mean they become unimportant. On the contrary, foundations are essential. But foundations are never meant to be the final destination of a building. Imagine someone pouring a foundation for a house and then spending the rest of their life standing on that concrete slab without ever building the walls, the roof, or the rooms that the foundation was meant to support. The foundation would still be there, but the purpose behind it would remain unfinished. Hebrews six challenges believers to recognize that the early teachings of the faith were always meant to lead somewhere deeper.
One of the quiet tragedies within modern faith communities is that many believers spend their entire spiritual lives circling the same introductory truths without ever moving deeper into the living experience of transformation that those truths were meant to produce. Sermons repeat the same introductory themes. Conversations return again and again to the same beginning-level questions. Entire communities sometimes find themselves spiritually parked in the same place year after year, comforted by familiarity but untouched by real growth. Hebrews six confronts that pattern head on. The call to move forward into maturity is not a suggestion. It is presented as a necessary step in the life of faith. Growth is the natural direction of life, and spiritual life is no exception. Just as a child is meant to grow into adulthood, faith is meant to grow into depth, strength, and discernment.
Then the tone of the chapter shifts into one of the most discussed and often misunderstood passages in the New Testament. The writer describes those who have once been enlightened, who have tasted the heavenly gift, who have shared in the Holy Spirit, who have tasted the goodness of the word of God and the powers of the coming age, and yet who fall away. The language used here is incredibly vivid, and for centuries believers have wrestled with what exactly this passage means. Some readers immediately fear that it suggests a believer can lose salvation in a way that can never be restored. Others attempt to soften the passage by arguing that the individuals described were never truly believers at all. Yet the power of the passage does not come from forcing it into one theological box or another. Its power comes from the warning it delivers about the seriousness of encountering truth and then walking away from it.
The writer of Hebrews is not describing someone who simply heard about Christ once and dismissed the idea. The description here is far deeper than that. The people described have experienced illumination. They have tasted the heavenly gift. They have shared in the Holy Spirit. They have tasted the goodness of God's word and glimpsed the powers of the coming age. These are descriptions of profound exposure to the reality of God. This is the language of spiritual experience, spiritual awakening, and spiritual participation. The warning that follows is not directed toward casual observers of faith but toward those who have genuinely encountered its power. The danger lies in treating those experiences lightly, allowing familiarity to dull their significance, and gradually drifting away from the very truth that once illuminated the heart.
To understand the weight of this warning, it helps to consider how the human heart often responds to repeated exposure to truth. The first time someone encounters a powerful idea, it can feel electrifying. The second time it feels familiar. The third time it begins to feel ordinary. Over time the extraordinary can slowly become routine. Spiritual truths are not immune to this process. When someone first encounters the message of Christ, there is often a sense of wonder, a sense of discovery, a sense that something profoundly important has entered their life. But if that experience is not followed by continued growth, reflection, and obedience, the sense of wonder can gradually fade. What was once alive can become background noise. Hebrews six warns that when people repeatedly encounter the truth of God without allowing it to transform them, their hearts can slowly become hardened to the very message that once awakened them.
The imagery used in the following verses helps illuminate this warning in a powerful way. The writer compares the human heart to land that receives rain. Rain falls on the ground again and again. When the land produces useful crops, it receives blessing from God. But when the land produces only thorns and thistles, it becomes worthless and faces the possibility of being burned. This metaphor reveals something important about spiritual life. The rain represents the blessings and opportunities that come from encountering the truth of God. The land represents the human heart. The key question is not whether the rain falls, because the rain falls generously. The question is what the land produces in response to that rain. Some hearts respond with growth, fruit, and transformation. Other hearts respond with resistance, indifference, or stagnation.
This agricultural imagery would have been deeply familiar to the original audience of Hebrews. In ancient agrarian societies, people understood that land could not remain neutral forever. Land that receives rain but produces nothing useful eventually becomes overgrown with weeds. Neglect leads to decline. The same principle applies spiritually. Faith that receives truth but does not cultivate it eventually drifts toward spiritual barrenness. Hebrews six is not describing a sudden collapse of faith. It is describing the slow erosion that occurs when spiritual growth is ignored. The warning is meant to wake people up before that erosion reaches a point where the heart becomes resistant to transformation.
Yet even within this serious warning, the writer does not abandon hope. Immediately after delivering one of the most sobering passages in the New Testament, the tone softens with words of reassurance. The writer expresses confidence that the audience is capable of better things, things that accompany salvation. This shift reveals something important about the purpose behind the warning. The goal is not condemnation. The goal is awakening. The writer is not declaring that the audience has already fallen into the worst possible spiritual condition. Instead, he is urging them to recognize the path they are on and to choose a different direction before it is too late.
One of the most beautiful aspects of Hebrews six appears in the way the writer reminds the audience of God's character. The passage declares that God is not unjust. He does not forget the work and love shown in His name when believers serve others and continue serving them. This reminder matters because spiritual growth is not merely about theological understanding. It is also about the lived expression of love. The early believers addressed in Hebrews were known for their acts of compassion and service. They had helped fellow believers during difficult times. They had demonstrated genuine care for others. The writer encourages them to continue in that path, to maintain the same diligence so that their hope may be fully realized.
This encouragement reveals a powerful truth about spiritual maturity. Growth in faith is not only about learning more ideas. It is about developing perseverance. The writer urges the readers not to become sluggish but to imitate those who through faith and patience inherit the promises of God. Faith and patience are presented as twin companions on the journey toward maturity. Faith provides the vision that sees God's promises. Patience provides the endurance that continues walking even when fulfillment seems distant. Together they form the rhythm of a mature spiritual life.
At this point in the chapter, the writer introduces one of the most powerful examples from the history of faith, the story of Abraham. Abraham represents the long arc of patient trust in God's promises. When God made a promise to Abraham, there was no greater authority by which God could swear an oath, so God swore by Himself. This detail may seem small at first glance, but it carries enormous significance. In ancient cultures, oaths were sworn by something greater than the person making the promise. By swearing by Himself, God demonstrates that His own character is the ultimate guarantee behind His promises. There is no higher authority that could validate His word because His word already stands as the highest authority.
The story of Abraham reveals something essential about the nature of God's promises. Abraham did not receive immediate fulfillment of everything God had spoken. Instead, he waited. He trusted. He continued walking forward even when the timeline stretched longer than expected. Hebrews six reminds readers that after waiting patiently, Abraham obtained the promise. This reminder is not simply historical information. It is an invitation to see faith through the lens of endurance rather than instant results. Many believers today live in a culture that expects immediate outcomes. But the kingdom of God often unfolds through seasons of waiting, growth, and quiet perseverance.
The writer then introduces a concept that becomes one of the most comforting images in the entire chapter, the idea of hope as an anchor for the soul. An anchor provides stability when the waters are turbulent. It holds a vessel steady when storms attempt to push it off course. The hope described in Hebrews six is not a vague wish for things to work out. It is a confident trust grounded in the character of God and the work of Christ. This hope anchors the soul because it reaches beyond present circumstances and connects the believer to something unshakable.
As the final portion of Hebrews chapter six unfolds, the writer moves from warning into one of the most stabilizing and hope-filled images in the entire New Testament, and understanding this shift is essential if we are going to grasp the true heartbeat of the chapter. Many readers remember the warning passages of Hebrews six because they are intense and sobering, but the destination of the chapter is not fear. The destination is confidence. The author is carefully guiding the reader through the seriousness of spiritual stagnation in order to arrive at the unshakeable security that exists in the promises of God. In many ways the entire chapter operates like a journey that begins with a wake-up call and ends with a profound reassurance. The writer wants believers to grow up, to move forward, to take their faith seriously, but he also wants them to understand that the foundation beneath their faith is not fragile human effort but the faithful character of God Himself.
The passage continues by explaining something that would have been immediately recognizable to the ancient audience. When people make promises to one another, they often reinforce those promises by swearing an oath. The oath is meant to remove uncertainty and confirm that the promise is binding. In human relationships this kind of confirmation is necessary because people know that human promises are not always reliable. The writer of Hebrews acknowledges this cultural practice and then does something remarkable with it. He explains that when God made His promise to Abraham, He confirmed it with an oath, not because God needed reinforcement in order to keep His word, but because human beings need reassurance in order to trust it. The oath was given as an act of mercy toward human weakness. God knew that people struggle with doubt, uncertainty, and fear, so He established His promise in a way that would leave no room for confusion about His intentions.
The passage goes even deeper by declaring that it is impossible for God to lie. This statement is not simply a moral observation about God behaving truthfully. It is a declaration about the nature of God's character. Everything about God is rooted in truth. His promises do not exist alongside the possibility of deception because deception is incompatible with who He is. When God speaks, His words are not merely hopeful projections about the future. They are declarations that carry the weight of divine certainty. This is why the writer emphasizes that believers who have fled to take hold of the hope set before them can have strong encouragement. The strength of that encouragement does not come from the believer's ability to hold tightly to faith. It comes from the unbreakable reliability of the One who made the promise in the first place.
At this point the writer introduces one of the most powerful metaphors in the entire letter, the description of hope as an anchor for the soul. Anyone who has spent time near the sea understands the purpose of an anchor. When waves begin to rise and currents attempt to push a vessel away from its intended position, the anchor reaches down into something solid and holds the vessel steady. Without that anchor the ship becomes vulnerable to drifting wherever the currents decide to carry it. The writer of Hebrews uses this image to explain the role of hope in the life of faith. The Christian hope is not a fragile emotion that changes with circumstances. It is a stabilizing force that connects the believer to something far more secure than the shifting conditions of life.
The remarkable detail about this anchor is the direction in which it is cast. Normally an anchor drops downward into the depths of the sea, but the anchor described in Hebrews six reaches upward into heaven itself. The text says that this hope enters the inner sanctuary behind the curtain. This imagery comes directly from the layout of the ancient temple, where the most sacred space was the Holy of Holies, the inner sanctuary separated by a curtain. Only the high priest could enter that space, and even then it was only once each year on the Day of Atonement. That inner sanctuary represented the place where the presence of God was most intensely revealed. By describing hope as entering behind the curtain, the writer is declaring something astonishing about the position of believers in relation to God.
Through the work of Christ, the barrier that once separated humanity from the direct presence of God has been opened. Hope is no longer anchored in earthly systems, religious rituals, or human achievements. It is anchored in the very presence of God Himself. This means that the stability of the believer's faith is not determined by external circumstances but by the unchanging nature of God. Storms may rage, doubts may appear, and seasons of uncertainty may come and go, but the anchor remains fixed in the one place that cannot be shaken. The entire point of the metaphor is to shift the believer's focus away from the instability of life toward the permanence of God's promises.
The writer then introduces a final, crucial detail that ties the entire chapter together. He explains that Jesus has entered this inner sanctuary as a forerunner on our behalf. The word forerunner carries the sense of someone who goes ahead in order to prepare the way for others to follow. In ancient maritime culture the term could refer to a small boat that carried an anchor into the harbor before the larger ship arrived. By placing the anchor securely in the harbor, the forerunner ensured that the larger vessel could safely enter and remain steady. The writer of Hebrews uses this image to describe what Jesus has done for humanity. Christ has gone ahead of us into the presence of God, securing a place where our hope can remain firmly anchored.
This idea transforms the way believers understand their relationship with God. Faith is not a lonely journey in which individuals struggle to reach heaven on their own strength. Instead, Christ has already gone before us, establishing access to the very place where God's presence dwells. The anchor of hope is not something believers throw into the unknown hoping it will catch. It is already secured by the work of Christ. The believer's task is not to create hope but to hold onto the hope that has already been established through Him.
The chapter concludes by identifying Jesus as a high priest forever in the order of Melchizedek, a mysterious figure who will be explored more deeply in the following chapter. For the moment, however, the significance lies in the permanence of Christ's priesthood. The priests of the old covenant served temporarily and were replaced by others when their lives ended. Their work had limits because they were human. Jesus, however, holds a priesthood that does not expire. His role as the mediator between humanity and God continues eternally. This means that the access believers have to God is not dependent on temporary systems or shifting human leaders. It rests on the eternal work of Christ.
When the entire chapter of Hebrews six is viewed together, a remarkable pattern emerges. The chapter begins with a call to leave behind spiritual infancy and move toward maturity. It warns about the danger of encountering the truth of God without allowing that truth to transform the heart. It uses vivid imagery to describe how repeated exposure to God's blessings should produce spiritual fruit rather than stagnation. Yet after presenting these warnings, the chapter steadily builds toward a breathtaking declaration of hope. God's promises are secure because they rest on His unchanging character. The hope of believers is stable because it is anchored in the very presence of God. And the path into that presence has been opened by Jesus Himself, who has gone before us as our eternal high priest.
This balance between warning and reassurance reveals something important about the nature of spiritual growth. True maturity does not emerge from fear alone, nor does it emerge from comfort alone. It grows when believers take seriously both the responsibility of responding to God's truth and the security of trusting God's faithfulness. Hebrews six calls believers to wake up from spiritual complacency, but it also reminds them that their hope does not depend on their ability to achieve perfection. The anchor of the soul has already been secured by Christ. Spiritual maturity grows when believers respond to that reality with perseverance, gratitude, and a deepening trust in the promises of God.
In the modern world it is easy for people to become distracted by endless noise, endless information, and endless opinions about faith. Conversations about religion often drift into debates, speculation, and intellectual puzzles that never touch the deeper transformation the Gospel was meant to produce. Hebrews six quietly cuts through that noise with a message that remains just as relevant today as it was when it was first written. Do not remain spiritually stagnant. Do not treat the truth of God casually. Move forward into maturity. Cultivate the kind of faith that produces fruit. And above all, anchor your hope not in temporary circumstances but in the eternal promise secured by Christ.
Every believer eventually faces moments when faith feels tested, when doubts whisper quietly in the background, and when the path forward seems uncertain. Hebrews six speaks directly into those moments by reminding us that the foundation of our hope does not shift with our emotions or circumstances. The anchor remains in place even when the waters grow rough. The presence of God remains open because Christ has already entered there on our behalf. The promises of God remain trustworthy because His character cannot change. When believers grasp this reality, faith moves beyond fragile optimism and becomes a steady confidence rooted in something far greater than human strength.
The call of Hebrews six therefore echoes across centuries as both a challenge and an invitation. It challenges believers to grow, to move beyond the comfort of spiritual infancy, and to allow the truth of God to shape their lives in deeper ways. At the same time it invites them to rest in the security of a hope that cannot be shaken. The anchor has already been placed. The path into the presence of God has already been opened. The promise has already been confirmed by the unchanging character of God Himself. All that remains is for believers to continue walking forward with patience, faith, and a heart that refuses to settle for anything less than the fullness of spiritual maturity.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph
Watch Douglas Vandergraph’s inspiring faith-based videos on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@douglasvandergraph
Support the ministry by buying Douglas a coffee https://www.buymeacoffee.com/douglasvandergraph
Donations to help keep this Ministry active daily can be mailed to:
Douglas Vandergraph Po Box 271154 Fort Collins, Colorado 80527
from Douglas Vandergraph
There is a subtle but powerful pattern that unfolds again and again in the Gospel accounts, and once you notice it, you begin to see it everywhere in the life and ministry of Jesus. People often approach Him thinking they are about to hear a short teaching, a simple insight, or a quick word of encouragement before returning to their ordinary routines. They show up the way people show up to many things in life, expecting a brief interruption before getting back to what they were doing. Yet something entirely different begins to happen the moment Jesus opens His mouth and begins to speak. Time stretches. Conversations deepen. Hearts begin to open in ways that surprise the very people who came to listen. What started as a brief moment becomes an unfolding encounter that grows larger, richer, and more transformative than anyone expected when the day began.
The crowds that followed Jesus throughout Galilee and Judea quickly discovered that listening to Him was not like attending any ordinary gathering of teachers or rabbis. His words carried a depth that reached past the surface of everyday thinking and moved directly into the hidden places of the human soul. People did not simply hear information when Jesus taught; they experienced revelation that reshaped how they saw God, themselves, and the entire world around them. His stories sounded simple on the surface, yet inside those stories lived truths powerful enough to shift the direction of a person’s life forever. What began as curiosity often turned into a moment of personal awakening, and the listeners found themselves lingering far longer than they had originally planned. It is no wonder that those who spent time around Jesus eventually learned an important practical lesson. If you were going to spend the day listening to Him, you would be wise to bring a lunch.
The famous moment when thousands gathered on a hillside to hear Jesus teach illustrates this reality in a way that continues to echo across centuries of faith. People had traveled from towns and villages, some walking miles just to hear what this teacher from Nazareth had to say. The atmosphere must have been filled with expectation, the quiet excitement that spreads through a crowd when people believe they are about to witness something meaningful. As Jesus began speaking, the hours slipped by almost unnoticed because the message was pulling people deeper into a new understanding of God’s kingdom. By the time the disciples began noticing the practical problem of hunger spreading through the crowd, the day had already stretched into something far longer than anyone had anticipated. It was in that moment that one small lunch carried by a young boy suddenly became part of one of the most extraordinary miracles ever recorded.
The boy could not possibly have imagined that his simple meal would become part of a story told around the world for thousands of years. To him it was just food his family had prepared so he would not go hungry during the day. Five loaves and two fish would normally be just enough for one person to eat quietly while sitting on the grass listening to a teacher speak. Yet when that small lunch was placed into the hands of Jesus, something miraculous unfolded before the eyes of thousands of people. The food multiplied in a way that defied every natural expectation until every person present had enough to eat. What began as a practical problem became a living illustration of what happens when ordinary things are surrendered into the hands of God. A small lunch became more than a meal; it became a symbol of how God multiplies the offerings people bring to Him.
That moment on the hillside also reveals something deeper about the nature of spiritual life and the way transformation unfolds in the presence of Christ. Faith was never designed to be a quick transaction that fits neatly between other obligations in life. The journey of faith is far more like a long conversation that continues unfolding over time, gradually revealing layers of meaning that were not visible at the beginning. When people encounter Jesus in an honest and open way, they often find themselves drawn into a deeper process than they expected when the encounter began. Old assumptions begin to dissolve, new possibilities begin to appear, and the heart slowly awakens to a different understanding of purpose and identity. That kind of transformation cannot happen in a rushed moment because it requires space for truth to settle into the deepest parts of who we are.
One of the remarkable things about the teachings of Jesus is the way they quietly bypass the defenses people often build around their beliefs and expectations. Instead of arguing endlessly about theology or philosophy, Jesus told stories about farmers, fishermen, vineyards, families, and travelers on the road. Those stories sounded ordinary enough that people listened without realizing how profoundly they were being challenged. As the meaning of those stories slowly unfolded, listeners often discovered that the message was speaking directly to their own lives in ways they had not anticipated. A parable about seeds falling on different types of soil suddenly became a mirror reflecting the condition of their own hearts. A story about a father welcoming home a lost son revealed something about the boundless mercy of God. The deeper people listened, the more they realized they were being invited into a completely different way of seeing life.
This is one reason the teachings of Jesus continue to resonate with people across cultures and generations long after the original conversations took place. The wisdom contained in those teachings does not lose its power because it addresses the timeless struggles that every human being eventually faces. Questions about forgiveness, purpose, hope, fear, trust, and love are not limited to any single period of history. Every generation wrestles with the same deep questions about what it means to live a meaningful life and how to navigate the brokenness that exists in the world. The words of Jesus reach directly into those questions and illuminate them with a clarity that still surprises people when they encounter it for the first time. What seemed like a simple message often unfolds into a deeper realization that God is inviting us into a life far more expansive than we had imagined.
When people today approach faith with the expectation that it should be quick and convenient, they sometimes miss the deeper invitation that lies at the heart of the Gospel. The modern world moves at an extraordinary pace, and many aspects of life have been designed to deliver results as quickly as possible. Messages arrive instantly, answers appear with a few taps on a screen, and entertainment fills every spare moment of the day. Yet spiritual transformation operates on a different rhythm that cannot be forced into the same patterns as the rest of modern life. The work God does within a human heart often unfolds slowly, through reflection, prayer, experience, and the quiet movement of grace over time. It is a process that deepens through patience and attentiveness rather than speed.
This is why the idea of bringing a lunch when Jesus begins to speak carries such a powerful metaphorical meaning for the life of faith. It suggests that a person is preparing themselves to stay long enough for something meaningful to happen. Instead of approaching faith as a quick inspirational moment that fades as soon as the day becomes busy again, bringing a lunch represents a willingness to linger in the presence of truth. It means being open to the possibility that God might want to work deeper in your life than you originally expected. It means recognizing that some of the most important conversations between God and the human heart take time to unfold fully. When someone approaches faith with that kind of openness, they begin to experience the kind of transformation that cannot be rushed or manufactured.
The people who experienced the most dramatic moments in the ministry of Jesus were often the ones who stayed longer than others thought was necessary. The fishermen who left their nets to follow Him did not know where the journey would lead, but they were willing to stay in the conversation long enough to discover what God was doing. The tax collector who walked away from his booth could not have imagined that his life would become part of a movement that would change history. The woman who met Jesus at the well probably thought she was simply stopping to draw water during the quiet part of the day, yet she left with a new understanding of God that reshaped her entire community. Each of those encounters began with an ordinary moment that unfolded into something far greater than anyone expected when the day began.
There is something deeply encouraging about the realization that God often works through the ordinary details of life in ways that become extraordinary over time. The boy who carried that small lunch to the hillside did not arrive expecting to participate in a miracle. He simply came prepared for a long day of listening, just as countless others had gathered to hear Jesus speak. Yet the small act of preparation he carried with him became the key that unlocked a moment of divine abundance for thousands of people. That story reminds us that the things we bring to God do not have to be impressive in order to become meaningful. Even the smallest offering of trust, time, or willingness can become part of something far greater when it is placed in His hands.
As the teachings of Jesus continued to spread through villages and cities, people slowly began to understand that listening to Him was never merely an intellectual exercise. His words did not simply inform the mind; they awakened something deeper within the human spirit that many people had long forgotten existed. Listeners would arrive thinking they were coming to hear a religious teacher offer wisdom about God, yet they would leave realizing they had encountered something much more personal and transformative. The message was not simply about rules, rituals, or traditions. Instead, Jesus spoke about a living relationship with the Father that reached into the most intimate corners of the human heart. Those who stayed long enough in that presence often found themselves confronting truths about their lives that no one else had ever spoken aloud.
It is striking how often the Gospels describe crowds lingering around Jesus long after the original moment of teaching had passed. People asked questions, listened to stories, and watched as healing unfolded before their eyes in ways that challenged everything they thought they knew about the boundaries of possibility. The atmosphere around those gatherings must have carried a sense of anticipation that something meaningful could happen at any moment. Someone might arrive with a sickness that had no cure, and suddenly they would leave restored. Another person might arrive burdened with guilt or shame, only to hear words of forgiveness that lifted the weight they had carried for years. The longer people remained in those moments, the more they realized they were witnessing a different kind of kingdom quietly emerging within the world.
What made these encounters so powerful was the calm authority that flowed through everything Jesus said and did. There was no sense of performance in His words, no attempt to impress an audience with clever arguments or dramatic displays of knowledge. Instead, His teachings carried the quiet confidence of someone who understood exactly who He was and why He had come. That certainty gave His words a stability that listeners could feel even when they could not fully explain it. When Jesus spoke about the love of the Father, it sounded less like a theory and more like a reality He knew personally. When He spoke about forgiveness, it carried the tone of someone who understood both the depth of human failure and the limitless reach of divine mercy.
The remarkable thing is that Jesus never required people to bring impressive credentials or perfect spiritual records before they could sit and listen. The crowds were filled with ordinary men and women whose lives contained the same struggles and imperfections that exist in every generation. Fishermen stood beside merchants, mothers held restless children while listening, laborers rested from the long hours of work that defined their daily survival. Some people arrived curious, others skeptical, and still others desperate for hope. Yet within those gatherings there was space for every one of them to encounter the truth of God’s kingdom in ways that met them exactly where they were. That openness created an environment where transformation could quietly begin in the most unlikely hearts.
Over time the disciples themselves came to understand that following Jesus meant stepping into a life that would continually stretch their understanding of what was possible. They had begun the journey as ordinary men with familiar routines, yet their willingness to stay near Him opened the door to experiences they never could have predicted. They watched storms calm at a spoken command, witnessed broken bodies restored to health, and listened as parables revealed mysteries about God’s kingdom that had been hidden for generations. Each day spent walking beside Jesus carried the potential for something unexpected to unfold. That reality required a different mindset than the one most people bring to ordinary life.
Living in that kind of expectation requires a heart that is open to being changed by what it hears. When someone approaches the teachings of Jesus with a willingness to listen deeply, they begin to notice that those teachings often challenge comfortable assumptions about how life should work. The message repeatedly invites people to choose humility over pride, generosity over accumulation, forgiveness over revenge, and trust over fear. Those choices do not always align with the instincts people develop while navigating a complicated world. Yet within the wisdom of those teachings lies a path toward freedom that countless believers have discovered over the centuries.
The metaphor of bringing a lunch when Jesus begins to speak continues to echo through the life of faith because it reminds believers that spiritual growth requires patience and attentiveness. It encourages a posture of readiness rather than distraction, a willingness to remain present long enough for God to reveal something meaningful. In a world where attention is constantly pulled in multiple directions, that kind of focus becomes increasingly rare. Yet the transformation described throughout Scripture consistently unfolds in moments where people pause long enough to hear what God is saying beneath the noise of everyday life. When someone chooses to stay in those moments instead of rushing away, the seeds of faith begin to take root.
There is also a quiet humility embedded in the idea of bringing a lunch that speaks to the heart of discipleship. It acknowledges that we come to God not as self-sufficient individuals who have everything figured out, but as people who are still learning how to trust Him with the unfolding story of our lives. The lunch carried by that young boy on the hillside represented preparation for a long day, yet it also represented a willingness to offer what he had when the moment required it. In the same way, believers are invited to bring their time, their attention, and their willingness into the presence of God without knowing exactly how those things might be used. Faith often begins with simple acts of openness that gradually reveal their deeper significance.
Throughout history there have been countless moments when individuals discovered that lingering in the presence of Christ reshaped their entire direction in life. Some encountered Him through the quiet reading of Scripture, where a passage suddenly illuminated their circumstances with unexpected clarity. Others found themselves moved by a sermon, a conversation, or a moment of prayer that stirred something within them that could not be ignored. What these experiences share in common is the sense that God often speaks most clearly when people allow themselves the time to truly listen. Those who rush past those moments sometimes miss the invitation that lies within them.
When believers today reflect on the stories recorded in the Gospels, they are not simply observing events that happened long ago. They are also being invited to recognize that the same living presence of Christ continues to speak into the lives of people who seek Him. The context may look different from the hillsides of Galilee, yet the spiritual reality remains remarkably similar. Whenever someone opens their heart to hear the teachings of Jesus, they step into a conversation that has been unfolding for centuries. That conversation carries the power to reshape identities, restore hope, and guide people toward a deeper understanding of God’s love.
In many ways the modern world desperately needs the reminder that not every meaningful encounter can be compressed into a brief moment. Some truths reveal themselves slowly, unfolding layer by layer as a person reflects, prays, and grows. The teachings of Jesus often operate in that way, revealing deeper meaning each time they are revisited with an open heart. A parable that seemed simple during the first reading may reveal profound insight after years of life experience. A familiar passage may suddenly speak directly into a current struggle in a way that feels almost personal. These moments remind believers that God’s word is not static information but living truth that continues to speak into new circumstances.
The lesson hidden within the story of that hillside gathering continues to resonate because it reveals something about the character of God’s kingdom. What appears small and ordinary at first glance can become the starting point for something abundant when it is placed into God’s hands. A simple lunch becomes a miracle that feeds thousands. A brief conversation becomes the beginning of a lifelong transformation. A quiet moment of prayer becomes the doorway to renewed hope in the middle of hardship. These moments often begin quietly, without fanfare, yet their impact can extend far beyond what anyone present initially realizes.
For those who are willing to approach faith with the posture of someone ready to stay and listen, the teachings of Jesus open a pathway toward a life shaped by grace, courage, and compassion. The invitation remains the same today as it was on those hillsides centuries ago. Come with an open heart, come with a willingness to learn, and come prepared for the possibility that the encounter may become far more meaningful than you originally expected. When people approach Christ with that kind of readiness, they often discover that the journey of faith unfolds in ways that continually surprise and inspire them.
In the end, the simple wisdom of bringing a lunch when Jesus begins to speak captures a profound spiritual truth about the nature of following Him. It reminds believers that the most meaningful encounters with God often unfold in moments where people slow down long enough to truly hear His voice. When someone chooses to remain in that presence, to listen deeply, and to offer what they have into God’s hands, they become part of a story that stretches far beyond the boundaries of their own expectations. What begins as an ordinary moment of listening can become the starting point for a life transformed by the quiet power of divine grace.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph
Watch Douglas Vandergraph’s inspiring faith-based videos on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@douglasvandergraph
Support the ministry by buying Douglas a coffee https://www.buymeacoffee.com/douglasvandergraph
Donations to help keep this Ministry active daily can be mailed to:
Douglas Vandergraph Po Box 271154 Fort Collins, Colorado 80527
from 3c0
I have now done a handful of readings for friends in the last weeks and I marvel how natural it has all come about.
There is a demand for intimate self-knowledge and deep knowing.
We are surrounded by dire fires and it’s not too late to thirst and ask for water.
We don’t just need cups, we need buckets. We need vessels for all these feelings we suppress and repress. We need love, and more love still.
I am grateful to be in a place where I am so at ease talking about the feminine and the yin. Unapologetically feeling and female. Silent in my determination, to love.
I look over my shoulder and I see old and younger versions of me, so full of joy for the woman I’ve become.
I have all that I need.
from The-Wandering-Soul
Someone is making my space beautiful. Someone that feels close yet so far from me. Someone I love.
Someone that I dont think I'll ever be enough for.
But it's not just pretty, it's above and beyond effort. It's thoughtful. The kind of care you notice in the small details, the ones that say “I see what you're building. I want to help.”
I am so grateful and yet so, so scared...
There's a part of me, taught through years of surviving, that knows this pattern, intimately.
Someone swoops in, making your world bright and seemingly everything you ever wanted. They pour themselves into not you, but into 'IT'. They make it feel like home. They feel like home.
And then comes the storm, as often, they are the same ones who burn it down. Who strip it away, piece by piece while you're forced to watch.
Not on purpose, maybe... sometimes. Not with malice. But the hand that builds is also the hand that can break.
And my body remembers.
My mind keeps score.
So now I sit here, streaming again after years away, and he's there. Every time. Quiet. Present. Building.
I can't say I understand. He's not doing anything wrong. He's being a great... friend. A friend that has subtly shown me that I will never be enough for, not even as a runner up.
Yet he still shows up.
I've taken a small bit of distance. Just a small texting change. It feels safer. A tiny wall. A small distance that no one else would notice, not even him. But I know. I feel it in my chest.
I don't know how to hold the gratitude of now and the terror swirling around that little, broken girl I once was, at the same time.
But I show up. I stream. I thank him because he deserves appreciation. I am so deeply grateful.
The fear still whispers in the cold wind of the dark... “How long before he decides to inevitably destroy you and the things he's chosen to help you build?”
I don't have an answer. I just have a stream, the quiet presence of someone who keeps showing up, and the hope that maybe, this time, the hands that build will stay kind.
I'm scared. But I'm still here.
I may not be enough for him, but I am enough for myself. That matters...
from
Roscoe's Quick Notes

Tonight's basketball game before bedtime will feature the Minnesota Golden Gophers traveling to Bloomington, Indiana, to meet the Indiana Hoosiers. Its early start time of 5:30 PM CST fits nicely into my nighttime routine. The plan is to pull the streaming radio feed from the Flagship Station for IU Sports for the call of the game and for pregame and postgame coverage.
And the adventure continues.
from
🌐 Justin's Blog
I'm taking my time to figure out what is next for me, and when.

When I sold LearnDash, I agreed to a non-compete agreement, which is pretty standard for any business sale. Mine was a bit longer than normal, but I didn't mind (and still don't). If anything, it has forced me to take a giant step back and to get in tune with what it is that motivates me.
But it wasn't always so easy. Immediately after the sale, I took up various projects because I was so used to the “go-go-go” frame of mind of an entrepreneur. I had no practice at slowing down.
But the non-compete forced me to eventually slow down.
I slotted into coaching for a bit, but it's not something that I ever planned on doing forever. Don't get me wrong, it was enjoyable.
The problem, however, was that it lacked something very central to what I like to call my “flow state”. That feeling where what I am doing doesn't feel like work. Coaching lacks a competitive and creative outlet that I crave.
Ever since I was five years old, I have loved to compete.
I played every sport as a child, and eventually took to soccer, where I continued playing through college. I competed at a high level, and I loved every bit of it. The trials and tribulations. Winning. Hard work. I found that these qualities transfered very naturally into entrepreneurship.
In 2013, I launched LearnDash and created the entire WordPress LMS segment. That same year, I gave up playing soccer (forced due to a neck injury) and put every ounce of my energy into “winning” in my market, as it was quickly flooded with other players.
The wins weren't always fast or easy. Some required the long game. Years and years. But I don't give up. Ever. I will never be outworked or outlasted. It's my superpower as an entrepreneur. I'm too addicted to getting “the win”.
I don't get intimidated, but energized. If a competitor does something good, I can't wait to clap back ten-fold.
At 28, I was a different person. I viewed business in black & white, but with more experience and perspective, I've softened my approach to competition.
It's still “us versus them” (it is always in business), but I wouldn't villainize my competitors like I did in the past.
This perspective, one that comes with the passing of time, is an asset. Because let's be honest: always being ready to “fight” is stressful. I was constantly on edge, and it impacted my health. It, in part, led to my increased drinking.
If I were doing it all over again, my view would be more refined. Still up for the challenge, but seeing it more as a game than “life or death”.
Competition for competition’s sake is well-and-good, but it isn't the only thing that I need. I need creativity. I've said it before, but entrepreneurship is my art.
I thoroughly enjoy the building blocks of a business:
These activities are like my drug. I get high from doing them, and then high again seeing the impact that they can have on my business. Tying it to competition, these activities take on more meaning. I'm more motivated and the end result is more refined.
When I do these things, I'm in my flow state. I'm vibrating on a different level, and it just feels right.
I'm still gaining clarity on the two areas above. My current sabbatical has been extremely helpful so far in creating the mental space I need at this point in my life.
I guess what I'm trying to say is that I'm not rushing anything. In fact, I can't anyway with my non-compete in place. This matters, because I don't have interest in just any niche. I love the e-learning space. I've worked in it since 19 years old. In many ways, it's all I know.
#entrepreneurship
from Two Sentences
Work just ramped up in terms of parallel tasks to handle; not excited about that. I was too annoyed with the rain to go out for a run.
from Two Sentences
Things didn't turn out as annoying at work as they could've been. An old friend and I caught up over life and Zoom.
from targetedjaidee
I think the hardest part of my life today is not giving in to my negative thoughts. That to me is half the battle in this program. There are so many aspects of this program that can negatively impact me daily; but I am choosing to not let things harm me mentally.
I choose to do things that can positively impact my life. Thinking positively, in my opinion, is not that hard, but it is also very hard. I have a tendency to think positively with a hint of anxiety. (Lol) I have control issues, for sure. I think it’s because of all the shet I’ve been through. I feel like when I try to control my environment I’m able to “foresee” what outcomes can be like; ever since I’ve given my life over to God, it’s been easier for me relinquish that control.
On most days I wake up, pray, & let God know He has my day, my heart, and my mind. That helps tremendously. Because it just lets me live in the moment with Him, and it lets me not be so easily distracted over things that don’t matter.
I want to make a difference in my life, be the change I wish to see in the world type shet. But like I’ve mentioned in previous posts, God has a calling over my life. I believe it’s to help other TIs & normies who have issues protecting themselves. I want to help people still, even after all the crap I’ve been through with them. This times different though: discernment. I want God to grow my discernment. Not every person I come across is a gangstalker. I believe that. But a majority are covertly & simultaneously stalking me. Which is fine. Some of these pessies tend to make it obvious that they’re in on it (LMAO). But I still don’t care; I am unapologetically myself.
There’s things I want to say to those who hurt me: The why doesn’t matter. You did what you did. Was I also a terrible person in my active substance use? For sure. I wasn’t easy to deal with and made a mess of things. I believe that doesn’t give someone the right to treat someone else with absolute disregard. To push and orchestrate scenarios where someone wants to unalive themselves is a different kind of evil.
I’ve been seeing so many posts on social media talking about how people laughed at others while they were going through traumatic experiences or added to the madness by making their lives hell. That type of abusive behavior? I can’t unsee it. I am grateful for the revelation. But man, does it hurt. Here’s the verse of the day:
Jeremiah 17:7-8 New International Version 7 “But blessed is the one who trusts in the Lord, whose confidence is in him. 8 They will be like a tree planted by the water that sends out its roots by the stream. It does not fear when heat comes; its leaves are always green. It has no worries in a year of drought and never fails to bear fruit.”
I’m going headfirst into the rest of the week with my mind on God.
I hope yous all have a great day!
Jaide owwt*
from
Sagor
Det här är en saga om Pingvinen Pelle.
På den vita, glittrande isen i Antarktis låg en liten pingvinkoloni. Där, mitt bland alla de svartvita pingvinerna, fanns Pelle. Pelle var inte som de andra. Han hade en liten gul halsduk, vävd av sin farmor av alger och istrådar, och ett hjärta fullt av nyfikenhet. Varje kväll, när de andra pingvinerna samlades för att sova, låg Pelle och tittade upp på stjärnorna och norrskenet som dansade över himlen. Han drömde om att se världen bortom isen, bortom det kalla havet.
– Varför stannar vi alltid här? frågade han ofta sin bästa vän, Lilla. – För det är vårt hem, svarade Lilla och ryckte på axlarna. Det är tryggt här.
Men Pelle kände att det fanns något mer. Något som väntade på honom därute.
En morgon, när solen precis hade börjat lysa över isen, bestämde sig Pelle. Han skulle ge sig ut på äventyr. Han packade sin lilla väska med några fiskar, en bit is som glittrade som en diamant (en gåva från sin pappa) och sin gula halsduk. Sedan vinkade han farväl till Lilla och de andra.
– Jag kommer tillbaka, lovade han. Jag lovar.
Lilla såg orolig ut, men hon nickade. – Var försiktig, Pelle. Havet är stort och farligt.
Pelle hoppade ner i vattnet och simmade iväg, bort från kolonin, mot horisonten.
Efter flera dagars simmande, då Pelle hade sett valar sjunga och isberg glittra i solen, kom han till en liten, grön ö. Ön var täckt av mossa och små blommor, och luften luktade salt och jord. Pelle hade aldrig sett något så vackert.
Där träffade han Torsten, en gammal, vis sköldpadda som hade sett världen. Torsten låg och solade sig på en sten när Pelle kom simmande.
– Vem är du, lilla pingvin? frågade Torsten med sin långsamma, dova röst.
– Jag heter Pelle, sa Pelle och bugade artigt. Jag är ute på äventyr.
Torsten log. – Ah, äventyr. Det är något jag känner till. Men vet du, lilla vän, att den här ön har en hemlighet?
Pelle skakade på huvudet, nyfiken.
– Långt in i berget finns en grotta, berättade Torsten. En magisk grotta. Säger man att om man önskar med hela sitt hjärta, så kan drömmar bli verklighet.
Torsten ledde Pelle genom öns snåriga skog, förbi små bäckar och över mossiga stenar. Till slut kom de till en mörk öppning i berget. Pelle kände hur hans hjärta bankade av spänning.
– Här måste du gå ensam, sa Torsten. Men kom ihåg: önska med hela ditt hjärta.
Pelle nickade och kröp in i grottan. Inne i grottan var det mörkt, men väggarna glittrade av kristaller som lyste svagt i blått och grönt. Mitt i grottan låg en liten, blank sten, som om den väntade på honom.
Pelle stängde ögonen och tänkte på allt han hade sett, på sina vänner hemma, på den stora, vida världen. Och så önskade han:
– Jag önskar att alla pingviner ska få uppleva världens under, precis som jag gör nu. Att de ska få se att det finns så mycket mer än isen vi bor på.
Plötsligt började grottan lysa, och en varm vind svepte genom rummet. Pelle kände hur något förändrades, inombords. När han öppnade ögonen igen, stod han plötsligt på isen hemma. Men något var annorlunda.
När Pelle kom tillbaka till kolonin, sprang Lilla och de andra mot honom.
– Pelle! Du är tillbaka!
Men Pelle såg förvånat på dem. För de berättade om sina egna äventyr. Lilla hade simmat med delfiner, en annan pingvin hade träffat en snäll sjölejonunge, och en tredje hade sett en ö full av lysande alger.
– Men… hur? frågade Pelle. Ni har ju aldrig lämnat kolonin förut!
De såg alla förvånade på honom. – Jo, vi drömde det, sa Lilla. Vi drömde alla samma dröm. Om att följa efter dig, Pelle. Om att se världen.
Pelle förstod. Den magiska grottan hade inte bara gett honom ett äventyr – den hade gett alla pingvinerna modet att drömma.
Från den dagen blev Pelle och hans vänner de modigaste pingvinerna i Antarktis. De organiserade expeditioner, lärde känna valar, lekte med sälar och delade sina berättelser med alla de träffade. Varje kväll, när norrskenet lyste över isen, samlades de och berättade om sina äventyr.
Och Pelle? Han fortsatte att utforska, alltid med sin gula halsduk fladdrande i vinden. För han visste nu att världen var full av under, och att drömmar kunde bli verklighet – om man bara vågade tro.
Du hittar fler sagor för barn här
Cuando estamos en el aeropuerto, moviéndonos de prisa, sentados o de pié, en una sala de espera. Cuando entramos o salimos de un baño, compramos algo en la tienda o en la cafetería, un sándwich sonámbulo, un café de arenilla.
¿Qué otra cosa somos sino espectros? Pendientes de tramitación, bultos animados.
Estar sin estar, sin que sea necesario comprender nada más; acartonados bultos que arrastran sus pies hacia las entrañas del robot volador.
Lo más quietos posibles, reduciendo nuestras necesidades al mínimo, para demostrar el grado de cordura establecido.
Mirando las superficies, casi como el que no mira. Ahora, doy el paso, sabiendo que la suerte está echada.
Vigilados.
from
Shared Visions
Srpski ispod.

As part of the preparation for establishing an international cooperative of visual artists, we are launching a reading group as a space for collectively reflecting on solidarity, collective work, and the political foundations of organizing in the arts. The formation of a cooperative is not only a legal and economic matter, but also a question of understanding historical struggles around emancipation, ideology, and social change.
We will begin on Friday, March 20, in the afternoon. The first meeting will be introductory and dedicated to getting to know the participants, presenting the Shared Visions project, and agreeing on the working format of the reading group. After that, meetings will take place every Friday online via Zoom. In the period of two weeks, we will read around 30 pages, which participants will be able discuss at any of the two consequent sessions. Discussions will focus on understanding both the historical context of the texts and their contemporary implications. The working language of the group is English, as it is intended for an international team.
The first text will be Fathers and Sons by Ivan Sergeyevich Turgenev (1861), a novel that, through generational conflict and the emergence of nihilism, opens questions of political emancipation and social tensions. We will then continue with What Is to Be Done? by Nikolai Chernyshevsky, Notes from Underground, and later with twentieth-century dystopian novels (We, Brave New World, Fahrenheit 451, 1984), tracing how ideas of collectivity, self-management, and their critiques unfold through literature. You can read more about the reading plan here.
The reading group will be led by cultural worker Nebojša Milikić and builds on the earlier experience of the program “THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE (D)EVIL” (Bibliotok, Cultural Centre Rex in Belgrade), in which literature was approached as a site where ideological conflicts are articulated. Here as well, our aim is to connect reading with the contemporary effort to build a cooperative structure in the field of visual arts, particularly in the context of the Balkans and Eastern Europe.
You can apply to participate by submitting a form by March 15. After the registration period closes, all participants will receive details for accessing the Zoom meetings.
*The illustration is a cadre from François Roland Truffaut's movie “Fahrenheit 451” in which one of the books that are burned is Turgenev's Fathers and Sons.
U okviru pripreme osnivanja međunarodne zadruge vizuelnih umetnika pokrećemo čitajuću grupu kao prostor zajedničkog promišljanja solidarnosti, kolektivnog rada i političkih osnova organizovanja u umetnosti – jer izgradnja zadruge nije samo pravno i ekonomsko pitanje, već i pitanje razumevanja istorijskih borbi oko emancipacije, ideologije i društvene promene.
Počinjemo u petak, 20. marta, u popodnevnim časovima. Prvi susret biće uvodni i biće posvećen upoznavanju učesnika, predstavljanju projekta Shared Visions i dogovoru o načinu rada čitajuće grupe. Nakon toga, susreti će se održavati svakog drugog petka onlajn, putem Zoom-a. IU periodu od dve nedelje pročitaćemo oko 30 stranica, koje će učesnici moći da diskutuju na bilo kojoj od naredne dve sesije. Razgovori će biti usmereni na razumevanje istorijskog konteksta i savremenih implikacija pročitanog. Radni jezik grupe je engleski, jer je namenjena internacionalnom timu.
Prvi tekst će biti „Očevi i deca“ Ivana Sergejeviča Turgenjeva (1861), roman koji kroz sukob generacija i pojavu nihilizma otvara pitanja političke emancipacije i društvenih napetosti. Zatim, nastavljamo sa „Šta da se radi?“ Nikolaja Černiševskog, „Zapisima iz podzemlja“, a potom i sa distopijskim romanima XX veka („Mi“, „Vrli novi svet“, „Farenhajt 451“, „1984“), prateći kako se ideje kolektivnosti, samoupravljanja i njihove kritike razvijaju kroz književnost. Više o planu čitajuće grupe možete čitati ovde.
Čitajuću grupu vodi kulturni radnik Nebojša Milikić i ona se nadovezuje na ranije iskustvo programa „Dobar loš z(n)ao“ (Bibliotok, KC Rex u Beogradu), u okviru kojeg je književnost bila čitana kao prostor artikulacije ideoloških sukoba. I ovde nam je cilj da čitanje povežemo sa savremenim pokušajem izgradnje zadružne strukture u polju vizuelnih umetnosti, posebno u kontekstu Balkana i Istočne Evrope.
Prijavite se za učešće do 15. marta, a nakon zatvaranja prijava, svim učesnicima ćemo poslati detalje za pristup Zoom sastancima.
*Ilustracija je kadar iz filma „Fahrenheit 451“ Fransoa Rolana Trifoa, u kojem je jedna od knjiga koje se spaljuju Turgenjevljev roman „Očevi i deca“.
from FFX
4.3.26:1000
Up at 0645 Overnight HRV: 61 Garmin Age: 49 Body Battery: not enough data
I have bought wine and chocolate to get through the day. As usual. I have a functional alcohol dependency. Which keeps me from achieving every goal I set for myself. Chocolate until mid-afternoon, wine from 5pm. The chocolate is how I have the energy for the day and the wine is so I can unwind at the end of it. Sleep is now the priority. So today's goal is simply:
1) In bed and everything off by 2215, aim for sleep by 2245.
Tomorrow the chocolate and alcohol are going – they both fuck with my sleep, my blood sugar and my mood. I can't give up one without the other as I get so wired from sugar that the only way I can calm down is with wine. It's simply that they both go, or I use both.
I've done 29 days of neither twice in the last year. Third time lucky.
In other news my 64GB phone and 1TB macbook air are both out of storage. I pay for icloud 2TB as well. Wtf is going on. I need a day spare to sit down and go through all the digital stuff I have.
from
Atmósferas
A la guerra guerra con tambores de espanto.
Guerra que te cantan con babas furiosas agitando pañuelos de sangre.
A la guerra guerra por la pera. A la guerra guerra por la canela.