
That meadow in the sunlight. The place where we dance and feel free. The place outside that smells of wildflowers and the freshest air.
Where is it?
I lost it in the busyness of life.
Instead, I am inside, head down, working on my computer. Was that a rat scurrying in the distance? I didn’t have as much weekend time to deep clean as I would have liked.
Where did my dream of what life was supposed to be like vanish?
I live in this tiny apartment created by my fear.
What if?
I don’t have time to wander outside with my backpack, eating the apple I distractedly packed along the way. How can we stumble upon life’s meadows if we don’t have time to look for them? What does it look like for my eyes to search the most distant horizon?
I forgot.
Jesus opens the door in this stuffy room. The open door beckons me outside. Come for a walk with me, He offers.
And the pile of to-dos stays on the desk as I walk and then run outside with my friend, Jesus.
My legs felt weak, and I stumbled as I laughed, breaking into to run.
I haven’t used my legs for a while.
All that sitting and worrying has caused my muscles to atrophy a bit.
But as I run with Jesus in that place of rest, I feel my legs, arms and lungs growing more robust.
The Lord replied, “I will personally go with you . . . and I will give you rest
I can see further when He beckons me to look at the far, far distant horizons. My eyes hurt from the strain. I hadn’t lifted my vision beyond my overwhelming concerns for a while.
I can sense my muscles are more substantial, my bones sturdier, my thoughts sharper. I feel more like the human I am meant to be after spending time in the spiritual clouds.
And it’s going to be okay.
Because when I walk, hand in hand, back to that tiny apartment with Jesus, he holds a button attached to a long cord that snakes to my apartment. The button can ignite the fuse attached to the dynamite that explodes the tiny apartment I used to live in, the one confining me by my fears.
It’s not that my fears have left me but that I have left them.
Jesus gives me enough food for today to live in freedom.
And I’m snatching up this food and eating my fill.
I’d rather fly.

You?



















