Are you a coward? For much of my life, I’ve been one — at least a large part of the time. I’ve drifted along avoiding things that scared me, acting as though I could somehow cheat my fears without having to face them. I’m at the point in life where I can’t do that anymore.
I can either face the fears and become who I’m supposed to be or I can go back to hiding in cowardice. Now that I understand the truth about what I’ve done, though, I don’t think I can put it back into a box and hide it on a shelf. I have to confront the fears — and become the person God made me to be.
I’ve been thinking a lot about this issue since the first of the year. Something happened that made me ask myself whether I was going to continue being less than my best or if I intended to make the changes necessary to be who I wanted to be. If I’d realized all the implications of that when I started thinking about it, I might have run. But I didn’t. And once I let myself go down that road, I didn’t have any choice but to follow some trails to their logical conclusion.
My heart longs for a future that’s more real to me than the dim past
Mom finds 28 reasons to put phone down, pay more attention to sons
Check out my Tuesday interview on Steve Gelder’s political radio show
Why does most love hurt us? Because one usually loves more
Trust and spontaneous order don’t require heavy hand of the state
Choose the person you don’t want to spend your life without
Accepting joy tomorrow does no good if tomorrow never comes
Can a free society tolerate intrusions into details of ‘The Lives of Others’?
End of life brought cancer patient to baptism six days before death