Go Walking

KNOW GOD--part two

Breathing fresh air is like sucking Heaven’s medicine through your nostrils. This is the perfect seasons to spend time with God outside. On a sunny or breezy day, take a walk. Sing praise songs to God as you stroll. Listen to worship music on your ipod. Whisper a prayer. Or just be silent and enjoy the beauty the day. God created nature so that we could find comfort in it. He made trees for shade. He made water so that we could dip our toes into a pond. He made the sun to turn our cheeks pink. Grasp the gift of creation with gratitude and don’t waste a warm day! Remember to thank God for the chance to roam in his backyard. (Wear good shoes!)

Be Silent

KNOW GOD--part one


Life is loud. Sometimes it is so loud that it can strangle us. Life is hectic, too. Sometimes it is so busy that we crash into our beds at night and can’t remember if we ate lunch or even talked to God at all. And when life is like that, we lose it. We aren’t healthy people anymore.


Take some time this week to be refreshed and renewed. Sit in silence with God, and not just for five minutes. Allow enough time for all the thoughts in your head to quit smacking into one another. Allow yourself to slow down enough to listen. Don’t talk. Just listen closely. You might be surprised to hear what God has to say to you if you give him a chance to speak. He is waiting to reveal himself to you.

Bad Listener


I think that you can learn a lot about people on a first date. It’s in those magical and often humiliating moments, that people reveal their true selves. Of course, I’ll be the first to admit it; I always hope that my first date self will be a more flawless, beautiful, interesting and witty version of the regular, everyday, give that girl a tic-tac Heather. But no matter how hard I try, my imperfections are doomed to follow me. I remember one date very vividly. I sat in the pizza booth, sipping my water, trying desperately to be cute and charming. I talked about my classes and my friends and how I love to write. That conversation led to the topic of books. “What kinds of books do you like to read, Heather?” he asked. I spouted off a few of my favorites, and then added, “But I like to write more than I like to read. I always have.” Honest answer. Total mistake. Flaw escape. My date glanced down at his food and then mumbled with a smile, “That’s probably because you like to talk more than you like to listen.” Ouch.


Of course, I don’t think that I’m a bad person for talking too much, and I don’t really care what that dude thinks. He’s long gone, thank goodness! But I have to confess: he was right. I do have a problem with listening, and that’s not okay. I’m trying to get better at listening, at not cutting people off mid-sentence, at forcing my own thoughts to slow down. I’m trying.


And although listening is one of my obvious issues, sometimes I wonder if maybe it’s not so much a problem with listening as a problem with silence. The truth is, I hate silence. I fill it with words because it makes me uncomfortable. It makes me feel alone. Last weekend I made my annual trek to Rockford, Illinois to visit my good friend, Lindsey. (Let me just say that I love that girl.) We packed our weekend full of activity: exploring downtown Madison, battling her friends in Euchre, chatting over coffee and stomping around the county fairground with her parents.


When it came time to leave, I hugged Lindsey goodbye, hopped into my car and immediately turned on the radio. It stayed on the whole ride home. Noise. Even if I wasn’t really listening to anything, the radio stayed on. Avoiding the silence. When I wasn’t listening to the radio full blast, I was talking on the phone, only to be informed (ironically) that I “use filler words whenever there is a lull in conversation.” Awesome. Point taken.


Sometimes I wonder if God laughs at me. I wonder if He hears my frantic prayers and rambling, worried thoughts. I wonder if He listens patiently for a while and then whispers, “Heather, breathe. Chill out.” He probably says things like that to me all the time but I am too busy talking to hear Him. I’m too busy avoiding the silence. I’m too busy spouting out my own words instead of allowing His thoughts become my own. I wonder how many words from God I’ve missed because I wouldn’t close my mouth.


I need to be a better listener. I need to be better at dwelling in silence. I just wish it wasn’t so difficult.


Side note: In honor of practicing silence I will be posting a series of six devotional entries, the first of which will talk about the discipline of silence and solitude. These are excerpts from a devotional booklet I published for the Westside Women last spring! Coming soon.