Who am I becoming?
Our culture often teaches us to define ourselves by production — what we create, earn, or achieve. But when those things change, who are we then?
Our culture often teaches us to define ourselves by production — what we create, earn, or achieve. But when those things change, who are we then?
It sounds financial — and it is — but it’s also deeply spiritual.
Living below your means isn’t just about spending less; it’s about choosing to live with less striving.
Throughout history, people have tried to describe God with words, symbols, and stories — each a window into something infinite. Some see God as Creator, others as Energy, Spirit, or Love itself. But behind every name is the same longing: to understand the One who gives life meaning and shape.
At its heart, polarization begins with a mindset: us versus them.
When we feel hurt, threatened, or unseen, we naturally start to see others as the problem — they are the ones who need to change.
When a relationship breaks, something inside us breaks too. Even if we move on or stop talking, the memories remain. Words linger. Walls rise. And those unhealed pieces can quietly shape who we become.
Our culture often teaches us to define ourselves by production — what we create, earn, or achieve. But when those things change, who are we then?
A life well-lived is rooted in relationships — our connection with others, and for those who believe, our connection with God.
If life was created with intention, then everything that flows from that creation also carries intention. Every person is part of something that began with purpose.
If we believe that life came from nothing, then meaning becomes something we invent.
But if life came from design — from intention — then meaning is something we discover.