• Home
  • About
  • Blog
  • Podcast
  • Events
  • Contact
Menu

refresh renew restore

Street Address
City, State, Zip
Phone Number

refresh renew restore

  • Home
  • About
  • Blog
  • Podcast
  • Events
  • Contact
blog banner Test 2.jpg

Blog

Soul Care in Busy Times

January 5, 2018 Stephen W. Smith
blurred-life.jpg

The holidays and life itself have been great reminders for Gwen and me about the need for soul care. It has been a lot—perhaps too much. Busyness. Full schedules. Sickness. Exhaustion in the midst of joyous times of family gatherings.In the midst of all of the busyness, how are we to care for our souls? For us, we were with all of our kids and their kids. We traveled to some while others came to us. Travel brings its own stress these days dosen't it? There were meals to prepare; presents to open; and hanging out with one another. It was full. It was sweet and it was a rich time. But we came away exhausted. We need to re-coup! I need to find “my” life that I seemed to have lost in a busy family time. But what if there’s no time to re-coup? That’s a problem!During December, Gwen and I barely had time for a conversation between ourselves—much less pray or take some moments for ourselves. I have some regrets. I didn’t read like I wanted. I wasn’t able to reflect back and forward into the New Year like I wanted. We were cramming in time and the gift of being present with each other. Much of the past few weeks feels like a blurr—not a blessing. I’m not complaining mind you, but trying to present some reality that stands in the face of caring for my soul. 0ther things happened which complicated our lives and health.A 24 hour “violent”—(is that the right word?) spread through our family while together. We watched our grandchildren drop like flies leaving us to meditate upon “We’re next!” more than God. Both Gwen and I got sick—something we did not want or invite. Interruptions happen—those events that face us that we do not want to face. Life is too full for the unexpected to drop in on us and mess up our already overly-crowded lives. When there is no space or margin in our lives, interruptions can send us spiraling. How will we ever be able to recover when we have to just buck up and move on and through? The unplanned things of life happen simply happen whether we are ready for them or not.When we think of our every day lives, we are busy, checking our lists and moving through our days. Diapers to change. Dishes to wash. Bills to pay. Groceries to be bought. Meals to prepare. There’s always more—always!In our work with people of all ages and in all seasons of life—one of the biggest pushbacks we hear is this: “I don’t have time to care for my soul. How can I fit THAT in upon every thing else I have to do?”Caring for your soul is learning to live with eternity in mind and in the heart. It requires a paradigm shift of how we look at our hours, days, weeks and years. Living with eternity in mind is at the heart of Jesus’ message: “Seek first the Kingdom of God” (Matt. 6:33). It is at the core of Paul’s epistles: “Set your minds on things above, not on earthly things” (Col. 3:2). While it is true that God has indeed set eternity in our hearts (Ecc. 3:11)—our minds are filled with the tyranny of the urgent and this is where the wheels of the bus come off in regard to caring for our souls.  So, soul care is learning how to maintain eternity in the midst of our crowded lives!Caring for our souls is a daily practice that keeps first things first. A mindless wandering through our days leads most of us to enter the hamster wheel where we simply spin and spin. Soul Care requires an intentional exit from the dizzying spinning and speed of life and to live with eternity in both of our minds and hearts.Annie Dillard reminds us so well that “how we live our days is how we live our lives.” Days upon days of survival foster a survival culture at home and in work. So, if we want to live better days and more full-filling weeks, we must make the choice every day to live with eternity in our hearts. The abundant life is a daily life which begins every day. Every day we have the opportunity to live with eternity in mind and heart.Here are five choices to cultivate eternity in your heart:

  1. Choose to live slow one day a week. For one day a week, make a choice to resist speed. The cult of speed has infected most everything we do. For one day—life more intentionally; live more from the heart—where eternity is rooted. Walk rather than drive. Park further away from your destination to make you walk just a bit. Cook a slow meal, not "fast food" on this day-- involving family and friends. Savor the time with music, story or read a chapter out of a book together. Some might call this a Sabbath but moving slow is more than taking a day off. Moving slow sets the culture of your heart to wake up. By eradicating hurry from your life, I believe you’ll find greater joy than ever before. After you’ve made this choice and lived slow for one day a week, take some time and see if you’re inner contentment meter has moved in one direction or the other. Is there more inner peace? Why or why not?

2. Choose to live with your soul and the soul of other people in mind—not moving into robot mode to produce, accomplish and succeed. Living with the soul in mind is keeping eternity alive rather than going into a catatonic trance of survival. To live with the soul in mind and heart is to foster dignity for others and yourself. If you’re exhausted—rest. If you’re sick—ask yourself “Do I really have to push through not feeling well?” Living with the soul in mind is living with your own sense of well-being and the well-being of others. Being present and not preoccupied with technology in conversation is one way to live with the soul in mind. Leaving our stresses of work outside the home—sort of detoxing a bit before we enter the doors of home can help. 

  1. Choose to be healthy. This daily choice requires us to monitor three vital areas of our daily lives: sleeping, eating and moving. It’s really not that complicated. These three areas: sleeping well, eating healthy and moving more all work together to help us become more healthy. Healthy living requires this trinity of a way of looking at our lives and giving our bodies what our bodies need to be healthy.

  1. Choose to have silence every day for 10 minutes. The only antidote there is to our busy lives and busy minds is being quiet. Sit BY yourself and WITH yourself every day for 10 minutes. Consent to the presence of God within you and around you. There is nothing to do but to be still. The only way for a shaken jar full of mud and water to settle is stillness.

 5. Choose to read only the “red” letters of Jesus. Rather than trying and trying to read the Bible through in a year—try something more realistic and doable. At the most stressful times of my life, I make a choice to read only the words of Jesus. I have found a comfort, peace and hope in his words that really help me focus and give me hope. Sometimes, it’s the simple things we do that can move us forward when we’re stuck. For me, finding a “red letter edition” of the Bible and focusing on what Jesus actually said helps. Start with Matthew 5—where Jesus begins his infamous “sermon on the mount."  Read it in a new version or translation that gives you the space to be offered new expressions and intent.

In Capacity, Soul Care, Transformation, Work Tags busyness, care of the soul, Potter's Inn, soul care
← Becoming Who We Really Are: The Journey of Being HumanThe Illusions of Christmas →

Quick Links

  • Potter’s Inn 

  • Potter’s Inn Podcast

  • Soul Care Institute

  • Potter’s Inn Facebook

  • Steve’s Facebook

  • Steve’s Instagram

  • 50 Days of Awakening 1
  • Advent 6
  • Aging 4
  • Beatitudes 6
  • Beloved 2
  • Books 4
  • Capacity 11
  • Church 15
  • Community 4
  • Companionship 8
  • Dailiness 24
  • Discernment 11
  • Doing Good 5
  • Family 17
  • General 50
  • Gwen Harding Smith 5
  • Hiddeness 7
  • Ignation Exercises 2
  • Inside Job 27
  • Leadership 25
  • Nature 2
  • Pandemic 1
  • Pandemic Diary 2
  • Pastors 2
  • Post Easter 1
  • Potter's Inn 12
  • Prayer 2
  • Retreats 9
  • Rhythmn 37
  • Ritual 14
  • Sabbath 8
  • Sabbatical 20
  • Soul Care 36
  • Spiritual Disciplines 11
  • Spiritual Formation 7
  • Suffering 7
  • Table 6
  • Technology 3
  • The Jesus Life Book 9
  • The Work within the Work 9
  • Transformation 9
  • Uncategorized 35
  • Unplug 7
  • Wilderness 2
  • Work 9
Archives by Date
  • May 2022 1
  • March 2021 1
  • January 2021 1
  • December 2020 1
  • July 2020 1
  • June 2020 1
  • April 2020 7
  • March 2020 1
  • December 2019 1
  • November 2019 1
  • October 2019 2
  • August 2019 1
  • July 2019 1
  • June 2019 2
  • May 2019 2
  • April 2019 1
  • February 2019 2
  • January 2019 1
  • December 2018 1
  • November 2018 3
  • October 2018 1
  • September 2018 3
  • June 2018 3
  • May 2018 2
  • April 2018 1
  • March 2018 3
  • February 2018 1
  • January 2018 3
  • December 2017 1
  • November 2017 2
  • October 2017 2
  • August 2017 1
  • April 2017 1
  • January 2017 1
  • December 2016 2
  • August 2016 3
  • July 2016 3
  • June 2016 3
  • May 2016 2
  • January 2016 3
  • December 2015 7
  • November 2015 3
  • October 2015 3
  • September 2015 4
  • August 2015 6
  • July 2015 6
  • June 2015 3
  • May 2015 10
  • October 2014 1
  • September 2014 1
  • July 2014 3
  • June 2014 2
  • May 2014 1
  • January 2014 1
  • December 2013 2
  • November 2013 1
  • September 2013 1
  • August 2013 1
  • June 2013 1
  • May 2013 1
  • November 2012 2
  • October 2012 3
  • September 2012 4
  • August 2012 1
  • July 2012 4
  • June 2012 2
  • May 2012 3
  • April 2012 9
  • March 2012 12
  • February 2012 2
  • January 2012 5
  • December 2011 1
  • November 2011 4
  • October 2011 1
  • September 2011 3
  • June 2011 4
  • April 2011 9
  • March 2011 5
  • January 2011 1
  • November 2010 11
  • September 2010 1
  • August 2010 2
  • May 2010 3
  • April 2010 4
  • March 2010 1
Tags
  • "dis-ease" 1
  • Advent 4
  • Anatomy of a Retreat 1
  • Andrew Sulliavan 1
  • Anne Morrow Lindbergh 1
  • Beattitudes 1
  • Beloved 1
  • Boundaries 1
  • Caravaggio 2
  • Christianity 1
  • Christmas 4
  • Christmas Devotion 1
  • Church calendar 1
  • Conversations 1
  • Curt Thompson 1
  • Daily Examen 1
  • Dallas Willard 3
  • David Whyte 1
  • Despair 1
  • Disappointment 1
  • Easter 3
  • Embracing Soul Care 1
  • Finding God's will 1
  • Finding home 1
  • Fixed hour prayers 1
  • Following Jesus 1
  • GPS for the Soul 1
  • Gethsamane 1
  • God is present 1
  • God's will 3
  • Good Friday 1
  • Good Samaritan 1
  • Gwen Harding Smith 4
  • Hebrews 5:7 1
  • Henri Nouwen 1
  • Hermitage 1
  • Holy Saturday 1
  • Holy Week 3
  • How a person changes 1
  • How do I know God's will? 4
  • How to lead a retreat 1
  • Ignatian Exercises 1
  • Jesus and the church 1
  • John Blase 1
  • Juliet Benner 1
  • Knowing God's Will 4
  • Labor Day 1
  • Lazarus 2
  • Lectio Divina 1
  • Lent 9

Featured

Featured
May 25, 2022
In Defense of “Thoughts and Prayers”
May 25, 2022
May 25, 2022
Mar 30, 2021
Letting Go and Embracing Change
Mar 30, 2021
Mar 30, 2021
Jan 8, 2021
The Disintegration of Christian Leadership
Jan 8, 2021
Jan 8, 2021

Resources

Bookstore
Bookstore
Podcast
Podcast
Soul Care 101
Soul Care 101
Potter's Inn
Potter's Inn
Soul Care Institute
Soul Care Institute

Subscribe

Sign up to receive a notification when our blog is updated

We respect your privacy.

Thank you!

©2019 steveandgwensmith.com POWERED BY SQUARESPACE.