Faith - huh?, General Ramblings, Letters to my sons, Not So Private Thoughts

I Asked for a Burning Bush and Got a Road Trip

Nobody tells you that life has a brutal sense of timing—and a genuinely unhinged sense of humor.

I lost almost everything that I thought mattered: a lakefront house, a sports car, a wife, a business, a dream, the entire future I was sure had my name engraved on it in a nice serif font. And I’ll be honest, because we all lie about this part. It didn’t feel like “a lesson.” It felt like drowning—except drowning at least has the decency to be quick. I was angry at God. I asked “why is this happening to me” roughly nine thousand times—on my knees, fists clenched, at 3 a.m. with no one awake to answer. The response? Silence. A truly premium, top-tier silence. Five stars. Would not recommend.

Turns out I was asking the wrong question. Not “why is this happening,” but “what is this preparing me for.” Which is a lovely thought to sit with while you’re crying into a bowl of cereal at midnight.

Here’s what I’ve since figured out: we ask for the right things at the wrong time. We want the opportunity before we can carry it, the love before we’ve stopped loving out of fear, the clarity before we’re remotely capable of trusting it. I asked for all three, loudly, with the confidence of a man who had clearly not read the fine print. Heaven said “not yet.” At the time that nearly broke me. Now I suspect it’s the only reason I’m still standing.

I keep landing on Jeremiah 18:1–6. God sends the prophet to the potter’s house, and the clay in the potter’s hands is marred—so he doesn’t toss it. He collapses it and reshapes it into something new. “As the clay is in the potter’s hand, so are you in My hand.”

I used to picture that scene as cozy. Reader, it is not cozy. To reshape clay you have to squash it flat first, which is a fun thing to learn about yourself in real time. All that spinning and pressure isn’t the potter being cruel—it’s the only way you become something that can actually hold anything instead of just holding a grudge. For a solid year I was convinced I was being crushed. Plot twist: I was being remade. Turns out “under construction” and “falling apart” look identical from the inside. Same dust. Same noise. Wildly different insurance claim.

Then one day a short conversation on a road trip handed me the clarity I’d been begging for. No lightning. No choir. No burning bush—which, frankly, after all that buildup, felt a little on-the-nose to skip. Just a few honest words at the right moment—and something finally clicked and, without hyperbole, changed the trajectory of my life.

And slowly, annoyingly slowly—like dial-up in 1998 slowly—I’m coming back to life. I catch myself laughing and have nearly filed a missing-person’s report on the guy who used to do that. My family felt close again. The future stopped sitting on my chest like a wet sandbag and started to feel like somewhere I actually wanted to go. I started building something new—a life, a future, a business venture I can pour my whole self into and enjoy. Doors opened where I’d previously only located walls, exhaustively, with my face. And lifelong love showed up in a healthy form—the kind that doesn’t make you audition for your own worth twice a week. I stopped surviving and started building.

Not because life got easier. It absolutely did not. Because I’d finally become someone ready for the life that had been standing there the entire time, tapping its foot, checking its watch.

The changes have been enormous—bigger than I’d have had the nerve to ask for back when my whole personality was “stuck.”

So if you’re in a hard season, furious, and the next person who says “it’s all part of the plan” is genuinely risking their safety—I get it. I won’t insult you by pretending it doesn’t hurt. It does. But don’t be so quick to call it the end. It might just be the workshop where your future is getting built, loudly, at an inconvenient hour. One day you’ll look back, like I do now, and realize the season you begged to escape is the one that quietly made you into everything that came next. Rude of it, honestly. But I’ll take it.

By Shaun Sima
https://chef-pocket.com/aboutme

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Faith - huh?, General Ramblings, Not So Private Thoughts, Uncategorized

The Power of Speaking to Your Mountains!

As we navigate life’s journey, we MUST cling to the promises of success, joy, and triumph found in God’s Word. Proverbs 3:5-6 urges, “Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and do not lean on your understanding. In all your ways, acknowledge him, and he will direct your paths.”

God’s word is a source of life, healing, and redemption. Psalm 107:20 says, “He sent out his word and healed them.” When God spoke, healing and rescue followed. John 14:12 reminds us that: “whoever believes in me will do the works I have been doing, and they will do EVEN GREATER things.”. It’s not enough to think good thoughts; it’s not enough to pray. We have to speak to our mountains. Speak! Mark 11:23 says: Whoever will say to this mountain be removed, and does not doubt, he will have whatever he says”. Don’t speak defeat, speak success.

Ephesians 3:20 promises that God will do exceedingly, abundantly above all we ask. ASK! His blessings will chase us down and overtake us when we ask and profess it. God’s favor surrounds us BUT “We will eat the fruit of our words”, Proverbs 18:21. It’s not enough to believe. We must talk confidently and remind God to fulfill every promise He has spoken over our lives so we experience the abundant success, overflowing joy, and unwavering victory that God has prepared for us.

Even in the face of challenges, the Bible provides solace and reassurance. In John 16:33, Jesus affirms, “I have said these things to you, that in me you may have peace. In the world, you will have tribulation. But take heart; I have overcome the world.” While struggles may arise, the promise of victory in Christ surpasses any obstacle we encounter.

As we navigate life’s challenges, let’s hold fast to God’s promises of success, joy, and victory. Our faith is not in our circumstances but in the unchanging Word of God. Proverbs 3:5-6 encourages us, “Trust in the Lord with all your heart and do not lean on your understanding. In all your ways, acknowledge him, and he will make straight your paths.”

God wants us to succeed in every area of our lives. In Joshua 1:8, we’re reminded, “For then you will make your way prosperous, and then you will have good success.”

We are not created for mediocrity; we are created to be prosperous, to have success, joy, and health! Jeremiah 29:11, “For I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord, plans for welfare and not for evil, to give you a future and a hope.”

“The tongue is a tree of life, but a perverse tongue crushes the spirit.” Proverbs 15:4.

What does all this mean to me? Simple! I needed to read them. I needed to be reminded of the power of the tongue and the promises made to me. I am encouraged to speak my success, to tell my mountains of negativity, doubt, and defeat to be removed. “Nothing will be impossible for you.'”, Matthew 17:20.

By Shaun Sima
https://chef-pocket.com/aboutme

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