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September 06, 2011 Posted by Mark Oestreicher

This used to be an easy question for me to answer. Then I got busy.

You can fill in the blank for yourself. “I used know of solitude and was able to rest, but then… We had a baby, I took on a second job, we moved to a new town, I said yes to another commitment, I was given extra responsibilities at church…”

As life in ministry becomes more complex, so does our need to find solitude and rest. A mentor helped me to see this very early in ministry, even before I started, and I’m thankful for this wisdom because it may have saved me from self-destruction at least once (or twice).

Honestly, I suck at this. Rest and solitude have always been some of the most evasive disciplines in my life. There are always problems to solve, directions to chart, people to figure out. Thinking, for me, is a sunup-to-sundown exercise. I feel like there is never a good time to slow down. I am sure there is something I forgot to do, some deposit I need to make in the severely overdrawn family bank, or some email I forgot to get back to. Things never stop, and I stink at standing back and putting a halt to the craziness.

In many ways, I am my own greatest obstacle to overcome. My life is compartmentalized into all the different activities, deadlines, events, and conversations that encompass waking up each day. Managing my own head space, let alone my calendar, is unavoidably tough, but it must be done. The cost of not finding rest to recuperate and find a calm equilibrium is first counted by those I love and work with long before I realize the price I pay! A few years ago, I found myself burned out at every end of the spectrum, so much so that even now I feel like I’m making up the sleep deficit.

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