![]() ![]() This is the one that can cause me to cringe a little. This is a time to confess whatever we have had buried deep inside, the regrets and the hurts, and the pain we never named.Ī ccepting hardships as the pathway to peace : It can be tricky to be in the moment at times when we have worries about the future attacking us, ungrieved traumafrom the past, and the ugly twin foes of guilt and regret still haunting us. Living one day at a time enjoying one moment at a time. I pray this prayer, asking God for the wisdom to know the difference because although I cannot control my mitochondria or my genetics, I can control what will build up my body and what will tear it down. As much as I’ve wanted to change my illness, and although I’ve improved from where I was, haven’t been able to untether it from me completely, even with fervent prayer, a healthy but excruciatingly restrictive diet, and meds and supplements. There’s simply things we can’t change, situations that God allowed that we are at least tied to for a season. ![]() This is the bulk of the prayer that most of us know. courage to change the things I can and wisdom to know the difference. God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change. It’s not words used to command Him, but instead, prayers for wisdom and intentionality. (They don’t this isn’t a mantra chant.) The power lies in the sheer fact that it’s prayer being lifted up to the Most High God. This prayer I’m about to go through could get a little self-helpy if and only if we rely on ourselves, fooling ourselves into thinking like Frank Costanza that the words themselves hold power. You can take a look at this short video clip if you want a good laugh.Īnd unless we’re intentional, we are going to go through a less dramatized version of Mr. We all laughed at the scenario because we knew he was helpless in his self-help endeavors. I can still picture Frank Costanza screaming “serenity now” at a bellowing octave, trying to achieve serenity as his eyes were bugging out. If you’re anything like me, you may think of the word serenity and immediately remember Frank Costanza, George Costanza’s zany father from Seinfeld going through a fictional self-help material based on the very real faddish trend of DIY self-help psychology in the 90’s. ![]()
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