When We Fall Asleep At The Wheel
She didn’t mean in the literal sense, she was trying to convey how he had spent the past five or ten years doing nothing really — just existing. And after forty years of marriage, she confided that their relationship was more as distant room-mates than husband and wife.
It happens all the time, and it regularly damages or destroys businesses, political candidates, marriages, and just about anything else you can think of. For many it can be identified as the onset of depression.
It can happen to any of us. The routine cycles of life — earning a living, raising a family, keeping an office running — can keep us so fully occupied that we lose sight of the bigger picture. We usually remember the daily ‘whats’ of our lives, but we can easily forget the ‘whys,’ the reasons behind our big life choices.
And when we forget those larger purposes, a time of wandering will surely follow. Life will pass us by and God’s big dreams for us will not come true.
The life and breath that God gives us so generously every day is a treasure that must not be squandered away. So, lest we fall asleep at the wheel, we need to ask ourselves two key questions early and often.
First, what is God asking of me at this time in my life? How should I be spending His gift? Second, how well am I doing at building my part of God’s kingdom? Are my deeds measuring up to God's hopes for me?
Spend some quiet time with God right now; open your heart for some honest answers. And don’t be afraid. The Spirit can grow and lift you, even when you’re dealing with bad news.
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Labels: depression after death of spouse, depression of elderly, falling asleep at the wheel, ideas on living after death of spouse, making the best of retirement, new start in life after death of spouse
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