Do you truly believe that you know yourself?
I am convinced that if we were to ask all the people who know us—the ones closest to us—about our identity, we would receive a multitude of answers.
The “you” at work, the “you” at home, the “you” as a parent, the “you” as a friend
or partner. In many ways, these personas can be both similar and
different at the same time.
The frightening part is that the way we perceive ourselves and the world around us is like a kaleidoscope, filled with many different colors that together create a whole.
We all have a tendency to edit out the colors we dislike and focus on those we do.
This is where the problem lies: we limit our perspective and our ability
to see the entirety of our existence.
God has a way of making sense of it all, revealing every facet—the pleasant and
the not-so-sweet.
Ultimately, we must see things as they truly are in order to become
who we were meant to be.
I invite you to join the conversation and step into the realm of possibilities.
I am convinced that if we were to ask all the people who know us—the ones closest to us—about our identity, we would receive a multitude of answers.
The “you” at work, the “you” at home, the “you” as a parent, the “you” as a friend
or partner. In many ways, these personas can be both similar and
different at the same time.
The frightening part is that the way we perceive ourselves and the world around us is like a kaleidoscope, filled with many different colors that together create a whole.
We all have a tendency to edit out the colors we dislike and focus on those we do.
This is where the problem lies: we limit our perspective and our ability
to see the entirety of our existence.
God has a way of making sense of it all, revealing every facet—the pleasant and
the not-so-sweet.
Ultimately, we must see things as they truly are in order to become
who we were meant to be.
I invite you to join the conversation and step into the realm of possibilities.