The Freedom That Comes When You Release the Plan
I wonder how much time I've spent trying to figure out how I'm going to get something to work.
I wonder how many hours I've tried to get something "right" or figure out how I'm going to do something.
I wonder how many minutes I've belabored what it would take to get what I wanted—and how it was going to happen.
And it's not just me.
Everyone wants to know "the how" of something coming together.
That's part of the danger of spending too much time in the thinking mind.
It wants answers.
Yet the mind-brain was designed to keep humans safe.
That's why there is a fight-or-flight mechanism wired inside each one of us.
Over time, man began relying on the thinking mind for more than God ever envisioned.
When I have a pressing problem, I used to believe I could think my way out of it, seeking the "right" way forward.
Now, I take it to prayer, trusting that there's probably something I can't see on my own that will lead to a solution with greater ease than I can see on my own.
Doing the heavy lifting myself is something I was accustomed to doing.
I can hustle and grind, and muscle and might my way through just about anything.
When others would give up, I'd still be standing because of my inner resolve to win.
Yet choosing to live and run my business this way led to greater struggles, heartache, and feeling overburdened than asking God to lead ever did.
This doesn't mean I get to abdicate responsibility and just surrender to whatever comes my way.
Walking with intention requires personal responsibility.
The how isn't any of my business as long as I stay the course, listening to where God's leading me.
And the same is true for you, too.
Most problems require stillness, presence, and an invocation of the answer that you can't see on your own.
ACTION: The Upside Challenge for the week is to choose one thing you have been carrying in your head.
Before you do something with it, pause and invite God into the moment.
Then set a 15-minute timer and take one clear, practical action that is already in front of you.
Stay present with the work until the timer ends.
When the time is up, stop and release the rest back to God.
This is how trust becomes embodied leadership, one intentional step at a time.










