The Quiet In-Between

There is a version of my life I don’t often put into words. It is not a dramatic struggle. It is something quieter than that, and harder to explain.

Not the one people can easily describe: roles, routines, responsibilities, all the visible things that make sense on the surface. But the version that lives underneath it all. The one that never really introduces itself but is always there.

It starts early, sometimes before the day has even fully begun. My mind is already moving through what needs to get done, what time I need to leave, what I might forget on the counter, what still isn’t finished from yesterday, and what’s waiting for me later in the day.

Some days it feels like I’m holding too many threads at once. Appointments, conversations I still need to respond to, things I promised I’d take care of—none of them fully set down long enough to rest.

And maybe you know that feeling too. When nothing is wrong exactly, but everything is already mentally “in motion” before you’ve even had a chance to settle into the day.

For a long time, I thought that meant something was wrong with me. That I should be able to quiet my mind more easily. That I should be able to hold life with more ease than this.

But I don’t see it that way anymore.

This is just how I move through the world.

And I’m learning not to fight it in the same way I used to. Instead, I’m learning to bring it to God exactly as it is. Not the organized version. Not the cleaned-up version. But the unfinished middle of it all.

The thoughts I haven’t sorted yet.

The questions I haven’t answered.

The things I can’t quite name yet, but still feel.

Sometimes I don’t even have the right words when I pray. It is not polished or structured. It is more like a quiet surrender in the middle of everything.

God, You see this even when I don’t fully understand it.

There’s a verse that keeps meeting me in that place:

“Call to Me, and I will answer you, and show you great and mighty things, which you do not know.” — Jeremiah 33:3 (NKJV)

I used to think I had to understand everything before I brought it to God. As if clarity came first and surrender came after.

But I am learning it does not work that way.

Awareness is not the same as control.

And carrying things internally does not mean I was ever meant to carry them alone.

This quiet in-between space no one sees is real in the small pauses of everyday life, in moments when something simple reminds me how quickly my mind can outpace me. It is like standing in a room and not remembering why I walked in, because my mind has already moved somewhere else.

It is where I am still becoming. Where things are still forming. Where I am still being shaped in ways I do not always recognize in real time.

Quietly. Honestly. Not alone.

And maybe that is where I meet God most truthfully, not in what I can fully explain, but in what I am still learning to understand.

What we carry quietly has a way of shaping how we see everything else. So maybe tending to the inner life matters more than I once realized.

Not everything has to be resolved before I bring it to His hands.
Some things are meant to rest there while He unfolds them in His time.

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