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February 2025

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Resistance Primer II

(If I want to work against what I know to be wrong, I need to start with myself. What parts of unrighteousness also live inside of me?  What can I do to keep my God-given capabilities intact, sharpened and focused? How do I survive self-destructive forces? Today a focus on those who want to be *resistors….) The conversations One way to combat injustice is to talk about it. Or so it seems. We comeMORE...

Resistance Primer III

(What many of us are going through right now is stressful. Our bodies and brain react with a set of automatic responses that help us deal with the stressors. One problem: Stress reactions release cortisol into our brains and bodies, and gradually ruin our biological capacities. Four stress reactions are available, and we must choose from among them wisely….) Fighting, fleeing, freezing, fawningMORE...

Resistance Primer IV

(An observant reader asked me a simple question that I’d like to treat at some depth today. The question: What constitutes resistance?) In common use, the term stays close to its Latinate roots – to stand against or oppose. When you put that idea into life’s many contexts, though, the attitudes and actions of resistance take on a variety of meanings. In the setting of present-day politics, thoseMORE...

Resistance Primer I

When conditions in the wider society reach a certain point—e.g., justice is threatened—it might be appropriate for us to find ways, within the law and holding our most precious values intact, to push back against or slow down what is oppressive, dangerous or unrighteous. Once we’ve made the decision to challenge what’s not right, questions like these merit our consideration: How do we find andMORE...

Enduring late night words

It’s a cloudy, cold winter night outside. Inside this darkened room, a single lamp frames my writing desk. The sounds of our neighborhood owl and quiet classical music accompany my solitary thoughts. As I begin tonight’s journalling, it occurs to me that there are probably others out there—maybe you?–engaged in the same task: Trying to corral just the right words to fill the pages ofMORE...

Vocabulary alert: Addled

(Today, my caution about a word sometimes used to describe older adults who are having more than a little trouble figuring things out.) In some lexicons, individuals—some of them older adults—can be described as addled, usually taken to mean something like dazed, confused, befuddled, disorganized or worse. (Intoxicated is listed as another synonym.) Like other words sometimes attached toMORE...

Field notes: Time is short!

Has this happened to you? Someone you know takes a sudden turn for the worse, and in less time than you’d like, their health, safety or financial well-being deteriorates drastically or their life comes to an end. That’s happened to some folks at our church recently, and it always brings me up short. Without warning, they’re cut off from their usual routines or relationships. (Here I think ofMORE...

Diluting my dismay

(For the past several weeks, I’ve been living with a sense of foreboding about what’s ahead. I want to thin this emotional bile that’s eating at my soul. Today some older adult assurances about long-haul thinking….) The newly arrived gaggle of angry, self-centered and self-righteous political appointees is making statements and taking actions that will clearly harm the public good. Given theMORE...

The Anxious Generation up closer

(Just this once, I’m going to relent and use this entry’s word count to spotlight a few of the hundreds of astonishing ideas that Jonathan Haidt offered in The Anxious Generation. And if you look closely enough, you’ll see some light, some hope!) “These two trends—overprotection in the real world and underprotection in the virtual world—are the major reasons why children born after 1995 becameMORE...

The Anxious Generation

(Today’s entry contains some of my reflections after reading a startling book, The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness. Yes, the title caught my attention, too, for good reasons….) “Our technologies may be harming us more than we admit.” Over the past few years, that idea has attached itself to smartphones and social media, sometimesMORE...

Bob Sitze

BOB SITZE has filled the many years of his lifework in diverse settings around the United States. His calling has included careers as a teacher/principal, church musician, writer/author, denominational executive staff member and meat worker. Bob lives in Wheaton, IL.

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