Do Over…


If I had a million dollars, I would’ve produced a TV show called Do Over. The whole idea would be simple: sit down with people and ask them about the one moment in their life they’d love to go back and experience again—not to fix it, not to guarantee a better outcome, but just to step back into it one more time. A true do over.

The show would start by interviewing the person about why that moment mattered so much. Then we’d follow them as they prepared for it—getting in shape, relearning old skills, losing weight, getting a makeover…whatever it took to authentically place them back in that moment. After that, the producers would recreate the situation so they could actually live it again. Cameras rolling, we’d all watch it unfold—however it unfolded. And when it was over, we’d sit with them again and hear what changed, what surprised them, what stung, and what healed. They’d get to see the moment through a new lens, with the wisdom they’ve gained over time.

I think that would be a great show to watch.

So what would my do over be?
No question—I’d play one more quarter of high school football for my hometown Radford Bobcats.

Back then, I was #5, the quarterback. In a small town, that wasn’t just a position; it was an identity. I worked hard, but the truth is, I was average at best. I didn’t have the size, the speed, or the smarts. My passes weren’t all that accurate, and I wasn’t all that strong. When I look back on those games—now more than 50 years ago—I’m met with a familiar feeling of regret. I regret not knowing then what I know now. I regret not throwing catchable balls instead of trying to knock my receivers down with them. I regret not relaxing, not enjoying the game, not appreciating the guys around me. For decades, my memories were nothing but fumbles under center and incomplete passes.

Those were my memories…until recently.

I stumbled across a YouTube channel that had many of my old games from 1974, 1975, and 1976. I’ve spent hours watching them—good games and not‑so‑good ones. But the thing I’ve enjoyed most is seeing that young version of me play a whole lot better than I remembered. I did complete passes. I didn’t fumble as much as I thought. Sure, I drifted too deep in the backfield on sweep plays (just like Coach Lyndon always told me not to), but overall…I was better than the story I’d been telling myself for 50 years.

In a way, I got a small do over—at least in my own mind.

And it makes me wonder: what else in my life would look different if I could see it again? Old relationships I’ve beaten myself up over—would they look the same? Moments I’ve replayed through the years—would they feel different now? And the filters I’ve adopted, the ones I use to interpret the world based on how I think something went—how accurate are they, really?

I hope someone out there reads this someday and has the resources to create a show like Do Over. I think it could do the world a lot of good. It might teach us that our memories aren’t always the truth, and that we always have the chance to revisit moments with more grace, more understanding, and more kindness toward ourselves.

And if that day ever comes—if it’s not too late—sign me up as contestant number one.
I’d love one more quarter.

Look… up in the sky…!

DISCLAIMER: SUPERMAN and all related elements are the property of DC Comics. TM & © 2025
DISCLAIMER: SUPERMAN and all related elements are the property of DC Comics. TM & © 2025

When I was a kid, Saturday mornings meant parking myself in front of the TV to watch Superman. George Reeves was the man back then, and everything was in black and white. The episodes were basically the same every week: mild‑mannered Clark Kent, Jimmy Olsen, and Lois Lane all working at the newspaper… and sooner or later, either Jimmy or Lois would end up in some life‑threatening situation. As the clock ticked toward their pending doom, “mild‑mannered Clark Kent” would catch wind of the trouble and sprint off to the nearest telephone booth. He’d duck inside, and moments later he’d burst out as Superman.

The music always made it even better. It would shift from this tense, perilous buildup to a full‑on powerful crescendo the second Clark disappeared into that booth. Then—boom—Superman would leap into action. People would look up and shout, “Look… up in the sky… it’s a bird… it’s a plane… no… it’s Superman!”

Those moments lit something in me. I genuinely believed I could be Superman. I’d even clothespin a bath towel to the back of my T‑shirt as a cape, climb onto the playhouse in our backyard, and jump off just to see if maybe—just maybe—I could fly.

Fast forward…

Now here we are at the start of Christmas week. The shopping is done. The big meals are planned. Everything’s lined up for the usual adult version of Christmas. But I don’t want this moment to just be about buying and eating. I want to pause and sit with the significance of what we’re actually celebrating—and why it matters.

What we’re celebrating is the birth of Jesus. But not just that—so much more. From the very beginning, as Genesis tells it, God created man and woman and walked with them in the garden. Everything was perfect. God enjoyed them, and they enjoyed Him. Then that relationship broke, and sin entered the world. A perfect God and sin can’t coexist, so a gap formed between the two.

The Bible then walks us through thousands of years of history—events, people, prophecies—all pointing toward the day that gap would finally be closed. And the thing is, only God could close it. Humanity couldn’t. God had to do it Himself… and He did.

So what Christmas really is—and why we celebrate it—connects right back to that Superman moment for me. It’s the moment Clark Kent steps into the phone booth. The music shifts. Everything changes. Good is about to overcome evil. The rescue is underway.

Christmas is God stepping into the world He created to close the gap between Himself and His beloved creation. It’s what people longed for and looked for over thousands of years, never imagining it would happen the way it did.

Christmas is the beginning of God’s rescue plan.

As I move into the days ahead, I can’t help but imagine what it must have been like for those shepherds out in the fields that night—when the sky suddenly filled with angels celebrating the arrival of the Savior. Each night, I’ll look up and remember… and be grateful… that God did what only He could do to remove the gap.

Happy Birthday Jesus…we’ve been waiting for you…

Merry Christmas.


Doors…

When I lived in Antigua, Guatemala, I loved taking photos of doors. Every walk through the city’s cobblestone streets felt like a gallery tour—brightly painted frames, weathered wood, ironwork patterns, and colors that seemed to hold centuries of stories. Each door was unique, and each one invited me to wonder: what’s behind it?

Doors aren’t just functional. They’re symbolic.

  • A closed door sparks curiosity. Opening it feels like stepping into possibility.
  • At the same time, shutting a door can mark the end of a chapter—a relationship, a season, or even a way of life.

That duality is what makes doors so powerful. They’re thresholds, both literal and metaphorical.

Think about the last time you walked past a house. Where did your eyes go first? The door.

The design, color, and condition of a door often reveal more about the people inside than any other detail.

Doors aren’t just seen—they’re experienced.

  • A solid door carries meaning, grounding us with its presence.
  • A door that opens smoothly reflects care and attention; one that creaks tells another story.
  • The click of a secure latch reassures us. A knock announces a visitor—sometimes urgent, sometimes familiar, sometimes unexpected.

These small details shape how we feel about safety, welcome, and belonging.

Next time you step out to run errands or return home after a long day, pause for a moment. Notice your door—the way it looks, feels, and sounds. It’s been quietly doing more than you think…


Thanksgiving…or more appropriately…Giving Thanks…


As I sit in this season of Thanksgiving, I find myself reflecting back on a recent post I wrote entitled “Gaps.” In that post, I shared about the spaces left in my life by the loss of people and pets who meant so much to me—those who shaped me, loved me, and influenced me in ways I’ll never forget. Those gaps are real, and they carry with them a weight of pain. Yet, as the holiday season approaches, I’ve realized something equally powerful: I am deeply grateful for the fact that those gaps exist at all. They are evidence of love, of connection, of lives intertwined with mine.


I’ve thought often about the people who stepped into my life and left such an impact. Their presence was a gift, and even though their absence hurts, I wouldn’t trade the gratitude I feel for having known them. Gratitude, I’ve learned, can live right alongside grief.


There’s a saying I’ve carried with me for years:

“What if you woke up one morning and only had those things you thanked God for yesterday?”

That thought always stops me in my tracks. It’s a reminder of how much we truly have, and how quickly we can overlook it until it’s gone. We are blessed beyond measure, and yet we forget.


This holiday season, my prayer is simple: that I remain in a constant state of gratitude—for what is, for what was, and for whatever comes. Gratitude doesn’t erase pain, but it transforms it. It reminds me that I am undeservingly blessed, and that every moment, every relationship, every gift is worth cherishing.


Thanksgiving is more than a noun. It’s more than a holiday. It’s a verb when lived out correctly. And that’s exactly what I plan to do—give thanks, not just in words, but in the way I live.

Gaps…

A year ago, I was back in my hometown of Radford, Virginia, sitting beside my 91-year-old mother’s bed. November felt like one long, emotional tide—rolling in, rolling out, never still. Some mornings she was alert, talking about life, faith, and family with that familiar spark in her eyes. Other days she slept, withdrawn, agitated, or simply tired of the weight of going on. Every hour carried a different version of her, and the emotional toll on all of us was heavier than I ever expected.

On December 2nd, she slipped quietly and peacefully into heaven. For that, I’m grateful. But the gap she left—between me here on earth and her now in glory—feels enormous. It’s a distance I can’t measure, and a silence I still don’t quite know what to do with.

Months before losing my mom, something similar—though different—happened. Our 12-year-old mini labradoodle, Maggie, whom we adopted just two years earlier, woke up with a purple abscess on her belly. One emergency vet visit turned into another, and by the end of that horrible day… Maggie was gone too.

My wife and I both broke that day.
And if I’m honest… I’m still broken.

And if we rewind another six months, I lost someone else—someone who shaped my life in immeasurable ways. A man I met in 2005 at the Rock Church in San Diego, where he served as Executive Pastor and I had just come on staff to help build the new facility. He was the one who persuaded me to go to Sudan… the first of many mission trips that would forever change my faith and life. A best friend. A confidante. A pastor. A mentor. A brother. I loved that man. I learned so much about God through him.

These are the gaps in my life.

They’re the echoing voids—the empty spaces that don’t get filled, the hollows that remind me every day that something or someone once lived there. I try to ignore them sometimes. Other times I try to fill them with distractions or busyness. And some days, I try to just sit in the darkness of them, letting the ache wash over me.

But still… they remain.

I don’t know that they’ll ever fully go away. I’m not sure they’re supposed to. And I certainly don’t want the memories to fade or get watered down with time.

But their presence—their continued, pulsing presence—reminds me how deeply I loved them and how deeply they loved me. It reminds me of laughter, joy, purpose, faith, and seasons of my life that were richer because they were in them.

I’m grateful—truly—for having had them. I’m better because of them. Their fingerprints are on my soul.

But I miss them.
Terribly.

And maybe that’s what grief really is…
the sacred space between what was and what remains.
The gap.
The echo.
The reminder of love that still has nowhere to go…

Start…

There’s a phrase I’ve heard a thousand times: “It’s not how you start, it’s how you finish.”
And I get it—finishing matters. Finishing builds legacy. Finishing earns respect.

But here’s the part people forget:

If you don’t start… you can’t finish.

You can literally change the entire trajectory of your life with one simple decision—a start. A first step. A moment when faith rises just enough to push you forward. A moment where something inside you says, “Okay… let’s do this.”

We underestimate that moment.
We underestimate the power packed into a beginning.

Because starting is emotional.
Starting holds both excitement and anxiety.
Starting whispers possibilities while fear whispers what-ifs.

And yet… every meaningful thing in our lives—every breakthrough, every relationship, every change, every accomplishment—was born in that fragile little moment called start.

It’s why I love Mondays.
Most people dread them.
I welcome them.

Monday is a built-in reminder from God: Here’s a fresh start.
A reset.
A new mercy.
A clean page where nothing has been written yet.

Our lives are full of endless possibilities—but possibilities don’t become reality until we decide to move. At some point, we have to stop rehearsing the excuses, stop overthinking the risks, stop polishing the plans… and just start.

Start the habit.
Start the conversation.
Start the healing.
Start the business.
Start the apology.
Start the prayer.
Start the walk.
Start the change.

It doesn’t have to be pretty.
It doesn’t have to be perfect.
It just has to begin.

Because that first little step—the one nobody else notices—that’s the one that unlocks the finish line.

So today, whatever dream God has been whispering to your heart… whatever assignment you’ve been delaying… whatever change you know you need to make…

Start.

Your finish depends on it.

Simplicity…

I love Chick-fil-A sandwiches… and I’m not alone.

For years now, the classic Chick-fil-A chicken sandwich has been America’s favorite. In fact, it has ranked #1 most beloved fast-food sandwich in survey after survey, year after year — even topping national polls for the past decade. Think about that. In a world overflowing with options, combinations, “secret menus,” and over-engineered creations, the simplest sandwich of them all consistently rises to the top.

A bun.
A piece of chicken.
And a pickle.

That’s it.

No elaborate toppings. No complicated sauces. No fourth-degree-of-heat spice scale. Just simple. Yet somehow, it tastes better than the sandwiches that try ten times harder.

The natural question is: why?

Most people say it’s the way the chicken is seasoned or the magic of the coating. Others swear it’s the pickle. But the real secret — the thing most people never even notice — has nothing to do with the sandwich at all.

It’s the package.

Yep. That little foil-lined pouch the sandwich sits in is the unsung hero. Chick-fil-A figured out that keeping heat and steam sealed in preserves every bit of flavor. Because of that foil lining, the sandwich tastes just as good 30 minutes after it’s cooked as it does the second it comes off the line. The secret of its success is where nobody is looking.

And you know… the same is true for us.

We spend so much time working on the part of ourselves the world sees — the “sandwich,” if you will. Our appearance. Our accomplishments. Our intelligence. Our polish. We keep working on the outside because that’s what the world reacts to. People respond to what they can see, so we keep presenting, shaping, editing, improving.

But what if the true secret to our lives — the flavor, the warmth, the impact — lives in a place no one else is looking?

I believe it’s in what we believe.

It’s in the internal “foil lining” of our lives:
How we see the world.
How we interpret people.
How we define ourselves.

Do I see good or evil around me?
Is the world for me or against me?
Am I a victim or a victor?

Nobody forces us to choose. Nobody demands that we believe one way or another. It’s 100% in our control — the one area no one else can touch. Yet it is the single most important thing we can do for ourselves, and maybe for the world around us.

We don’t always need to change the sandwich.
Most days, we just need a better package — one built from hope, perspective, gratitude, and truth.

Choose wisely.

And here you were thinking it was all about the chicken. 🍗

Life and Golf


Life and Golf

The older I get, the more I realize golf has been quietly preaching to me for years. Not with a loudspeaker or a sermon… just with those small, stubborn lessons that show up somewhere between the tee box and the 18th green. And honestly, the parallels between life and golf are almost uncanny.

Every Shot Is a Start

In golf, you can’t drag the last hole into the next one.
Trust me—I’ve tried.

But life works the same way. Yesterday’s mistakes, yesterday’s pain, even yesterday’s victories… they don’t get to tell today who you are unless you let them. God hands you a brand-new shot every morning. You just have to take it.

Your Setup Matters

I’ve learned—usually the hard way—that bad alignment will sabotage a good swing every time.
Life is no different.

If my heart isn’t right…
If my priorities are off…
If my walk with the Lord is drifting…

Then even my best effort ends up feeling strained. The setup matters—in golf and in life.

Even Good Shots Get Bad Bounces

You ever hit a drive that feels perfect… only to watch it hop into a divot someone else left behind?
Life does that too.

You can make the right decisions, love people well, work hard, pray hard—and still face something completely unfair. But that’s where character, resilience, and faith get tested. The bounce isn’t the story… how you respond to it is.

Stay Where Your Feet Are

My worst holes usually come from thinking ahead—thinking about the scorecard, the water on 16, the putt I missed back on 3.
But the best golf I play happens when I’m fully present for this swing.

Same in life.
Regret pulls you backward.
Fear pulls you forward.
But God meets you right where your feet are.

Small Tweaks Change Everything

Golf rarely changes with grand gestures—it changes with little adjustments most people don’t even notice.
Life, too, is shaped by the small things.

A new habit.
A gentler tone.
A prayer you actually stop to pray.
A decision to start instead of waiting for “perfect.”

Tiny shifts… big impact.

You Play Your Own Ball

One of the quickest ways to ruin a round is to compare your swing to somebody else’s.
Life isn’t any kinder to comparison.

God didn’t give me someone else’s calling, someone else’s gifts, or someone else’s course. I play my own ball—and trust Him with the journey.

The Battle Is Mostly Mental

I don’t think I’ve ever played a round where my mind didn’t try to sabotage me somehow.
Same in life.

Doubt, fear, insecurity—they whisper louder than they deserve. But the moment I breathe, reset, and remember Who walks with me… the whole game changes.

Just Keep Showing Up

Some rounds feel effortless. Others feel like a grind.
But I never get better unless I keep teeing it up.

Life rewards that same quiet consistency—showing up even when it’s heavy, even when it’s slow, even when you don’t feel like you’re improving at all. That’s where strength is built.

It’s Not About Perfection

No one plays perfect golf. But the best players learn how to manage their misses.
Life’s the same story.

God isn’t grading us on perfect performance—He’s shaping us through growth, humility, and grace.

The People You Walk With Matter

A good round becomes great when the company is right.
Same with life.

Family, friends, and just the people who show up in the hard seasons and stay long after the scorecard is signed—that’s the real treasure.


Mile Marker 65…

I’m not sure how I feel about arriving here… It’s a milestone that was always coming…but for some reason…it always seems a long way off…but now it’s here. Now that I’ve arrived, should I celebrate it? Probably. Some of my friends never made it here, so yes, I should celebrate. But it doesn’t feel like a ‘whoo hoo’ celebration. Instead, it calls for a reflective acknowledgment of the journey ahead, which will be much different from the path that led me here.

It seems like the path forward will require me to carry a lighter load than before. I can no longer count on my physical stamina and strength to make up for my shortcomings. I need to be smarter, wiser, and more deliberate moving forward. I’ll need to carry a lighter load and make sure I’m more intentional about how I use my resources since they are fewer now.

This milestone is about taking off my backpack and sitting down for a moment. It’s about looking back on all the beauty that God has allowed me to experience. It’s about wondering how on earth I was blessed to have the life I have enjoyed thus far. It’s about thinking of all the people I’ve met and relationships I’ve had and appreciating all of the impact each and everyone of them have had on my life. It’s being thankful and grateful and just basking in those memories for a while and thanking God for His love of me and His grace.

It’s also about going through my backpack and removing those things I no longer need. Things that have weight to them I can no longer carry. Dreams, hopes and desires that I need to let go. Some of which include, hiking the entire length of the Appalachian Trail probably needs to go, owning a house on a lake probably won’t happen, having a single digit handicap in golf is probably gone for good as well and many others… Giving them up is difficult. The voice in my head is constantly asking me, “are you sure you want to let this one go? ” …and reluctantly the answer is yes.

As difficult as this is…it’s also a time to make sure the things I still have in my backpack will be utilized and needed for the remainder of my journey. They are items that may have only been sparingly used in the past, but will be significant to my success moving forward. Some of these areas include realizing the importance of relationships, taking care of my health, watching what I eat, growing deeper spiritually, being a good steward of my finances, shielding myself from negativity and others… The journey ahead will be challenging in new ways and I’m going to need new tools, skills and attitudes.

65 is a mile marker that I’m grateful to have achieved. I’ve been blessed beyond words. My life has been nothing like I had dreamed of yet remarkable beyond my imagination. It’s now time to move on… It’s time to get up, load my new backpack on to my sore shoulders and continue on an upward path.

I’m mindful of the new feel on my shoulders and while it’s not markably heavier, it is markably different. I’m going to need to slow my pace and at the same time be more mindful to enjoy the views. I’m above the treeline now and the view is nothing but mountaintops and clouds. Yet I’m also exposed to the elements and can no longer seek the protection from the trees. This is no time to be reckless if I plan on completing my journey successfully.

The great thing about hiking is you never really know what is around the bend, or what the view is going to look like once you reach the ridge. The view is always new and changing. The camera cannot capture its beauty, nor can you share the peace that is felt in the silence of your thoughts. The wind, the sun, the crunch of each step on the path is the soundtrack of the day. Yet one thing is certain…the path that I’m on is the one that was made just for me and for how ever long it continues…I know where I’ll end up…home.

Happy 65th to me…the journey continues…

Weeds…

There used to be an infomercial on TV that was made famous by Ron Popeil regarding a little rotisserie oven… He would say, “Set it and forget it!” That is all that would be required. Put the food in, set the timer and it would be perfectly cooked when the timer went off.

Unfortunately, there is little in life that we can expect to come out perfectly without at least some type of maintenance and work. In fact, I would say there is nothing in life that you can truly “set it and forget it!”

We all have multiple aspects of our lives that we try to maintain. Work demands, family needs, relationships, physical responsibilities, spiritual needs as well as the things outside of ourselves, home maintenance, car, finances, and the list goes on and on. Think about all the things, both internal and external that require some aspect of your time and attention. It’s a daunting thought! The question then becomes…how are you doing?

When areas of your life get ignored, expect weeds. Nobody wants a life full of weeds because over time they just get worse and worse. If weeds remain too long, things begin to deteriorate. Weeds don’t go away by themselves. Their removal requires diligence, focus, and effort and we usually get a little dirty during the process. If you’re like me, weeding wears me out. I’m physically sore and exhausted after weeding.

Life is no different. The only way to keep weeds out of your life is to regularly spend the time to remove them in their earliest stages. The effort is minimal, but yet still required. It is relatively painless but still requires diligence, focus, and at least some degree of effort.

Every so often I make a list of everything I am responsible for. Then I ask myself, “How am I doing in that area?” This exercise always results in several areas in my life I have either neglected entirely or need immediate attention. Then I try to keep this list in front of me for a time so I’m aware of areas I need to maintain.

Unfortunately, having a perfectly manicured life is only a temporary state. Weeds can and will return. However, it is worth those brief moments when you can step back and enjoy the fruits of your labor.

Stay on top of your life. Ron Popeil’s tagline should have been, “Set it and forget it….will make you regret it!”