Tuesday, March 31, 2026

FROM THE SPINE - MARCH 2026 BOOK REVIEWS

March 2026

March has been a lot this year. The weather is schizophrenic, swinging by more than 80 degrees in four days. Most days started cold and ended hot. We set some heat records for March. We had spring break and most of March Madness. We all learned something about dealing with adversity and mean people. One of my favorite parts of March was watching the USA Sled Hockey team compete in the Paralympics in Milan. I got to play sled hockey with my Nephew last summer, and it was so hard. Watching the USA athletes fly around the ice and smash the competition was so fun. I hope we can watch Gabbon compete in France in 2030 and collect more Canadian Tears!


Anyway, here are the books I finished in March and my reviews of them:


Fiction Books

Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card

Ender is a third (child). His older brother is a genius and a sociopath. His older sister is a genius, but too empathetic. Ender is the perfect blend of both. Ender is chosen to save the human race from the buggers (aliens) who attacked Earth. Ender starts Battle School at age 6. The teachers are never fair, twisting circumstances to mold Ender into the weapon they need. At age 9, Ender is given his own army to command. At 10, Ender meets Mazer Rackham, and begins training to take control of the human fleet in deep space. Colonel Graff (played by Harrison Ford in the movie adaptation) does an amazing job stretching Ender to the end of himself as he prepares to be humankind’s last best hope to end the war with the Buggers forever. 


Ender’s Game is an iconic book because, for many, the way Ender feels resonates powerfully with readers and their feelings from their youth. The battles of middle school specifically conjure memories, fears, regrets, and relatability with Ender’s story. The psychology of the story makes it extremely cathartic, putting feelings and struggles into words most would have trouble with. 


Reading about Ender’s evolution in Battle School is my favorite part of the book. I love the visuals of the battle room, the team building Ender uses, his refusal to back down from authority, and his determination to win. I love the creativity of his solutions to unfair puzzles set by the teachers. I had totally forgotten the end of the book from my first reading. I’ve grown a lot as a reader, I suppose, being able to see the conclusions the author was driving now, rather than focusing only on the adventure and danger. 


This is for fighters, survivors, empaths, and young aliens. 

(Rated PG, Score 10/10, audiobook read by Stefan Rudnicki and others, 11:57) 


The Monster In The Hollows by Andrew Peterson (Wingfeather Saga #3)

After they escape from the Gray Fangs in the north, the Jewels of Anniera sail south to the Green Hollows. The Green Hollows were originally home to two of the main characters in the story- Nia Wingfeather (the Jewels’ mother and the Queen of Anniera) and Podo Helmer (the grandfather). The welcome the family receives is not what they expected. The Hollows Folk guard their land fiercely. Their main enemy has been the Fangs of Dang. Now, a little Fang (Kalmar) has found his way into their peaceful community. The little Fang is treated with contempt and shame, and only by offering her life as collateral is Nia able to secure Kalmar’s freedom. As the story unfolds in the Green Hollows, the three children deepen their gifts and royal roles through schooling, squabbling with the Hollow's children, and through their family ties. As winter falls, animals are disappearing from the farms surrounding the Hollows. Eventually, the people of the Hollows, hearts hardened by fear, capture and attempt to execute Kalmar for murder. There are some excellent twists and turns as the end of the book plays out. Who is the monster? Reading this with Jet, I had to answer questions at each twist. He already has running theories that stretch into the next book, as well as ideas about the cover art. Fear makes people do strange things; it also provides a trigger to help us think about where our greatest opportunities lie. 


This is for monsters, little boys, and anyone dealing with bullies.

(Rated PG, Score 9/10, audiobook read by the author, 9:18)


The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins

I found my 100-book bucket list poster this week while I was decluttering the house. This one looked like an easy win, helped by its instant availability of the audiobook through my library app. Katniss is a hunter. She hunts illegally to feed herself and her family in a post-apocalyptic community. Katniss volunteers as tribute in the Hunger Games- a brutal gladiator game designed by the capital to keep the twelve districts humble and subservient. Each district sacrifices one male and one female teenager as tribute every year to the Hunger Games. The twenty-four tributes fight to the death in front of the world in the arena. This book series is quite popular, partially because of the related movies. It’s good to have a teenage girl hero version of Maximus from Gladiator. Katniss is the girl on fire and the girl who defied the capital (an empire). There’s a love story. The survival aspects are fun. The gamesmanship/showmanship aspects are prevalent, but a little too obvious. It has a little something for everyone, like The Princess Bride. Some of my takeaways: There’s always a way out. Play to your strengths. Find water first. Kindness matters. I should be teaching my daughter to be a warrior and a princess. 


This is for hunters, survivors, and rebels.

(Rated PG, Score 7/10, audiobook read by Tatiana Maslany, 10:35)


Slaughterhouse Five by Kurt Vonnegut

Have you ever read a book that you thought you had read, but then realized that whatever you were remembering, it was definitely not the same story? That’s how this book was for me. I thought I had read this book, maybe in high school, but none of it sounded familiar. The story is about Billy Pilgrim, who survives World War II, including the firebombing of Dresden, Germany.     Billy is unstuck in time, so the narrative bounces between the war, his post-war life as an optometrist, and his alien abduction and life in a Tralfamadorian zoo. The story is broken into lots of little chunks, and it bounces around in time with Billy. There is quite a bit of anti-war flavor to the narrative. One of the fun things about fiction is that you can write all kinds of truths that might be politically unpopular without everyone taking them too seriously as threats. I imagine that’s how Vonnegut approached this story. He used the story to deglamorize World War II and show some of the hard truths in stark contrast to popular opinions. I did get to check this one off the 100-book bucket list. 


This is for time travelers, reluctant soldiers, and abductees. 

(Rated PG-13, Score 6/10, ebook, 231p.)


The Warden and the Wolf King by Andrew Peterson (Wingfeather Saga #4)

Janner turns thirteen at the start of the book and gets blind-plopped in the middle of nowhere as part of a Durgan ritual designed to test the young man’s skills at survival, orientation, and navigation. During his trip back, the Fang army attacks Ban Rona with an air assault- Bat Fangs. Kalmar alerts the backup troops about the secret assault and saves the city from being overrun. Leeli discovers that her whistle harp has the ancient power to turn the tide of battle. She also uses her dog-speak gift to send messages and to send reinforcements where they are needed. The Fangs pull back, and the city stands for the moment. Kalmar knows that the only way to win the war is to cut the head off of the snake- Kalmar goes after Gnag the Nameless in the Castle Throg. On his way, he finds Janner and a young troll named Oood. The trio heads toward the deeps of Throg. On their way, they go through Clovenfast, and they meet the queen and spark hope with the creatures there. On the doorstep of the deeps, a herd of toothy cows takes out Oood. The boys make it into the Castle Throg, steal the ancient stone, and run away from a Bonnifer Squoon spider creature. But Gnag isn’t in his castle. He is capturing Leeli. The boys are captured at the bottom of their escape route from the castle, and the children are taken to the Isle of Anniera, where Gnag forces the jewels to open a secret chamber called the Fane of Fire, where he steals a much bigger ancient stone of power. The final battle is a crazy mix of all the creatures, including the dragons, ridge runners,  fangs, and cloven. The end of the book is a story of ultimate sacrifice as the Wingfeather brothers seek to heal the fangs and the cloven who will be the seeds that begin the renewed kingdom of Anniera. This is my favorite book in the series. It is the most complete. It ties up almost all of the loose ends. It takes you through the darkest depths, and tension and sorrow and loss, but restores your hope. It’s a reminder that we are all loved and named by the Maker. It says that little boys are made out of much more solid stuff than we give them credit for. Let’s challenge, teach, and grow them. Let’s help them do dangerous things, carefully. 


This is for adventurers, seekers, and healers.

(Rated PG, Score 10/10, audiobook read by the author, 13:46)


Hyperion by Dan Simmons

Sci-fi this intense is like learning a new language. The author dumps you into a strange land with all kinds of new words for things you’ve never seen or heard of before. This is a seminal example of world-building. As the story unfolds, the pattern of the book becomes clearer: there are seven strangers on a pilgrimage together. They decide to share their stories, and they draw numbers to determine who will tell their story in which order. Each story is a big chapter, shining new light on the overall narrative. Each story builds out its own characters, explores new worlds, unwraps deep motives, and adds to the drama. The uniting thread is always the planet Hyperion and the Shrike pilgrimage to the Time Tombs. The Time Tombs are a set of artifacts that do not experience time normally. There are claims that they are a weapon from the future sent to the past with malicious intent. The stories are very unique, and the characters come from strikingly different backgrounds. There’s a commander, a poet, a private investigator, a priest, and an intellectual. Each pilgrim is willing to risk it all for resolution. I’ll have to hunt down book two to figure out what happens next. The writing style was a bit more… adult than I’m used to. There is a lot of violence, complexity, and sex. The story challenged my imagination and comprehension. During the Private Investigator’s story, the narrative language felt a lot like The Neuromancer, which was fascinating. 


This is for cyber cowboys, pilgrims, and Benjamin Buttons. 

(Rated R, Score 8/10, audiobook read by Marc Victor and others, 20:44)


A Wind in the Door by Madeleine L'Engle (Time Quintet #2)

Meg and Calvin get drawn into a quest to save Charles Wallace. Charles Wallace is sick. He has mitochronditis. His mother and doctor are working to diagnose his illness, and they think it is tied to his farandolae, which are causing his mitochondria to fail at energy production. Meg and Calvin meet a cherubim named Proginoskes, who looks like a drive of dragons. The kids and Progo meet a teacher named Blajeny, who leads them through three epic tasks. First, Meg has to identify and name Mr. Jenkins, who has been copied by evil Echthroi who are trying to destroy humans through Charles Wallace. Mr. Jenkins joins the crew, and Blajeny takes them into one of Charles Wallace’s mitochondria. There, they learn why Charles Wallace is so sick. His farandolae are refusing to deepen because they are being deceived by the Echthroi. Working together against the Echthroi, the team must get Sporos to grow up and deepen to complete task two. For the final task, Meg must save Mr. Jenkins from the Echthroi who attack him and try to ex him.  This is an amazing story about how we are all tied together from the galaxy down to the microscopic. I love the story structure of the three tasks. I love the description and personality of Proginoskes. It gives light to the creatures I’ve read in prophecy and Revelation. I listened to this book with Millie, who I hope will take some of the strength of Meg and the courage of Calvin, and the magical power of naming. 


This is for drives of dragons, younglings, and teachers. 

(Rated PG, Score 8/10, audiobook read by Jennifer Ehle, 5:27)


Non-Fiction Books

The Big Leap by Gay Hendricks

The Big Leap is a quest to live in your Zone of Genius. To leap, you must break through four barriers which cause upper-limit problems: 1- A false belief that we are fundamentally flawed in some way. 2- A false belief that by succeeding, we are being disloyal to and leaving behind people in our past. 3- A false belief that we are a burden in the world. 4- A false belief that we must dim the bright light of our brilliance so we don’t outshine people in our past.  These barriers lead us to sabotage ourselves as we start to achieve success.  When we live in our Zone of Genius, we can thrive in love, abundance, and creativity. The author also spends a couple of chapters discussing our perception of time and how to solve relationship problems. I struggled to get through this book for a while. The main concepts seemed a bit out of my experience, and the language was too fluffy. I got some useful perspective out of the Einstein time chapter. We must take ownership of time and make the most of what we have. Claiming we don’t have enough time is typically dishonest and makes us the victim. When we decide what to do with our time and intentionally spend it on the most important things, we become the masters of it. Sorry, Mikey, this one didn’t resonate with me in my old age. 


This is for self-saboteurs and anyone stuck. 

(Rated PG-13, Score 5/10, audiobook read by the author, 5:27)


War is a Racket by Smedley D. Butler

“A racket is best described, I believe, as something that is not what it seems to the majority of people. Only a small “inside” group knows what it is about. It is conducted for the benefit of the very few, at the expense of the very many. Out of war, a few people make huge fortunes.” This is a fascinating short book describing how war is a racket. It is written in plain, conversational, yet convincing language to the Everyman. It talks about who makes war profit, who pays the bills, how to smash the racket, and concludes with “to hell with war”. I was impressed with the numbers presented in the text, particularly the troop numbers and financial figures. It would be interesting to dig in and see how the numbers for the earlier wars lined up with numbers from some of our more recent wars in terms of cost, loss of life, and misuse of resources, as argued by the author. The author presents some common-sense solutions to the problem: remain neutral, defend our own land, and change the conscription model to force conscription of capital and industry before any humans can be drafted. Of course, these make too much sense and threaten the wealth and influence of those making the rules.


This is for a quick read, historical perspective, and an interesting peek behind the curtain.  

(Rated PG, Score 8/10, audiobook read by Victor Craig, 0:40, ebook, 81p.)


On The Shortness of Life by Lucius Annaeus Seneca

We’ve been faced squarely by death over the last few years. We lost Grandpa Buzz and my cousin Eddie already this year. As my 13-year-old nephew said, “Why do people keep dying?! It’s SO annoying!” I feel that. It’s a pure sentiment. Death reminds us how small and out of control we are. This book is filled with stoic ideas about how short life is and how important it is to live well with the time we have. We waste our time with petty worries. We get our priorities out of order. We forget to enjoy nature. We leave important things unsaid. We can fix these things. Let’s control what we have and live well. 


This is for stoics, anyone needing a quick book win, and anyone who is alive. 

(Rated G, Score 7/10, audiobook read by Jeffrey Ito, 1:00)


Preview/Currently Reading-

Strong Ground by Brene Brown

The Ruthless Elimination of Hurry by John Mark Comer

The Apostle’s Creed by Ben Meyers

Beautiful Outlaw by John Eldridge

Lux by Brandon Sanderson

The Shining by Stephen King

Me Talk Pretty One Day by David Sedaris

Small Things Like These by Claire Keegan

Wingfeather Tales by Andrew Peterson


I track my books in a database called Goodreads. It might help manage your reading lists. 


Final Thoughts- 

Looking at the books I finished this month, there’s a lot of battle, war, chaos, and adventure. In the face of all that, there are beautiful (and ugly) characters who grow, rise up, overcome, adapt, and persevere. There were several instances in which characters sacrificed themselves so that others could live. There’s also a whole lot of weird out there. So it goes. I’m trying to figure out how to be more resilient and calmer in all the weirdness and chaos. I’m trying to learn how to bring people together and make connections. 


This weekend is Easter. Easter is about all these things, too. For me, it’s especially about sacrificial love, resurrection, and redemption. Let’s celebrate and honor these things while we hide the eggs. 


Thanks for adventuring with me. 


Joshua

Saturday, February 28, 2026

FROM THE SPINE - FEBRUARY 2026 BOOK REVIEWS

February 2026

February was a roller coaster with highs and lows. We had a dark week when the kids had the stomach bug. We watched a lot of the Winter Olympics, including the bright spot of the USA Women's and Men’s Hockey teams collecting Canadian tears. At work, the talk has been all about AI. The weather has been everywhere from 10 to 80 degrees. 


Anyway, here are the books I finished in February and my reviews of them:


Fiction Books

The Time Machine by H.G. Wells

What do you think the future holds for man? What does the Earth look like after eons of time pass? This book is the author’s guess in the form of a story, told by an inventor who travels to the far distant future and finds his way back to his own time. In the future, the time traveler finds two types of humanoids: a bright, fairy type, and a dark, ape-like subterranean type. The inventor philosophizes with his friends as he recounts the adventures. His idea of how humans evolved changed drastically as he learned more about the future Earth. After relating his thoughts to his friends, the time traveler disappears again into times unknown. 


This is for students of philosophy, class, and human development. 

(Rated PG, Score 7/10, audiobook read by David McAlistair, 3:27)


The Boy Who Fell From the Stars by Ted and Rachelle Dekker

Religion has led to nuclear war, forcing humans to create an ark and send the best of the race into space to wait while the earth recovers. But when scouts return, they find dragons, released by the war and emitting toxic gases. So the council on the ark has created a team of dragon slayers. The dragon slayers are being trained to travel down to earth, hunt dragon queens, and kill them, paving the way for the rest of the humans on the ark to return to earth before they run out of air and water. The plot and setup for the series are very dramatic. The stakes are the fate of the human race, but the dragons are not their biggest enemy. The story is written for kids, so the language is clear and direct. There are some unshakable truths woven into the conversations between the main character, Jack, and his mother that really resonated with me as I read. First, “There is no darkness in light, and there is no fear in love.” I needed this reminder when I found it. Second, “You might be my son in this life, but you don’t belong to me. You are a gift from heaven, and to heaven you belong.” This truth is critical for me as a parent. I often forget it when my kids are sick. 


This is for little survivors and space nerds.

(Rated G, Score 9/10, paperback, 170p.)


A Wrinkle in Time by Madeline L’Engle

A crazy trio of former stars comes to the aid of the Murry family, whose father is missing. Mrs. Who, Mrs. Whatsit, and Mrs. Witch take Meg, Calvin, and Charles Wallace to rescue Mr. Murry by tessering (space and time-traveling) away from Earth. The party stops at a planet named Uriel so the children can see the darkness they will be fighting. The darkness is terrifying. The children fight it anyway, for love. The children rescue Mr. Murry from IT on a dark planet, but they lose Charles Wallace. Only love can help Meg rescue her little brother from the darkness and IT. The book is unique in style. It blends deep themes with fantasy, sci-fi, and clever writing. It is a classic now, but it took a while to stick. By defying classification, it baffled experts, publishers, and editors. I love the lessons in the book. It depicts the battle between good and evil in an accessible plot. Light overcomes the darkness. 


This is for explorers, rescuers, and misfits. 

(Rated PG, Score 9/10, audiobook read by Hope Davis, 6:27, paperback, 211p.)


Separation by Seth Ring (Battle Mage Farmer #7)

John and Ellie have their farm and their valley packed up in a tiny sphere. They are traveling through the void searching for a place to anchor their world shard and reestablish their home. They break into a dying world, learn about the power of faith, and save the world. They stabilize the mana enough to use a dimensional portal to get to Candle Scholar Tower. While there, they study, politic, and research, eventually discovering a Void Labyrinth which appears to be a potential new home for their farm. They build an adventure party- John, Ellie, Katryn, Cavvod, Ferdie, and Captain Worrell. The party goes hunting for the center of the labyrinth, the source of the void beasts, and the source of mana that will power their world shard stabilizer. This story was pretty consistent with the other books. I am not sure I follow all the logic supporting the magic system (still). There are two more books for me to figure it out. 


This is for void travelers, heroes, and warriors.

(Rated PG, Score 7/10, ebook, 403p.)


Theo of Golden by Allen Levi

I wonder if I could have enjoyed this book ten years ago. The beauty of the book is in the depth of the characters and the deep emotional ranges it made me feel. If you hate feeling things, you should not read about Theo. Theo is an old, mysterious gentleman who moves to the city of Golden from New York. Theo finds some amazing portraits for sale in a small coffee shop. He studies them deeply. He doesn’t understand why they haven’t sold. He decides to buy them and give them to their subjects as gifts. The story blends Theo’s bestowals, his past, and his interactions around Golden. The character development is so good. The dialogue is perfect. There are so many moments that echo with the feel of eternity. Some interactions gave me a glimpse into things unshakably true. I love these moments. Ten years ago, I don’t think I could have understood or appreciated a book like this, but maybe I sell myself short. 


There were three pieces of the book so good that I marked them for revisiting. One was a discussion between Theo and Asher about what makes good art. Theo thoughtfully tells him, “For anything to be good, truly good, there must be love in it.” That seems to be true for all work. 

Two was, “Sadness can make us bitter or wise. We get to choose.” We will all face sadness. How it shapes us is our choice.  

Three, “God gave us faces so we could see each other better.” We must be willing to look at people’s faces to know them and understand them, or we will fail to understand them, and that will let us dehumanize them. 

Thank you, Jimi, for this beautiful recommendation. 


This is for anyone needing a glimpse of kindness and heaven.

(Rated PG, Score 10/10, audiobook read by David Morse, 13:12)


North! Or Be Eaten by Andrew Peterson (Wingfeather Saga #2)

Book 2 of the WingFeather Saga picks right up where Book 1 (On the Edge of the Dark Sea of Darkness) ends. The adventures of the Igiby family continue as they flee from the Fangs of Dang over the Mighty Blapp River and into the Ice Prairies. Stranders, a Fork Factory, toothy cows, Gray Fangs, Bomnubbles, and Snickbuzzards are just a few of the dangers the Jewels of Anniera must face in this tale. Can the Throne Warden protect the King as his duty and honor dictate? Can an old man be forgiven for his long-ago sins against the dragons? Listening to this with Jet, I had to deal with so many questions. The action and danger keep him nervous and trying to figure out what happens next. 


This is for adventurers, protectors, and rebels.

(Rated PG, Score 9/10, audiobook read by the author, 12:01)


The Hard Line by Mark Greaney (Gray man #15)

I love reading Gray Man books. They aren’t all polish and fancy ideas and self-improvement. They are gritty, dangerous, and entertaining. They talk about people as they really are- varying degrees of gray. We all have our strengths, weaknesses, and dark sides. We all have loves and hates and lines we swear we will never cross. We all have doubts. We all have mistakes we can’t go back and unmake. In this book, Court Gentry (Gray Man) and Zack Hightower are forced to face mistakes and consequences from their pasts. At the same time, they are working as members of Ghost Town, an off-book CIA task group that is trying to figure out who is killing members of the US intelligence community in DC. Like all the other Gray Man books, there are lots of gunfights, chase scenes, and political intrigue. If you don’t know Gray Man, think Jason Bourne, but more sarcastic. I don’t usually mention the audiobook narrators, but for this one, Jay Snyder is not at his best doing broad Irish accents. 


This is for ghosts, spies, and protectors. 

(Rated R, Score 9/10, audiobook read by Jay Snyder, 15:02)


The Journey to the Silver Towers by Rachelle Dekker (And They Found Dragons #2)

The Dragon Slayers are stranded on Earth after they crash-landed at the end of book 1. Jack, Sammie, Miguel, and Marco are the children Dragon Slayers whose mission is to kill the dragon queen so that the remaining humans on the ark space station can return to Earth before they run out of air and water. The dragon's breath in the air drives each of the humans to the worst of themselves. Only Jack is immune. Jack and Sammie are rescued by Scalers who drink dragon’s milk, serve the red dragons, and live in fear. Jack finds that his blood will temporarily heal Sammie of the effects of the dragon's breath and dragon’s milk, but it wears off, sending her into fear and distraction. Jack discovers the Silver dragons after Sammie falls back into fear and chooses the reds. The Reds are fear. The Silvers are light. The fate of the humans will be decided by which type of dragons they choose to believe. I liked the action in this book better than the first one. The story makes more sense as the layers are peeled away. 


This is for dragon riders and survivors.

(Rated PG, Score 8/10, paperback, 167p.) 


Non-Fiction Books

Trust by Henry Cloud

This is an amazing book that found me at just the right time (as most books do). I’ve been wrestling with some ideas surrounding trust, even though I didn’t understand how big the trust aspects were. 

There are five sections in the book-

  1. In the first section, Dr. Cloud explains what trust is, how we develop it during infancy and childhood, and how we rely on it in so many aspects of our lives. 
  2. In section two, Dr. Cloud explains that there are five essential elements of trust: understanding, motive, ability, character, and track record. Each element is broken down in its own chapter. Dr. Cloud uses his search for a knee surgeon to explain how each element of trust contributed to his eventual selection of a surgeon while ruling out untrustworthy options along the way. For example, a surgeon could listen to your situation and empathize (understanding), express his desire to help you recover (motive), but be completely inexperienced in knee surgery, failing the ability and track record elements. We know and understand these ideas intuitively, but it’s so helpful to have a framework and language to discuss them. 
  3. Section three contains ways to develop trust. 
  4. Section four is a step-by-step process for restoring broken trust. 
  5. Section five is a wrap-up with tips for not making the same mistakes in trust. 


I enjoy reading content by Dr. Cloud. He uses a good blend of psychology, wisdom, story, and plain language. He breaks big ideas into manageable chunks. He is hard on bad behavior. He provides wonderful perspectives on difficult issues. He calls it like it is. 


This is for anyone dealing with interpersonal trust issues (all of us). 

(Rated PG, Score 9/10, audiobook read by Michael Beck, 9:28)


Preview/Currently Reading-

Strong Ground by Brene Brown

The Big Leap by Gay Hendricks

The Ruthless Elimination of Hurry by John Mark Comer

The Apostle’s Creed by Ben Meyers

Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card

The Monster In The Hollows

A Wind in the Door

Beautiful Outlaw


I track my books in a database called Goodreads. It might help manage your reading lists. 


Final Thoughts- 

There was a clear theme in all of the books I read this month: Light overcoming darkness. I love this theme. It resonates with me this time of year. Clawing our way out of the dark of winter has been tougher since COVID. Fear and darkness, sickness and sadness; they hang on and don’t let go without light and deliberate focus on healing, motion, and (sun)light. Check in with your people and lift each other up out of the seasonal depression, and help each other thrive and bloom. 


I found this prayer in The Boy Who Fell From The Stars. It touched my dad-heart. I will pray it over my kids with tears in my eyes as I bless them and pray power and direction for them. I can imagine my mom praying these powerful words over me, too, just like in the story. 


[Child] of heaven, I pray all light and love go with you all the days of your life. May you know your worth deep enough to see the worth in others. May you see the narrow path, the only way, and not fear it. May you use innocence in the face of judgment. May you hear Yeshua’s voice and see him in all the things you face.


May you find light and life. 


Thanks for adventuring with me. 


Joshua