7-40 Challenge | Round 5 Day 7
I’ve spent this year trying to be one person.
Not one person at work and another at home. Not a version for the office, a version for church, a version for my family. Same guy everywhere. Part of that is conviction — I don’t want to play games or keep track of which face I’m wearing. But part of it is that I’ve found it actually works. What I learn at work sharpens what I do at home. What I figure out at home comes back and makes me better at work. The lessons only flow both directions because there’s no wall between them. There’s just one of me, learning.
There’s a line I’ve always liked, from Remember the Titans: I may be a miserable cuss, but I’m the same miserable cuss to everybody. Consistency is its own kind of fairness. People know what they’re getting. So do I, which means I get to be at ease instead of performing. Performing is exhausting — it never lets you rest in yourself.
Which brings me to the room I won’t walk into.
I don’t rest well. I’m bad at it in a way I can’t explain away as a scheduling problem. There’s always something left on the list, and somewhere underneath that is a conviction that getting it all done depends on me. So I keep moving. And if I’m honest about why I don’t stop, it isn’t that I lack the time. It’s that admitting I need rest feels like admitting I’m failing.
I know that’s not true. I can tell you exactly why it isn’t. The rest is what makes the working hours worth anything — I’m sharper, kinder, more useful to everyone around me when I’ve actually stopped. My faith tells me the same thing, more plainly than I’d like. Rest isn’t a reward for finishing. It’s commanded. It’s built right into the week, no achievement required.
So here’s the crack in the whole thing. I’ve been going on about being the same person everywhere, one integrated life, nothing walled off — and the one part of my life I’ve quietly refused to bring into the system is the exact part God explicitly asked for. My theology says rest is holy. My gut reads it as weakness. Those two have never met.
The way through, I think, looks like tithing. I already trust God with ten percent of the money. Not because the math works — the math never works, that’s the whole point — but because I believe He does more with the ninety than I’d ever squeeze out of the hundred. That’s not a budgeting strategy. That’s faith, applied to something I can count.
I’ve just never extended it to the calendar. Rest is a tithe of time. You give back the seventh and trust that six days in His hands beat seven in yours.
I believe that about my money. I’m still learning to believe it about my week.

