Like some kind of finely tuned timepiece, my internal alarm goes off — clockwork faithful.
No snooze button negotiations. No grace period. Just “bing.”
And there it is… 3:00 a.m. glowing on my digital clock
(yes, I still have one — don’t judge).
I pull the comforter up like it might save me.
It does not.
My body says, up up up,
while my soul whispers, “Really, Lord? Again?”
There was a time I filled those early hours with “responsible things” —
finishing chores I ignored the night before,
paying bills that had been staring at me all day,
or letting the TV talk so I didn’t have to think.
Busy things.
Distracting things.
Things that looked productive but didn’t change me one bit.
But lately… I’m up writing.
Blog entries.
Poems.
Devotionals.
Words spilling out at a pace that tells me I’m not in charge of this schedule anymore.
And somewhere between the glow of that clock and the scratch of my pen, truth had my full attention.
I’ve moved from me cleaning house
to God housekeeping me.
Because once I’m fully awake, I go full steam —
fixing, managing, pushing, performing.
But at 3 a.m.?
I’m not impressive. I’m not polished. I’m barely caffeinated.
And that’s exactly when God starts pointing things out.
Things my soul was too tired to hear during the day,
my pen now faithfully records in the quiet.
Cleaning me.
Pruning me.
Digging around places I thought were “fine.”
Re-creating what I rushed past in daylight.
This isn’t insomnia.
This is divine interruption.
Early-morning housekeeping —
the kind where God gently rearranges what I’ve been tripping over inside
while I’m still wrapped in blankets and honesty.
And I’m reminded, softly, without accusation or demand:
“In quietness and trust is your strength.” (Isaiah 30:15)
Turns out, God doesn’t always wake us up to get more done.
Sometimes He wakes us up because He’s not finished with us yet.
Love, Chelle

