I walked out of the hospital holding back tears.
Not the kind that fall freely…
the kind that sit right behind your eyes
because your heart is full and heavy at the same time.
I had poured in. Tears. Prayers. Words of life. And I meant every bit of it.
Before I even made it off the elevator,
my mind had already started moving ahead of me…Who can I call?
What resources can I connect?
What can I put in place to help carry this?
By the time those automatic doors opened,
I had a plan forming. I was ready to do more.
Be more. Help more.
And right there, as I stepped outside… I heard it in my spirit:
“Step off now.”
Not later.
Not after one more call.
Not after I “just check on one thing.”
Now.
And it didn’t match what I felt. Because everything in me wanted to stay involved.
To keep my hands in it. To make sure it would be okay.
But I’ve learned something… both in the garden and in life:
There are moments when the worst thing you can do is touch it.
When the soil is too wet even good hands make mud. You can have the best intentions.
The purest heart. The right tools. And still…do damage by stepping in too soon.
“In quietness and trust is your strength…” — Isaiah 30:15
Because sometimes strength doesn’t look like movement. Sometimes it looks like restraint.
In the garden, wet soil means wait.
Let it settle. Let the excess drain. Let the roots breathe again.
And here’s what took me time to learn…Not every plant needs constant tending.Some plants actually thrive when they are allowed to grow without being handled every day.
Too much touching…
too much adjusting…
too much checking… can stunt what was already trying to grow.
In life, in ministry… it’s the same.
I must trust God to show me which seeds I am assigned to plant… and which ones I am not meant to cultivate.
Because every seed I sow is not mine to steward long-term.
Some will be watered by others.
Some will be strengthened in places I will never see.
Some will grow best when I am no longer standing over them.
Doing nothing can feel like neglect. But sometimes it’s obedience.
That day, standing outside those hospital doors, I had to make a decision : Trust what I heard or trust what I felt.
And what I felt said: “Stay. Help. Fix it.”
But what I heard said:
“Step off.”
So I did.
Not because I didn’t care.
But because I trusted that God was already working in ways I could not see… and without making it muddier.
Truth:
Everything that’s messy is not mine to fix.
Some soil needs to settle before anything can grow. And some seeds need space to become
what God intended without my constant touch.
Dear Lord, teach me the difference
between when to step in and when to step back. When my heart wants to help,
but Your Spirit says wait…give me the strength to listen.
Help me trust that You are working even when my hands are still. Show me which seeds are mine to plant… and which ones I must release into Your care and the care of others.
Help me with trusting You with what I have planted, even when I am not the one called to stay.
Love, Chelle
defygravitywithoutwings.com

