This page is about Christian contentment: making peace with the life you have, fighting the restlessness that whispers you need more, and learning to notice the good that’s already here. There is a restlessness that lives in most of us — a nagging sense that we should be further along, doing more, becoming more. I know that feeling well. These posts are my honest wrestling with it, and the quiet, hard-won discovery that contentment is not a feeling that arrives. It’s a practice.
On Restlessness and Always Wanting More
Most of us carry a quiet sense that we should be further along than we are.
- When You’re Always Looking for More
- Will You Never Be Satisfied?
- Wishing My Life Away
- When Your Heart Is Restless
- Obsessing Over the Stock Market
- Nobody Cares — Work Harder
On Work, Calling, and Purpose
So much of our striving is really a search for meaning in the wrong places.
- How to Find Your Calling
- What Is Your Calling?
- Working Yourself to Death
- Stuck in Work Mode
- What Is the Point?
- If You Can’t Measure It, Does It Matter?
On Noticing Beauty and Practicing Gratitude
Most of the beauty in life goes unnoticed — not because it isn’t there, but because we move too fast to see it.
- The Most Beautiful Sight You’ve Ever Seen
- Fresh Eyes and Little Things
- Sacrifices That Are No Sacrifice
- The Scarcity and Abundance of Shark Teeth
- Christmas
On Slowing Down and Paying Attention
The pace of life is the thief; attention is how you steal the moments back.
- Childhood Moments I Miss the Most
- The Summer Camp Mentality
- Life Is Moving Too Fast
- How a Superhero Cape Helps Me Be Awesome
- No Time for Simple Pleasures
On Time, Legacy, and Regret
Nothing clarifies what matters quite like remembering how short all of this is.
- Does the Shortness of Life Motivate You?
- What Deathbed Regrets Teach Us
- Time Spent
- The Best Days of Your Life
- Why I Don’t Make New Year’s Resolutions
On Meaning and the Stories We Tell
We’re all writing a story with our lives, whether we’re paying attention to the plot or not.
- Do You Want to Live a Great Story?
- Viewing Life as a Story Worth Writing
- Just Getting Through Life
- Making the Best Decisions
- Living on the Edge
Common Questions About Contentment
How do you find contentment when you always want more?
By treating contentment as a practice rather than a feeling that shows up on its own. The wanting never fully disappears; what changes is how much power you hand it. Gratitude is the muscle that pushes back, and it gets stronger the more you use it.
Is ambition wrong for a Christian?
No, but it’s worth examining honestly. There’s a real difference between building something good and trying to outrun a restlessness that no achievement will ever satisfy. The question I keep asking myself is whether I’m chasing or receiving.
How do I stop comparing my life to everyone else’s?
Comparison feeds on inputs — what you scroll, what you measure, who you watch. I’ve found contentment grows when I narrow my attention to the actual life in front of me instead of the highlight reels beside it.
What’s the point if you can’t measure your impact?
Some of the most meaningful things in life can’t be measured at all — presence, faithfulness, love, a quiet word at the right time. I’ve had to learn that “unmeasurable” is not the same as “unimportant.”
I seek to live my life in a way that keeps me joyful and young at heart — and contentment is what makes that possible. Not having everything I want, but wanting everything I already have.