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Finding Center in a New Season

September 26, 2025 by Rev. Dr. Kelly Jackson Brooks. LPCC Uncategorized 0 comments

The change of seasons rarely arrives quietly. It sweeps in with a flurry of uncertainty and excitement—new roles, shifting relationships, unexpected transitions—and can leave us feeling untethered. Whether it’s a seasonal change or a change that we have chosen, or a change that has chosen us, the experience can feel both like the opening of a gift or like standing in the middle of a storm. Yet, within every season of change lies an invitation: to find the steady center that holds us when everything else is shifting.

Finding that center begins with presence. Before we make a plan or rush to the next step, we pause. A few slow, intentional breaths can become an act of trust. Breathing in, we acknowledge the swirl of thoughts and emotions – Breathing out, we release the need to control every detail. In this simple rhythm, the present moment reveals itself as solid ground.

From this place of presence, we can listen—really listen—to what is happening within us. Change can stir grief for what is passing and excitement for what is emerging. Both can coexist. Journaling, prayer, or a quiet walk invites those layered feelings into the light where they can be honored instead of avoided. Naming our inner landscape is not a sign of weakness; it is the first step toward clarity.

Community also anchors us. Seasons of change can tempt us to withdraw, yet sharing our story with trusted companions reminds us we are not alone. A conversation over coffee (pumpkin spice perhaps!), a supportive faith community, or a circle of close friends becomes a reminder that others have weathered their own transitions and emerged whole. Their presence steadies us when our own confidence wavers.

Spiritual practices offer another path to center. Whether it’s contemplative prayer, meditation, or simply sitting in silence, these rituals draw us back to center. For some, scripture or sacred music provides reassurance; for others, time in nature offers perspective. The form matters less than the intention: to reconnect with the deep, abiding love that holds us through every shift.

Finally, finding center in a season of change calls for gentle self-compassion. We may not move through transition neatly or quickly. We may falter or feel lost, but growth is rarely linear. Offering ourselves kindness, as we would to a dear friend, creates the spaciousness needed for transformation.

Change, regardless if it’s a seasonal one of the life-transition type, will keep coming and that is the nature of life. But the center we cultivate through presence, listening, community, spiritual practice, and compassion remains steady. In that quiet heart-space, we discover that we are not merely surviving the storm; we are being reshaped by it. And from that place of stillness, we can step forward with courage, trusting that even in uncertainty, we are held.

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