When You’re Tired but Keep Showing Up (The Work of Everyday Faith) Finding God in the Middle of It All
Episode Description
When You Wake Up Already Tired
There’s a kind of tiredness that sleep doesn’t fix.
The kind that’s already there before your feet hit the floor.
The kind that lingers quietly beneath everything you carry.
In this opening episode of Season 2, we begin at the counter…
with an honest look at what it means to feel tired in ways that are hard to explain.
Not to fix it.
Not to push past it.
But to notice it.
This season will hold space for the quieter places people carry—
through both solo reflections and conversations with guests in a new series called
A Seat at the Counter.
Each episode invites you to slow down, reflect, and sit with what’s real…
without rushing toward answers.
You are welcome here.
In This Episode
- The difference between physical tiredness and deeper weariness
- What it feels like to carry something unseen
- Why not everything needs to be fixed
- A gentle invitation to notice what’s present
A Quiet Invitation
Where are you feeling tired right now…
in ways you can’t fully explain?
Explore More
At the Counter: Spiritual Recipes for Faith in Everyday Life:
https://amzn.to/4c4RSIv
At the Counter Soul Pause Journal: https://amzn.to/4c4RSIv
Stay Connected
Follow along for future episodes and reflections: Facebook or Instagram
If this episode met you where you are, I’d love to hear from you. What stayed with you?
The counter is always open.
If you’d like a quiet place to sit with what this stirred, A Seat at the Counter: A Soul Pause Journal is available here: https://amzn.to/4c4RSIv
*****
Considering being a guest on At the Counter With the Baking Pastor?
I invite you to listen to 1–2 recent episodes first to get a feel for the tone and heart of the conversations.
If it feels like a good fit, you’re welcome to reach out to me directly on PodMatch and share a bit about what you’d love to bring to the counter: https://www.podmatch.com/hostdetailpreview/atthecounterwiththebakingpastor
I’m especially drawn to conversations that are honest, reflective, and rooted in real-life experience.