In 2019 I consumed 25 audiobooks, over 900 podcasts, and somewhere around 110 sermons. Not unlike other 18- to 32-year-old males, I spend a lot of time listening. All of that content I listened to covered topics such as finances, leadership development, spiritual growth, physical fitness, mental toughness, emotional intelligence, professional development, and so much more. Very little of it was what I would call ālightā reading. Almost none of it was fiction.
Now if youāre thinking, āHow on earth does anyone have time for that? Does this guy have a job?ā The answer is yes, I have a job, but I listen to everything sped up during my commute, dog walks, days off, household chores, gym visits, and outdoor runs.
Very efficientāfor consumption, that is.
It is not efficient for processing, though. It is certainly not efficient for implementation.
Iām all for personal growth and development, but unprocessed ideas without any implementation have begun to cause a problem for me. For example, I listened to the audiobook Strengthening the Soul of Your Leadership, by Ruth Haley Barton. I rushed through this book about deep rest and reflection at 1.5x speed. Does anyone see the problem?
Deeper than my ironic rushing through a book on rest is a powerfully problematic word that has emerged in my subconscious and regularly makes its way out of my mouth and into my mental framework: should.
I should be more disciplined. I should be more active. I should be a better leader. I should be leading a bigger organization. I should be a better husband. I should be a better father. I should be able to handle that. I should be ā¦ I should be ā¦ I should be ā¦ .
Who is this person that Iāve concocted, to whom I constantly compare myself? Heās the man of my inputs, the cacophony of all the ideas Iāve been consuming over the past 12 months at a breakneck pace. You see, when you donāt take the time to process ideas and decide how, if, or when you will implement them, but instead just keep flooding your head with the new, or old, or current way you should lead, parent, exercise, schedule, or grow spiritually, it becomes a problem.
Someone wise once said, āExperience is lifeās best teacher.ā Someone wiser said, āIt is not experience alone that is the best teacher, but reflection on your experience that is the best teacher.ā Without reflection there is little retained learning. This has left me with a hodgepodge of uninterpreted and unimplemented ideas forming a nebulous shadow of who I think I should be.
Drowning the Fear
As a pastor I have the privilege of walking alongside all sorts of people, but Iāve noticed the stalling out of a particular demographic: mine. Young men aged 18 to 35. Weāve got ideas on how life could go and what we could or should be, but we end up paralyzed by our fear of failure. None of us likes to feel or dwell on those fears, so what do we do? We drown out that fearful voice with other voicesāmore books, more podcasts, more sermons. More ideas without implementation to cover the fear that Iāll never be who I think I should be. And listen, Iām all for personal growth and development. Iām all for the restlessness of who I am that drives me to become who Iād like to be. But the answer to that restlessness is not found in continuing to consume ideas without implementation. Without reflection there will be no retained learning.
In fact, continuous consumption might be exacerbating the problem.
There will always be new ideas to consume. There will always be ālife-changing hacksā for time management, leadership, money, parenting, or exercise, just as there will always be more work to be done. But working only for gain, only for progress, only for growth is a meaningless, discontented life. The wise teacher in Ecclesiastes repeatedly calls it āchasing after the windā (Eccles. 1:14). Not only is it meaningless, but it is at the same time foolish, even stupid. Who in their right mind would try to chase and grasp the wind?
So whatās the fix for the fear and discontent that comes from our chasing ideals? According to the wise teacher, the answer is to eat, drink, and find satisfaction in oneās work (Eccles. 2:24)āin other words, enjoy your work, enjoy your gain, enjoy your progress. Enjoy your food. Enjoy your drinks.
But hereās the thing about enjoyment: it's a slower process. You donāt enjoy food by continually cramming more in your mouth. To be satisfied requires digestion. It takes time. Satisfaction is slow. You significantly hamper your ability to enjoy life when, rather than living it, you listen to or read about what it should be likeāand do so at 1.5x speed.
I think Jesus understood this. Maybe thatās why he walked everywhere, was often seen eating and drinking, and frequently encouraged his disciples to ācome ā¦ to a quiet place and get some restā (Mark 6:31). Jesus was the one who said that his yoke is easy and his burden is light (Matt. 11:29-30). A yoke here refers to a rabbiās expectation of how life ought to be lived. Jesus was saying that his way of life was easy and light. Would you describe your life that way? Donāt you wish you could?
Perhaps you're like me, thinking, āIf I donāt keep up on all the latest ideas, Iāll fall behind. Iāll miss out!ā Hereās the truth: You will. But that's OK. It was also the writer of Ecclesiastes who said āthere is nothing new under the sunā (Eccles. 1:9).
Because of that, hereās what Iāve decided:
I will not let the fear of falling behind drive me to create a version of myself that I think I should be but constantly fear I never will be.
No, I want a life of satisfaction. I want to do a little more enjoying. A little more reflecting. A little more implementation.
I think that means Iām going to take in a little less, listen a little more slowly, and try a yoke thatās a little lighter.
Slow down; learn to enjoy. Donāt consume so much that you undermine your own contentment. Perhaps you will find yourself living the lighter and easier life Jesus is inviting you to (Matt. 11:28).
Discussion Questions
- How might people fall into the problem of āunprocessed ideas without any implementationā? Have you ever had that problem?
- Have you ever been tyrannized by the word āshouldā? How and why did that happen?
- How can we avoid being paralyzed by our fear of failure?
- In what areas in your life can you slow down more, enjoy more, and reflect more?
About the Author
Corey Van Huizen was the founding pastor of The Gathering, a church plant in Caledonia, Mich. He and his wife, Alanna, love all things on, in, or near water.