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Faith is the Exhale: Trading Your Panic for His Peace

November 9, 2025 Kurt Henson

You know that feeling.

Your shoulders are hiked up to your ears. Your jaw is clenched. You realize you haven't taken a real breath in the last five minutes. You’re just... holding.

You’re holding your breath as you wait for the email. Holding it as you check your bank account. Holding it as you listen to the news or wait for a loved one to get home.

Anxiety holds its breath. It’s a full body clench, a physical bracing for an impact that may or may not ever come. It’s our body’s way of trying to control the uncontrollable. We think, "If I just stay tense, if I stay alert, if I don't let my guard down... I can manage this."

And in that tense, airless space, there is no room for peace. There is only panic, waiting.

We’ve all been told to "just pray about it." But what does that mean when you’re so full of anxiety you can't even think straight? You try to pray, but the words feel hollow. They just bounce off the tightness in your chest.

This is where I’ve found the most profound connection between mindfulness and my Catholic faith.

Faith is the exhale.

The Sacred Pause Before the Exhale


When you’re stuck in that anxiety clench, you can't just force yourself to be at peace. Telling yourself to "stop worrying" is as effective as telling a wave to stop moving.

The first step isn't a giant leap of faith. It's a tiny, mindful pause.

Mindfulness is simply the act of noticing. It’s the gentle, non-judgmental thought that says, "Wow. I'm really anxious right now. My chest is tight. I'm holding my breath."

That's it. You just notice. You don't judge yourself for it. You don't berate yourself for "not having enough faith." You just compassionately observe the reality of the present moment: "I am here, and I am scared."

In that tiny, honest pause, you’ve created a sliver of space. And in that space, you finally have room to make a choice.

Faith: The Great Exchange

Here’s the secret: Faith isn’t a feeling. It's a decision. It's an action.

It is the choice to trade our panic for His peace.

In that mindful pause, we see our two hands. In one, we’re white-knuckling our panic, our "what-ifs," and our desperate need for control. In the other, God is offering His peace—a peace that, as St. Paul says, "surpasses all understanding" (Philippians 4:7).

The exhale is the act of opening our hand.

It's the conscious decision to stop holding our anxiety and to start giving it away. This isn't a polite hand-off. 1 Peter 5:7 gives us a much more beautifully human and desperate image:

"Cast all your worries upon him because he cares for you."

"Cast" isn't a gentle placement. It means to hurl. To throw. To unload.

This is the faith-filled exhale. It’s the "I can't" that finally gives way to the "You can."

A 2-Minute Mindful Prayer for the Exhale

The next time you feel that suffocating clench, try this. It’s a practice, not a one-time fix.

  1. Notice (The Pause): Close your eyes. Acknowledge the feeling. "Lord, I feel this. My chest is tight. I'm holding my breath."

  2. Inhale (The Acknowledgment): Take a slow, deep breath in. As you do, don't fight the anxiety. Just gather it up. Acknowledge its presence.

  3. Exhale (The "Hurl"): As you breathe out, physically and intentionally give it to Him. Imagine yourself literally hurling that entire bundle of worry from your chest into the hands of a Father who, as the verse promises, cares for you.

Do this again.

  • Breathe in: "My panic..."

  • Breathe out: "...for Your peace."

  • Breathe in: "What I can't control..."

  • Breathe out: "...I give to You."

  • Breathe in: "My fear..."

  • Breathe out: "...Your care."

Anxiety holds its breath because it's a burden we were never meant to carry. It’s the tragic pride of thinking we have to manage our own salvation.

Faith is the exhale. It's the sweet, life-giving relief of surrender. It's the repeated, daily, sometimes-hourly choice to hurl the full weight of our worry onto a Father who has never once dropped what we’ve given Him.

He can take it. He wants to take it.

So let go. Let Him carry it. And breathe.


In Bible Study, Christianity, Mindfulness, Personal Growth, Spirituality Tags Faith, Anxiety, Catholic, Mindfulness, Catholic Mindfulness, Peace, Surrender, Trusting God, Worry, Christian Living, Prayer, Let Go, Philippians 4:7, 1 Peter 5:7, Christian Mindfulness, Anxiety Relief
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Dethroning My Idol of Comfort: A Mindful Path to Trusting Christ

October 5, 2025 Kurt Henson

For most of my life, I believed the pursuit of comfort and security was a noble goal. I was taught to build a nest egg, climb the ladder, and establish a life so well-fortified that no unexpected storm could shake its foundations. These aren’t bad desires, but I began to notice a subtle and dangerous shift in my own heart. Slowly, without me even realizing it, my pursuit of security had become the source of my security. The comfort I was building had become an idol I worshipped.

I remember reading Jesus's stark and unsettling words to a man who wanted to follow him: "Foxes have dens and birds of the air have nests, but the Son of Man has nowhere to lay his head" (Luke 9:58). This verse struck me, not as a command to be homeless, but as a profound spiritual invitation. I realized that my call as a Christian was to dethrone the idol of comfort in my own life. It was a summons to a life of radical, moment-by-moment trust in God as my sole provider, my only true security, and my ultimate comfort.

My Idol With Many Names

My idol of security doesn’t look like a golden calf. Sometimes it looks like my banking app, which I check obsessively. Sometimes it’s the over-planning of every detail of my life, leaving no room for the Holy Spirit to move. It’s the paralyzing anxiety I feel when life deviates from the script I’ve written for myself.

An idol is anything I turn to for what only God can truly give: ultimate peace, lasting worth, and unwavering security. When my peace of mind rises and falls with my financial portfolio, I have found my idol. When my first instinct in a crisis is to figure it out myself rather than turning to God in prayer, I have revealed where my true faith lies.

The Open Hand: A Mindful Practice

The key to dethroning this idol, I've learned, is not about suddenly rejecting all worldly goods, but about cultivating a profound interior shift. It’s about being so captured by the "treasures in heaven" that I hold the "treasures on earth" with an open hand. To help me do this, I’ve integrated a simple, mindful prayer into my daily routine.

Practice: The Open Hand Meditation

  1. Find a quiet space and sit comfortably. Close your eyes and take a few deep breaths.

  2. Clench both of your fists tightly. As you squeeze, bring to mind the things you are clinging to for security—your career, your savings, your plans for the future, your reputation. Feel the tension in your hands and arms. Acknowledge that this tension is how your soul feels when it's grasping for control.

  3. Slowly, intentionally, unfurl your fingers until your palms are open and facing up. As you release the tension, consciously offer everything you were clinging to back to God. Picture yourself placing them in His hands.

  4. Sit for a few moments with your hands open. Meditate on this posture of surrender and trust. Your hands are now free to receive what God wants to give you and free to be used in His service. I often end by praying, "Lord, I surrender what I am clutching so that I may receive what You are offering."

From Anxious Thoughts to Trusting Breath

This journey is a moment-by-moment practice. Anxiety about the future can still creep in. In those moments, I turn to a practice that connects my mind, body, and soul: a breath prayer.

Practice: Breath Prayer for Trust

When you feel a wave of anxiety about uncertainty, pause. Close your eyes and focus on the physical sensation of your breath. As you inhale, silently pray a simple phrase, like "Jesus, I trust." As you exhale, complete the prayer: "in You."

  • (Inhale) Jesus, I trust...

  • (Exhale) ...in You.

Repeat this for a minute or two. This simple act re-centers my frantic mind, calms my nervous system, and re-orients my heart toward my true source of security. It moves my trust from the shaky ground of my own plans to the solid rock of Christ.

My True Resting Place

The call of Christ is a daily invitation to find my rest not in the stability of the world, but in the unwavering love of the Father. My security is not in a place, but in a Person. My comfort is not in my circumstances, but in my Companion, Jesus Christ.

I still have to manage finances and plan for the future, but these practices help me do so with an open hand and a trusting heart. My prayer for myself, and for you, is that we have the courage to dethrone the idol of comfort and find our one, true, and eternal resting place in the heart of God.

In Bible Study, Christianity, Mindfulness, Personal Growth, Spirituality Tags Christian Living, Faith, Trust in God, Letting Go, Surrender, Mindfulness, Christian Mindfulness, Catholic, Prayer, Anxiety, Idolatry, Spiritual Growth, Idol of Comfort, Divine Providence
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