Dear Friends,
The living world is a constant theater of unseen effort. Consider what happens beneath the surface of your own lawn: roots, blind and pale, reach down every day, groping for water and staking the green above in place. The grass appears still, but its true drama is hidden underground, a slow-motion ballet of persistence. Beyond the backyard, in forests and riverbeds, entire communities of life pulse and breathe in secret. Fungi spread their white fingers through loam, feeding for centuries on trees, while newborn minnows flash through the murky, deeper water, each movement a prelude to something larger.
Within the chambers of a heart, the same law holds. Inside you are questions, fears, and hunger you dare not name, but also hope, and the stubborn germ of belief. You may wake on a gray morning certain that nothing can change, only to find, days later, that a small but unmistakable shift has occurred. Some problems are resolved in silence, over days or years, and only later do you trace the cause back to a moment you barely noticed. Like the green shoot that appears suddenly after weeks of barren earth, change often surprises you with its timing. You may not see the struggle or the preparation, but it is always happening, even in the most dormant seasons.
To live with this knowledge—to trust that what is hidden is still alive, still at work—requires discipline. It asks you to suspend judgment, to loosen your grip on certainty, and to become, for a time, a witness to silence. There will be days when your faith in forward motion falters, when you mistake stillness for stagnation. You may demand evidence, only to be met with still more silence. But this is the way of all things that grow: they transform in darkness, they strengthen before they show themselves, and they endure even when you forget to remember them.
Trust, therefore, is an act of both humility and courage. It means accepting that all living things—including yourself—exist in a state of becoming, and that the future is being assembled out of parts you cannot see. It means believing in the persistence of roots, and the eventual return of the sun. It means living as if the world is always preparing to surprise you.
When you are tempted to despair, think of the seeds beneath the snow: they do not pause in their labor just because the world above has turned cold. In time, they will break through with green, and you will marvel at what once seemed impossible. By then, their work will have been long underway—unseen, but unfailing, and more miraculous for it. You may not see the outcome yet, nor understand the delay. You may not feel confident in the process, but unseen does not mean absent.
This week, lean into trust, not blind optimism, but grounded belief that the work you are doing internally is not wasted. May you find comfort in unseen progress, rest in the mystery of becoming, and trust that what is forming now will reveal itself in time.
With gentleness,
Comfort and Joy
