I hope that wherever you are, you know Recovery is with you—right where you are.
Due to the Thanksgiving holiday, there will be no blog posts on Thursday, November 27, or Friday, November 28, 2025. Thank you for being so supportive. It is an honor to walk with you on this Recovery journey.
I am excited to share that my second book will be published in January or February of 2026. The title is Daily Devotional – 12 Steps to Unshakeable Recovery. It guides us to practice one of the 12 Steps each day for an entire year.
Recovery teaches us that our souls wait in silence, for our hope comes from Him. Silence means stillness and resting. It does not mean doing nothing. It is a spiritual kind of alertness. When we sit quietly, our spiritual ears—our inner antennas—are lifted and open.
Even in the chaos of life and Recovery, we can choose inner quiet. Most of us live busy lives. We can’t just escape to a mountaintop whenever we want peace. Instead, we learn to quiet our hearts within. True listening requires waiting. And waiting reveals where we place our trust. If we cannot wait, we cannot listen.
Lately, I have been asking the question, “Lord, what are You wanting from me?” The longer I wait, the deeper the experience becomes. Waiting has taught me to trust more and to listen more.
Most days, I sit still, clear my mind, and open my heart. I try to hear what God wants me to do next in my Recovery. Many times, I hear nothing for days or even months.
I also struggle at times with writing about my faith. I know many people have been hurt in the name of religion—I was, too. I try to be gentle and sensitive in my words so that no one feels pushed away or unseen.
This is why I often use the word Recovery as another word for God or Higher Power. I want my work—my books, my blog, and our 12-step journey—to be open to everyone. Recently, during quiet time, I sensed the Lord urging me to seek spiritual direction. I am listening, and I am taking steps to find someone who can walk with me.
Our culture often treats waiting as a waste of time. We expect fast answers, instant clarity, and immediate solutions. But Recovery invites us to slow down. Most of the healing happens beneath the surface of our inner life. Waiting is not Recovery, holding something back. Waiting is Recovery, preparing us.
As we wait, Recovery grows larger inside of us, and our anxiety grows smaller. We cannot rush this process. We can only enter into it with an open heart. Getting ready is not passive—it is active spiritual work.
May we all learn to wait with hope, listen with trust, and grow in quiet strength.
SuperHuman Being
Peace
Larry
email: ljw@superhumanbeing.net
website: https://superhumanbeing.net/