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What if the self-protection you’ve been practicing is the very thing stealing your peace? From a quiet hotel room in Arequipa, while traveling and staying ahead on upcoming shows, Austin speaks to the listener who feels forgotten, unseen, and tired of fighting alone. Bitterness, he says, can sound like wisdom and look like strength, but it slowly becomes a hidden prison. We call it boundaries, but sometimes it’s fear in disguise.
In this episode, we talk honestly about how selfishness hides in self-pity, in the need to win the last word, and in the quiet resentment of others’ success. Beneath it all lies a deeper lie: If I don’t look out for me, no one will. But grace has a different story. Grace whispers, “Come to Me.” It meets us where striving ends and teaches us the truth that changes everything—you’re not abandoned; you’re beloved.
Austin opens up about learning to be followed by mercy rather than chased by enemies. He invites us to trade scorekeeping for service, entitlement for gratitude, and brittle self-reliance for the steady strength of grace. Together, we explore what it means to live free: where forgiveness becomes a daily decision, long before feelings catch up; where closure belongs to God’s justice; and where hope becomes confident assurance, not wishful thinking.
We talk about the Shepherd who carries us home when we’re too weary to keep walking. We talk about forgiveness that happens again when memories sting, about choosing invisible kindness over control, and about small, repeatable habits—deep listening, quick forgiveness, quiet gratitude—that train the heart to rest instead of react.
You’ll hear about living with the Great I Am today, not just believing He was or will be, but trusting His presence right here, in this moment. We close with a prayer of surrender, a reminder that grace runs deeper than any pit we dig with pride, and that mercy always finds its way to the wounded heart.
If this speaks to you, share it with a friend who’s tired of keeping score and ready to live lighter. Follow the show, leave a review, and help others find the message of mercy that’s been pursuing them all along.
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