“The Ball in the Sunlight”

The afternoon sun stretched across the park like a warm blanket, wrapping everything in a golden calm. A father stood in the grass with his young daughter, a red ball in his hand — scuffed from years of play, edges faded from time. It wasn’t just a ball anymore; it was a bridge between them, a small ritual in a world that was always racing ahead.

“Ready?” he called, the wind carrying his voice through the trees.

She nodded, squinting against the light. The ball arced high into the sky, spinning toward her — and for a moment, she froze. Her mind flickered to the game last weekend, the ball she’d missed, the laughter that followed. She reached, but her hands weren’t steady. The ball slipped past and rolled into the grass.

Her father smiled. “Almost,” he said gently. “You have to see it now, not where you think it will be.”

She bit her lip, nodded again. But her thoughts were still tangled — caught in the memory of mistakes, in the fear of missing again.

Another throw. Another miss.

Her father walked over, knelt so their eyes met. “Sweetheart,” he said quietly, “you’re not missing because you can’t catch. You’re missing because you’re not here. The ball’s right in front of you, but your heart’s somewhere else — in what already happened or what you think will happen next. You can’t catch the moment if you’re not in it.”

Something in those words sank deep.

He threw it again. This time, she took a breath — a long, deliberate one — feeling the ground beneath her feet, the sun warming her arms, the air brushing against her face. She let go of the past drop, the worry of the next throw. She watched this one, spinning toward her like a slow heartbeat.

And she caught it.

It wasn’t just a game anymore. It was understanding.

Years later, that same girl — now a grown woman — would stand at different crossroads. She’d lose things that mattered, chase dreams that seemed just out of reach, face storms that left her uncertain and afraid. Life would throw its share of curveballs — some gentle, some hard, some wild.

And every time she started to drift into what was gone or what hadn’t yet arrived, she would remember that afternoon: the smell of grass, the flash of sunlight, and her father’s words echoing softly —

“The ball — and life — only meet your hands when you’re here to catch them.”

That lesson became a compass.

Because being present isn’t just about slowing down — it’s about truly showing up. When you live trapped in the past, regret ties your hands. When you live in the future, fear clouds your vision. But when you live in this moment, the world opens. You start to see the texture of life — the way laughter feels in your chest, how the air smells before it rains, how love shows up in quiet ways that don’t need to be chased or controlled.

The truth is simple and profound:

Life is always happening now. Not in the “someday” you keep chasing, not in the “what if” you can’t let go of.

You only get one chance to catch the ball in flight — one moment to align your hands, your eyes, your heart. And when you do, when you stop fighting time and start embracing presence, you’ll realize something beautiful:

The ball was never just about the game.
It was about life.
It was about you — learning to be here.

“You can’t catch what you’re not present for — life, like the ball, only meets your hands when your heart is here in the moment.”
Robert Bruton

Robert Bruton is a multifaceted creative visionary whose work spans literature, photography, and filmmaking. As an author, Robert’s captivating storytelling delves into the mysteries of human nature, life’s challenges, and the pursuit of purpose. His written works resonate with readers, offering profound insights and inspiration from his journey of perseverance and creativity.

https://www.amazon.com/author/robertbruton

Conflict in your Head Getting Rid of It

“Conflict cannot survive without your participation.”–Wayne Dyer

What I loved about Wayne Dyer is his ability to evolve his spiritual awareness. He was open to receive the grace of the universe, God.

The quote rings so true for me. Conflict in my head is what slows me down. Not taking the time to resolve my thoughts to accept what is and faith for what will be.

prayer, bible, self help

Staying in faith that God will work through my life if I just let him. I’m terrible about hanging onto the past. Mistakes that we make are not life sentences of internal pain. This exists when we participate in that conflict.

Letting go of it is not easy for some. We get okay with pain, wallow in our own self-loathing. Begging the question, how do we stop this behavior?

Learning to forgive yourself is where I started. Throughout my life, I have chosen unwisely many times. Costing me relationships, especially with family. How you can resolve yourself is to not do the old behavior. Live life as a better you!

Don’t accept the status quo!   

Today I don’t live as I did in the past. After enough loss in my life, what the hell us could I do? So you dive in and learn to live a life that YOU can be proud of. A secure measuring stick is to ask yourself when you’re doing something “would grandma approve?” When you are doing anything, we all know right from wrong!

This cliche when you have arrived at this place in your mind; “Sick and Tired of being Sick and Tired.” Crying, depressed, or ready to give up? DO NOT!

Change can hurt, change can take time. On the other side of change is the life God promises you will have. It’s not just going to happen this moment we all have to do the work. It’s so worth it!

Hurt comes in many forms. So this article applies if you’ve suffered loss from divorce, death, betrayal, or any number of things that were out of your control.

The pain you are going through is not as significant as how you deal with it. Learning to deal with our grief healthily takes work. It’s worth the time and effort necessary to change old paradigms. The promise of life, happiness, and joy exist.

I can hear you screaming, Okay, how:

  1. Throw everything in your head up to God. Pray and confess everything negative in your life. Let him know you are ready for a change.
  2. Breathe. Take time every day to just stop and breathe. Don’t say this is stupid until you actually try. I thought to breathe whatever. Just take a minute or two only and breathe.
  3. Learn to meditate. It’s super easy!
  4. Get toxic people out of your life. Don’t listen to someone’s poisonous bile. You control the person you are, not someone else.
  5. Patience. Nothing worth having comes overnight. Go at your pace, JUST GO. This is not a contest. Do things every day that help moves your life forward. Some days big stips, somedays small steps. Forward motion is always a good thing.

Okay, so five things to get you started. Now it’s your turn. GET STARTED!

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