A DARK ROOM OF THOUGHTS HINDERS | WITH KAYA COCOE

 



 A Dark Room of Thoughts Hinders 

When the danger of our Innermost Judgement Becomes Reduced to Pondering...

The writer is a person who is thrilled by the ponderings of life, usually creating stories that resemble life's questions, and trying to give balance to their personal pondering. Though this may seem harmless and even common it can become dangerous. It can hinder our perception on dire issues, dulling their existence and making it hard to escape the fog of daydreaming. 

Thoughts in general are not all bad.

But there are some that can lead, wanting you to follow its call into territory unknown. Filling your mind with thoughts for tomorrow for example is a sure-fire way to bring into the mind anxiety and then an anxious heart. 

For in the bible it mentions: Take no thought for tomorrow: for the morrow shall take thought for the things of itself. Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof... (Matthew 6:34 KJV). For when we think in the recesses of our minds the things of tomorrow, we get nothing but to be anxious, fearful, and such the opposite of hope. Like the quote above in the picture..."just complaints" becomes our portion when we focus on thoughts that cause a mayhem of pondering.

We think, we overthink.

We worry, we lose sight of hope.

When you are alone, with your thoughts in a dark room the weapon of choice is prayer. For we are to cast our cares upon the LORD who cares for us...(See 1 Peter 5:7). When doing so you can assure that God will take your anxieties and give you his perfect peace in exchange. Just like when he gives you beauty for ashes. (Isaiah 61:3) We often get the increase on something that is out of reach for us in the natural but with God it is possible to receive. God is so good. 

This night of thoughts should not captivate you,

no, it should place you in awe of God, for he cares about every detail. 

In a dark room were thoughts that hindered my state of rest...

I give it to the God of all comfort. 


MEET THE BOOKS BY THE AUTHOR:

Kaya Cocoe


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