Mountain Scape

Choose Your Hard

March 03, 20262 min read

Where Discomfort Becomes Strength

I was fragile.
I couldn’t hold it together.

I would’ve been better off by myself.
But that would’ve been too easy.

So I sat in the discomfort
while my mind worked overtime
and my body felt paralyzed.

Forty-five solo minutes in the chapel.
Quiet. Still. Hidden.

I debated walking into the nave, the main part of the Church.

I didn’t want to perform.
Didn’t want to smile.
Didn’t want to explain my energy.

Even walking to my seat felt like miles —
past familiar faces,
past friendly eyes.

I made it as far as the commons,
but stood there physically stuck
under the weight of my own thoughts.

Until I heard —

“Release it at the altar.”

It was my deacon’s voice —
a steady presence beside me.
A faithful man who never lets me walk alone.

That was enough.

Not a speech.
Just a few words.
Enough to give me momentum.

I made it to my seat —
and wept.

I was stretched.

My mind on overload,
my body a poor representation
of the joyful, strong self I’ve worked so hard to become.

We weren’t unified.
I was disconnected.

So disconnected that I didn’t have the strength
or confidence
to connect with others who might expect it of me.

But I wasn’t there for others.

I needed a protected environment
while I reconnected.

Through all of life’s challenges,
there is one place where I am physically safe
enough to allow my mind and body
to realign on the narrow path.

I was guided in choosing my hard.

Not isolation.
Not performance.
But presence —
honoring the discomfort instead of escaping it.

And somewhere between the chapel,
the altar,
and lunch with my aunt —

it was released.

And the strength didn’t just return.

It multiplied.

A hard day.
But a necessary one.


Evelyn Harper

Evelyn Harper

Writing at the intersection of faith, health, and intentional living-- with the belief that true fitness begins with alignment of mind and body.

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