Rolling Thoughts

(2-minute read)

Controlling my thoughts has always been a problem for me. Sometimes I need to concentrate, and my brain does not want to cooperate and brings up things that are not a part of what needs to be considered. Even during the night, when I want to sleep, my brain will suggest that we go through the events of some incident one more time. Naturally, it will then want to think about what I could have done, followed closely by what I should have done. A quick clock check confirms that I’ve spent a great deal of time thinking about things that don’t matter. This frees me up to begin being concerned about how losing that time in sleep will affect me the following day, which wastes more time.

Possibly because I’m retired and have no schedule to keep pushing me along during the day, I started having more of a problem controlling my thoughts. It became more frequent, and I would think, I don’t want to be thinking about this.

My prayers about controlling my thoughts had become ineffective. Our dear friends, Dean and Patti, were at our house one evening, and I asked for prayer. When Dean put his hands on my head and began to pray, the wording of his prayer was different than I expected. I felt faith and believed God would answer. That evening when I went to bed, my mind began to roll over with thoughts just as before. Normally I would have prayed, but this night it was different. I thought the Father is taking care of that. Immediately, the rolling of thoughts ceased. Later during the night, as I was beginning to wake, the thoughts started to roll again in my brain. Generally, I would have been wide awake with this, although groggy, I thought the Father is taking care of that, and the rolling thoughts ceased again. I found concentrating very easy the following day, and those rolling thoughts were gone. They’ve tried to come back, but they are more easily controlled now.

I realized that I had been violating one of the basics of prayer. When we pray, if the Lord says yes, he will give us faith. We will suddenly believe the Lord is going to grant our request. We can pray a thousand times for something, but once faith comes, it’s time to stop praying and begin trusting the Lord. The problem I had when I was asking the Lord to stop these rolling thoughts in my mind was that even after he gave me faith, I began to pray again, which is unbelief. Once we get faith that is not some self-generated positive thinking, God wants us to trust him.

In my case of praying that God would take away these rolling thoughts in my mind, I don’t know how I got away from trusting the Lord when faith came. This must have been going on for some time. I’ve repented of my unbelief, and the Lord has set me free.

26 responses to “Rolling Thoughts”

  1. What a wonderful friend you have in Dean. I’m guilty of repetitive petitions, too, so I’ll have to try “The Father is taking care of that.” Thanks.

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    1. Dean is a great friend and dearly loves the Lord. He has been a great help to me in my walk with God.

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  2. I love examples of how to apply the word of God in practical every day situations…and this has given me food for thought over something I keep asking for! Thankyou.

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    1. Thank you. You encourage me.

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  3. Beautiful and SO helpful!! Thank you for this. Jonda

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    1. Thank you, Jonda. I was wondering who kangacrews was. I assumed it was of your clan.

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  4. That makes complete sense, Don.
    “The Father is taking care of that.” What a valuable lesson, thank you!
    I’m a ruminator too and it can become physically and emotionally exhausting. I need to repent of my unbelief also and let our Father deal with it.

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    1. I am so glad it was helpful, Lesley. Thank you for the encouragement.

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  5. Thank you for your meaningful post. I found myself smiling through your description of roaming thoughts, for you were describing my struggle! I too, wrestle with these – especially during the night. I appreciate your new idea of releasing these into God’s care. Bless you!

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    1. Thank you, Karen. It seems like a lot of us have similar difficulty controlling our thoughts.

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  6. Thank you. I will remember that when I continually pray about something. “The Father is taking care of that”

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    1. It was a big surprise to me that I was doing it. I’m somewhat relieved that I’m not alone. Thank you.

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  7. What a eye opening post for me. I had not thought of a repetitive prayer as unbelief. Thanks for the slap on the forehead. 😉

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  8. This was a most instructive post…. about ruminating (my specialty) and prayer. Thanks for sharing. And you have a great friend. Thanks so much for sharing.

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    1. Thank you , Ellen. It is very encouraging when someone considers something I wrote as helpful.

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  9. Yes, it is very helpful.

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  10. Yes, this is my experience. I have said to God: ” I have told you this before so there is no need for a repetition it is already in Your keeping”. Glad you have had this experience too. God is good all the time.

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  11. Don, thank you for sharing this great practice in trusting, it’s a very helpful post. You detailed the practice Paul taught when he said, “we take every thought captive and make it obey Christ” (2 Corinthians 10:5b, GNT).

    Whenever worries are bogging me down, I do something similar. I’ll say, “this has passed through the Father’s hands.” After that, agitated fearful thoughts dissipate then I can effectively pray with faith and trust in the Almighty God over the situation or circumstance.

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  12. We are in a battle against satan and his minions until we reach Heavens Gate.
    I daily pray for The Holy Spirit to guide my thoughts

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  13. Good testimony Don – I’ve found it helpful to realise the enemy only fires blanks. Insulated by Christ. Blessings 🙂

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  14. “Possibly because I’m retired and have no schedule to keep pushing me along during the day, I started having more of a problem controlling my thoughts.” I am a steadfast believer in routine. Thank you for sharing this wisdom!

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  15. Amen! Let us surrender it all to the Lord.

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    1. Thank you, Deborah.

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