đż When Rest Is Hard to Find đż
Sensory Overload and Sacred Ground

âš Sacred Pause
Exodus 33:14 â âMy presence will go with you, and I will give you rest.â
đŹ Gentle Questions to Begin
Have you ever felt like the world was too loud, too bright, too fast?
When every sound scratches, every light stings, and even kindness feels like too much?
Today, we honor the sacredness of your sensitivity.
What if your need for quiet isnât weakness but wisdom?
đ A Deeper Look at the Word
Exodus 33:14 says, âMy presence will go with you, and I will give you rest.â
This isnât just a promiseâitâs a posture. God doesnât wait for us to be calm before offering rest. He brings rest into the chaos. Into the overstimulation. Into the moment when the lights are too bright, the sounds too sharp, and our bodies feel like theyâre vibrating with too much.
For neurodivergent souls, rest isnât always found in stillnessâitâs found in safety. And Godâs presence is the safest place of all. He doesnât rush us. He doesnât shame our need to retreat. He walks with us into quiet corners and wraps us in peace.
This verse reminds us that rest is not something we earn by being productive or regulated. Itâs something we receive because we are loved. Even when our nervous systems are frayed, even when we feel like weâre unravelingâGod goes with us. And He gives us rest.
đȘ A Moment from My Journey
I remember walking through a crowded flea market on a warm Saturday afternoon. The air was thick with smellsâfried food, incense, old books. Music played from three different booths at once, each clashing with the other. People brushed past me, voices rising and falling, children darting between tables. I wanted to enjoy it. I really did. But my body had other plans.
My heart started racing. My skin felt electric. Every sound was too loud, every color too bright. I tried to focus on a handmade journal at one booth, but the vendorâs voice blurred into the background noise. I felt myself shutting downâslowly, then all at once. I didnât want to be dramatic. I didnât want to leave. But I knew if I stayed, Iâd unravel.
So I stepped outside. I found a quiet patch of grass behind the market and sat down. I closed my eyes. I breathed. I let the silence hold me. And in that moment, I felt Godâs presenceânot in the crowd, but in the quiet. Not in the hustle, but in the hush.
I used to think I had to push through overstimulation to prove I was strong. Now I know: honoring my limits is holy. Listening to my nervous system is sacred. And rest isnât something I earnâitâs something I receive.
đ± What Helped Me Heal
I stopped trying to âpush through.â
Instead, I started listeningâto my body, my breath, my overwhelm. I gave myself permission to leave crowded places early, to step outside when the noise got too loud, to choose quiet over obligation.
I created sensory sanctuaries: soft lighting, weighted blankets, playlists with gentle sounds. I learned which textures calmed me, which spaces restored me. I stopped apologizing for needing them.
I began to see my sensitivity not as something to fix, but as something sacred. A holy alert system. A way my body tells the truth.
And most of all, I let God meet me thereânot in the noise, but in the hush. Not in the crowd, but in the quiet patch of grass behind the flea market. Thatâs where I felt peace. Thatâs where I remembered: rest is not earned. Itâs received.
đ A Prayer for Today
God of quiet places, thank You for honoring my need for rest.
When the world feels too much, help me find refuge in Your presence.
Let my sensitivity be a doorway to grace, not a source of shame.
Teach me to bless the pause, the retreat, the silence.
đŁ Your Gentle Invitation
Today, create a small sensory sanctuary.
Dim the lights. Wrap yourself in something soft.
Breathe deeply.
Say aloud: âMy body is sacred ground.â
Let rest find you.