It was about five years ago that God called me to step down from my role as a children’s ministries director and pursue my work at Love Does That more fully. And even though it was pretty clear, it was still pretty hard to follow through—to walk away from that job and those people and do something else instead.
What hard decisions have you had to make? Maybe it regarded your job, like me. Or maybe it focused on which school your kids should go to, or where you live. Maybe someone in your family needed extra care from you, and that meant you had to step away from something else, at least for a little while.
There are hard decisions, and then there are decisions you don’t want to make—when your heart and your head are telling you two different things.
Lauren Black had a decision like this. And she has had to lay down her dream and move forward in surrender.
Lauren is a Decision Coach, as she’ll talk more about in our first moments together. And she has been able to develop some frameworks that have helped her—and others—discern what choices to make.
Lauren and I talk about how to grieve these hard decisions and if you should ever reconsider decisions later down the road. Is it okay to change your mind? Or is that too flakey?
And after this conversation, be sure to catch our episode over on Lauren’s podcast, Anchored Decisions. You’ll hear us reference parts of it here, including more about when I stepped down from children’s ministries.
Now, let’s go ahead and dive into my conversation with Lauren.
[interview]
CONNECT WITH LAUREN BLACK:
RELATED EPISODES:
- Episode 77: Three Prayers for Discernment: Making Difficult Choices in Difficult Seasons
- Episode 160: When Life Changes, Re-evaluate
You can do more than just read a Bible story; you can actually enter into the story itself and experience God.
And you don’t have to be a Bible scholar to do it.
In the Imagine devotional, you’ll dive into a different story in the Bible and get a taste of what a person’s life might have looked like as they encountered God through their specific circumstances.

