
A Reflection on Being Found
Most of us will never drown.
But most of us know the water.
We know what it feels like when the waves come bigger than expected — when what began as a manageable swim quietly becomes something else entirely. We know those strange mathematics of exhaustion, how energy disappears not all at once but in small, almost polite withdrawals, until one day we look up and realize the account is nearly empty. And we cannot remember the last time we felt solid ground beneath us.
It rarely announces itself as a crisis. That’s the thing nobody warns you about.
We imagine drowning would be dramatic — thrashing, panic, calling out. But I have been in the water long enough to know that the deeper kind of drowning is quieter than that. It feels, almost, like acceptance. It feels, at times, remarkably like peace. The head starts to bob. We call it equilibrium. We call it maturity. We call it, with great conviction, I’m fine, really.
We are not fine.
I have sat with enough people in these seasons — and have lived through more than a few of my own — to know that the quiet depletion is the one nobody talks about. The retreat leader who has led everyone else to stillness and forgotten where he left his own. The mother who pours herself out so completely that she cannot remember what she was full of to begin with. The executive who has mastered the language of resilience while quietly running on fumes. There is a kind of surrender that looks like wisdom but is really just depletion. We stop fighting not because we’ve found our center, but because we’ve run out of fight.
And yet.
Even here — especially here — something is moving across the water toward us.
This is what I keep learning, both from my own quiet drownings and from sitting alongside others in theirs: God is almost never where we expect the rescue to come from. The divine rarely shows up in the form we prepared for. We watch the horizon for a lifeboat with the right credentials, and the rescue arrives not as a boat at all, but as a sound. Faint at first. Familiar. Something we almost dismiss because it doesn’t look like saving.
A phone call from a friend who “just happened” to think of you that morning. A sentence in a book that lands like a hand extended in the dark. A moment of unexpected laughter right in the middle of grief — the kind that surprises you and then breaks something open. A stranger on the retreatants’ path who asks exactly the right question without knowing it. A memory that surfaces, unbidden, like a buoy.
The sound of a ship across the bay.
We hear it and we think: coincidence. We think: good timing. We think: lucky.
We rarely think: this is God’s doing.
And perhaps that’s precisely the point.
Sacred Noticing has taught me that divine presence in our lives operates mostly in the minor key — in the subtle, the understated, the easily overlooked. We want burning bushes. We get burning candles. We want the sea to part. We get a sound in the distance that pulls us back to ourselves just enough to keep going.
And that, I have found, is usually enough.
The rescue doesn’t require us to recognize it as rescue. The grace doesn’t demand that we name it correctly before it works. The ship crosses the water whether we know who sent it or not.
But here is the invitation: What if we learned to notice?
What if we practiced the contemplative art of looking back over our lives — over our near-drownings, our quiet depletions, our “I don’t know how I made it through that” seasons — and asked the honest question: What was moving toward me that I didn’t fully see?
You will find things there. I promise you will find things.
The friend who arrived at exactly the wrong moment that turned out to be exactly the right one. The door that closed so definitively it forced you toward the one that would actually open. The season of stillness that felt like failure — but was, in truth, the sea preparing to give you back to yourself.
God has, as the poem says, a heck of a sense of humor.
This is the quiet mystery at the heart of the contemplative life: we are rarely rescued the way we imagined, but we are rarely not rescued at all. The waves do not have the last word. They never have.
Something is always moving across the water. Something has always been moving across the water. The practice — the sacred, patient, lifelong practice — is learning to hear it before we go completely under.
Notice the sound.
It is closer than you think.
And it has been sent.
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DROWNING
The waves are bigger now,
the coastline receding,
As the salty water soothes my eyes but smothers my breath.
It comes soon, I can feel it.
This time not with dread but with acceptance,
Legs tiring now, from hours or it’s minutes of movement.
No longer trashing,
Slowly doing what’s required to stay in place;
But with ever increasing peace,
And less energy.
The head starts to bob under,
Slowly at first,
Then for longer,
As a call comes in,
“Come in number 10 your time is up”
God has a heck of a sense of humor!
Then just as the sea was ready to take its one big last swallow:
I heard a sound …
Faint at first but familiar,
The sound of a ship across the bay,
Waking my spirit,
As I bobbed one last time to see the commotion.
My rescuer was near,
And I lived another life thereafter.
Take a moment today to look back at one season when you felt you were running out of strength. What arrived? How did it arrive? Could you let yourself call it by its right name — even now?
