I love thinking about all the many, many normal moments that we have as humans in between our incredible highs and super lows. Those extremes may show up on our highlight reel, but it’s the ordinary, messy moments that develop our character, whether by shining in our times of triumph or rehearsing resilience in our times of adversity. Those extremes may show up on our highlight reel, but it’s the ordinary, messy moments that develop our character. It’s the “what happened before actions” and the “what comes after actions” that make us who we are.
To face adversity head-on and find true resilience, we need to do some serious heart-work behind the scenes. The secret to drawing from a deep well in hard times is to be faithful every day, even when life is easy. That’s how you fill the well.
Likewise, the view from the mountaintop is exhilarating, but it’s what happens after we come back down that really counts. If we want our peak experiences to have lasting impact, we have to let them change us from the inside out. When the hype dies down and reality sets in, our day-to-day choices matter more than ever.

My Mundane
Late last night, I found myself waist-deep in laundry – the never-ending nemesis of every mother on the planet. I think laundry is so mentally taxing because it is a multi-step process. By the time I get to the putting away part, I give up, and we live out of baskets for…well, forever!
But I’ve recently had to change my ways and stop living out of baskets. My sweet Lael is in a phase where she wants to help. That extra chromosome makes her super sweet, but also super stubborn. Lately, she’s been “helping” by putting away all our folded laundry. And when I say “putting away,” what I really mean is hiding it. We’ve found socks in the linen closet, t-shirts under the couch cushions, and my personal favorite, underwear in the dishwasher. Sigh.
So my ordinary, messy moments are spent playing hide-and-seek with stolen laundry, refolding and redistributing it, and doing it all quickly and quietly so my little helper doesn’t keep throwing away sports uniforms!
As I reflected on my life with Lael, I realized that during her life, I’ve experienced the highest highs and the lowest lows. But in between those extremes, there are countless ordinary, messy moments that make up the bulk of our days. Like the times when I’m chasing a giggling little girl who’s wearing every piece of clean laundry she can find. It’s chaotic and exhausting, but also full of joy and laughter. And it struck me that if I didn’t learn to appreciate these everyday moments and draw strength from them, I’d be missing out on so much. After all, it’s these messy, imperfect moments that shape us and help us grow. So even as I’m playing hide-and-seek with stolen laundry and trying to keep up with my wild child, I’m also filling my well for the moments when I’ll need refreshment and strength.
The Woman at the Well
I couldn’t help but think about the story of the woman at the well in John 4. You know the one: Jesus and his buddies were on a road trip, and they stopped at a well in a place where they weren’t exactly welcome. While the disciples went off to find some lunch, Jesus stayed behind and waited at the well. And wouldn’t you know it, just then a Samaritan woman showed up to draw water.
Now, this might not seem like a big deal to us, but back then it was a pretty scandalous thing for a woman to show up at the well by herself in the middle of the day. It was also pretty taboo since 1. she was a woman, 2. she was a Samaritan, and 3. she was a Samaritan woman. But Jesus didn’t care about societal norms or expectations. He saw right into her heart and knew that she had a hard life, with hard choices and a reputation that wasn’t exactly sterling.
And yet, he spoke to her with such kindness and compassion. He saw all the things that had led her to this moment, all the “what happened before” actions that had shaped her life. He must have seen her actions not in isolation, but as part of the greater story where what others judged her about was only just a page. He didn’t judge her or condemn her; he simply offered her a drink of living water and a chance to start over. He loved her in the middle of her mess and brokenness. Not only that, but he felt she was worthy to reveal his identity to her. This woman was the first person that Jesus revealed himself as the Messiah to. This just blows my mind. He didn’t wait for her circumstances to change. He didn’t wait until the end of her story, the mountaintop of her testimony, or the apex of her self-realization. She was still living with a man and married to another. She came to the well in the heat of the day because she was the topic of conversation among the other women. She could feel their eyes, hear their whispers. So, to guard her heart, she suffered physically to save herself emotionally.
I think Jesus came to her in spite of her messy circumstances because he saw her heart. She was in the middle of her mundane. Literally and emotionally.
It was in the mess, in the mundane, that Jesus gifted her the courage to hope. He told her the biggest secret in history and it changed everything. John 4:28 tells us that she was so excited about this news that she ran back to town, leaving her water jar at the well. What a small, but significant detail.
What Comes After Mountaintop Moments
We don’t know much about this woman after this encounter. We know she told everyone she could about Jesus, and that she led them back out to him. But that’s it. That’s all we have.
But we know that people saw her differently that day. She didn’t shrink away. She didn’t hide. Instead, she came running and she unapologetically shared her excitement about meeting Jesus. Jesus. Yet another man. This could have been so scandalous, but when we encounter Jesus, there’s no room for worry. There’s no time for fear of what man can say or do. When we encounter Him, we run towards our purpose, leaving our past behind.
We know that she became known as the woman at the well that day. We know that John, the disciple, took great care to catalog her past in his gospel, but he called her by a different name than most in the village probably called her. She may have been known as a scandalous woman, that girl, the one to keep away from your husbands. But for the rest of history, she wasn’t called by the name of her lows, but by what happened in her mundane. She became the woman at the well. The one who saw the Messiah. The one whose course was changed. When we encounter God, He calls us by our true name.
And the most interesting thing to think about is that we know that she still had her life to return to. She still had this man she was living with and this husband that she had been unfaithful to. She still had people in her village that would probably not believe who Jesus was, not believe in her change, and not believe that their opinion of her could shift. She still had her own trust issues to work through.
But she saw Jesus and that was enough to carry her through the “what comes after moments.” Those are the ones that were significant. Those are the ones that secured her name as “the woman at the well.” We can guess that she transformed that day. We can guess that there were many after moments that were radically different after she left her jar behind. When the hype dies down and reality sets in, what will our day-to-day choices be?

We can be stuck in our mundane tasks of life, not ever really waking up to realize that hope is sitting right in front of us. We don’t realize that we can leave our own jars of water behind and joyfully run toward our purpose. We don’t realize that there will always be circumstances, nay sayers, self-doubt, and insecurity, but there is a God who calls us by name, sees our hearts, and speaks courage into us. And while that doesn’t take away any of our mundane, messy things in this life, it repositions them in our line of sight.
Those ordinary, chaotic moments can be the ones that define us. Not because of the task we’re engaged in, but who we engage within those moments.
Remember the woman at the well? She left her water jar behind when she met Jesus. What is your jar and what does it hold? What will you leave behind?
Whatever challenges you face right now, they’re just a page in your story. Use your previous experiences to fill your well. Draw from it during those messy moments. And get ready, because you’re only one encounter away from leaving your jar behind and running towards your purpose.


