Tag: slow down

What Bourbon Teaches About Life

There’s something almost sacred about the way a good bourbon is made. Not rushed. Not hurried. Not microwaved or sped up or forced through shortcuts. Just time, patience, the right environment, and a process that refuses to be cheated.

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about how the best things in life take time and how often we try to rush the very moments meant to shape us.

The Unhurried Art of Bourbon

Take bourbon, for example. You can’t fake the aging process. You can’t speed-mature character into the liquid. Bourbon becomes bourbon because it rests, because it spends years in oak barrels absorbing flavor, depth, and identity from seasons of heat, cold, pressure, and change.

Life isn’t all that different.

We go through seasons of heat and seasons of chill. Moments of pressure and times of release. Chapters where everything expands and chapters where everything contracts. Every one of those seasons is meant to shape us, deepen us, and mature us into who God designed us to be.

But here’s the catch: you can’t rush maturity.

You can rush tasks. You can rush schedules. You can rush decisions. But you cannot rush character.

When we speed through the hard stuff, when we numb the pain, when we dodge the lesson, we rob ourselves of the slow aging that produces wisdom, courage, compassion, and resilience.

A Bourbon Worth Sipping: Four Roses Single Barrel

One of the bottles that reminds me of this truth is Four Roses Single Barrel. It’s a bourbon that refuses to hide its story.

Pour a glass and you’ll notice:

  • The nose: warm vanilla, hints of caramel, a gentle floral sweetness, and a little spice that almost waves hello before settling in.
  • The palate: layers of ripe fruit, honey, oak, a smidge of cinnamon, and a long, smooth finish that doesn’t hurry to leave.

It’s a bourbon with character not because someone engineered it quickly, but because it was allowed to become something worth savoring.

On a scale of 1–5, I’d give Four Roses Single Barrel a solid 4. It’s reliable, flavorful, and balanced… the kind of pour that reminds you that patience produces depth.

Slow Down and Let Life Season You

If bourbon teaches us anything, it’s this: Your life is aging into something rich and meaningful but only if you let it.

The seasons you’d rather skip? They’re the very ones adding depth.

The experiences you wish would hurry up and end? They might be shaping compassion you’ll need later.

The frustrations, the waiting, the unanswered prayers, the stretches where God feels quiet…Those are all part of your barrel time.

You are becoming. Just not at the speed you wish.

Take It Slow On Purpose

Maybe today’s invitation is simple:

  • Sit in the moment instead of sprinting past it.
  • Let the lesson settle instead of resisting it.
  • Allow God to work at the unhurried pace of transformation.

Good bourbon takes years. Good character takes a lifetime.

And both are worth the wait.

So tonight, if you pour a glass of something rich and warm, maybe pause long enough to ask:

“What is God aging in me right now?”

Because you might just find that the slowest seasons are the ones producing the deepest flavor in your life.

Cheers to patience, to growth, and to becoming who you were crafted to be.

When Wisdom Comes From Unexpected Places

Some of the best lessons in life don’t show up in classrooms, books, or seminars. Sometimes they arrive in the strangest places like the quiet moment when you’re slowly sipping a glass of bourbon. I know some of you will never acquire a taste. Others don’t think it’s right for a pastor to have a glass of bourbon. I understand. But there is a serious almost sacred moment that can happen when you slow down enough to enjoy a quiet sip.

There’s something about holding that glass, feeling the weight of it, watching the amber swirl in the light, and taking a slow, deliberate sip that reminds me of life’s deeper rhythms. Bourbon isn’t a quick drink. It isn’t meant to be rushed, chugged, or tossed back on the fly. It makes you slow down. It forces you to pay attention.

And honestly? Most of us need that more than we admit.

The Strength of Taste and the Potency of Life

A good bourbon has strength. Not the kind that knocks you over, but the kind that reminds you it’s alive. You taste the heat, the depth, the boldness and mixed within all of that is subtlety, sweetness, and complexity.

Life is the same way.

Some seasons hit hard. Some carry heat. Some surprise you with unexpected sweetness. Some seasons burn going down but still leave you stronger on the other side. The stronger the season, the more potent the lesson if we’re willing to take it slow enough to recognize what it’s teaching us.

But that’s the challenge, isn’t it?
We move too fast.
We power through.
We miss the flavor of the moment because we’re already sprinting toward the next thing.

The Aging Process Matters

Every bourbon worth drinking has spent years in a barrel resting, absorbing, changing, deepening. It ages through cold winters and blistering summers. The shifts in temperature expand and contract the wood, pulling flavor into the liquid that cannot come any other way.

The same is true with us.

We grow through seasons of pressure and expansion, seasons of contraction and quiet, seasons of change we didn’t ask for and seasons of blessings we didn’t see coming. You can’t cheat the process. Maturity takes time. Wisdom takes repetition. Character takes slow, deep work.

Bourbon reminds me that time isn’t the enemy. Rushing is.

Forced Slow Downs

We all know what it feels like to be forced to slow down. A health scare. A moment of exhaustion. A spiritual dry season. A relationship strain. A setback we didn’t see coming. At first those moments frustrate us, but sometimes they are exactly what we need to regain clarity. Just like bourbon forces you to pause, savor, and breathe.

Those forced slow downs often teach the lessons we were too busy to learn on our own.

A New Series: Lessons In A Glass

This post kicks off a new series: Lessons In A Glass – reflections on faith, life, leadership, and the unexpected wisdom hidden in the slow craft of a good pour.

No gimmicks. No clichés.
Just the simple reminder that God often teaches us through ordinary things including a glass of something warm and strong at the end of a long day.

So pour gently. Sip slowly. Pay attention.
There’s more inside that glass and inside your life than you think.

More to come. Cheers.

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