
There’s a moment most people hit eventually.
You’ve been grinding. Showing up. Doing what you know how to do.
And it’s not working.
Not a little slow. Nothing. No traction. No payoff. Just effort disappearing into the dark.
That’s where this story starts.
A group of guys go out to fish, something they’ve done their whole lives. This isn’t new territory. This is their lane. And still… all night, nothing.
Empty.
If you’ve ever worked hard at something and watched it go nowhere, you already understand the scene.
Then morning comes. And from the shoreline, someone calls out:
“Catch anything?”
Nope.
“Try the right side of the boat.”
That’s it. No explanation. No credentials. Just a voice suggesting a small adjustment.
And somehow they listen.
That’s the part that should catch you. These aren’t amateurs. They know what they’re doing. But after a long night of getting nowhere, they still have enough humility left to try something different.
So they move the nets. And everything changes.
Suddenly more fish than they can handle. The kind of result that makes you stop and realize this is not luck.
Here’s the tension we need to feel. Most people don’t get stuck because they’re lazy.
They get stuck because they’re locked in.
Same habits. Same patterns. Same approach. Over and over again.
We call it consistency. Sometimes it’s just resistance to change.
Because these kind of adjustments feel small. It feels almost too simple to matter.
But that’s usually where the shift happens.
Not in some massive overhaul, but in a decision to listen when something, or someone, cuts through the noise and says, “Try it this way.”
The story turns when one of them realizes who’s on the shore. It’s Jesus.
And one of the guys, Peter, doesn’t hesitate. Doesn’t even think. He jumps straight into the water and heads to shore.
Because when something real shows up, you stop analyzing and start moving.
And when they get to shore, it’s not chaos. It’s calm. A fire’s already going. Food’s already cooking.
Here’s the twist: Jesus already has fish. He didn’t need theirs.
But he still tells them, “Bring some of what you caught.” That changes the whole angle.
This wasn’t about filling a gap. It wasn’t about proving themselves. It was an invitation.
Join me.
Be part of something.
That’s a different way to think about life. The pressure to perform, to produce, to make something happen. That’s heavy. But what if the point isn’t proving your worth?
What if it’s paying attention… and then responding?
So if you’ve been pushing hard and getting nowhere, maybe the answer isn’t more effort.
Maybe it’s a shift.
Listen again.
Try the other side.
It might not be about doing more.
It might be about doing something different and finally getting unstuck.
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