Peter Attridge, Ph.D., LMFT
There’s a line in Scripture that feels both poetic and slightly unsettling:
“Teach us to number our days, that we may gain a heart of wisdom.” — Psalms 90:12
It sounds peaceful—until you realize what it’s actually saying. Number your days.
Not manage them. Not optimize them. Not color-code them and hope for the best. Count them. Pay attention to them. Recognize that they are finite, and therefore meaningful. Most of us measure our days by what we accomplish. Scripture invites us to measure them by what we attend to. One leads to efficiency, the other leads to wisdom—and they are not always the same.
Most of us, if we’re honest, don’t really live that way. We live quickly. Reactively. We move from one thing to the next, often unaware that we are living inside a story we haven’t taken the time to understand. And that’s where the work proposed by Dan Allender becomes so helpful. Story work insists on something we tend to avoid: your life is not random. It is a story, and until you begin to understand it, it will shape you in ways you don’t fully see.
The Story You’re Living (and Probably Not Examining)
Most people don’t wake up thinking, “Today I will unconsciously repeat patterns formed in childhood.” But we do. We react to tone, withdraw from conflict, overextend ourselves, or shut down emotionally—and then we explain it away with phrases like, “That’s just how I am.”
But Story work gently pushes back on that. No, that’s not just how you are. That’s how you learned to be. For example, someone who grew up in a home where conflict felt unsafe may learn to avoid it entirely. As an adult, that can look like being “easygoing,” but it often leads to unspoken resentment or emotional distance. The behavior isn’t random—it’s rooted in a story that made sense at the time. Unless we take time to understand how our story has shaped us, we’ll keep living on autopilot—repeating patterns without ever questioning them. This is where Psalm 90 becomes more than poetic language. To “number our days” is to become aware of them. To notice what we feel, how we respond, and what keeps showing up again and again. This awareness is where wisdom begins.
Slowing Down Enough to Actually See Your Life
Of course, this sounds good in theory. In practice, it’s… inconvenient. As soon as I wrote the above paragraph I rolled my eyes and said, “Here’s more time needed for someone to examine themself and not fully understand what it means, or what to do with it.” The fact of the matter is we cannot understand our stories at the pace most of us are living. As I reflected on in February, our society has trained us to move faster than our souls can keep up with. That line lands because it’s true.
We are efficient, productive, and often deeply disconnected. We scroll instead of reflect. We react instead of process. We fill silence because, if we’re honest, silence tends to surface things we’d rather not deal with. And yet, as another insight reminds us, “healing begins when we finally give ourselves permission to slow down—emotionally, spiritually, and relationally.”
That’s not just good spirituality. That’s good psychology. You cannot integrate a story you refuse to sit with.
Easter Isn’t Just a Celebration—It’s a Pattern
If we take seriously the idea that our lives are stories, then we also have to ask what kind of story we are living. Afterall, not all stories follow the same arc. Some feel stuck or repetitive, and some feel like they took a turn we never would have chosen. If we’re honest, many of us are trying to edit our story in real time—skipping the hard parts, minimizing the painful ones, and rushing toward resolution.
But this is where both knowing our stories and scripture gently interrupt us: They suggest that the middle matters. This is precisely where Easter becomes more than a destination—it becomes a lens. As we move through Lent, we don’t just prepare for a celebration. We rehearse a pattern: suffering, death, and resurrection. Not as abstract theology, but as the shape of real human experience. We love the resurrection part. In fact, many of us quietly start counting down to it, eager to move past the discomfort of Lent and into something lighter. But the story doesn’t work that way. There is no resurrection without crucifixion. No new life without something first being laid down.
And that is where knowing our story connects so directly to our own lives.
Most of us are living somewhere in the middle of that pattern—between what has been lost and what has not yet been restored. And understanding our story invites us to stay there long enough to actually see it,to name the wounds, to acknowledge the losses, to recognize how those experiences have shaped the way we see ourselves, others, and even God. Because here’s the paradox at the heart of both Easter and Storywork: The parts of your story you want to avoid are often the very places where transformation begins.
Why Understanding Your Story Changes Everything
Research in narrative psychology shows that we are constantly constructing meaning from our experiences. Psychologists often refer to this as “narrative coherence”—the ability to make sense of your life story in a way that feels integrated rather than fragmented. We don’t just live events; we interpret them and those interpretations shape our identity, our relationships, and our emotional health. When those interpretations are unclear or distorted, life feels chaotic, reactions feel disproportionate, and patterns feel unbreakable. But when we begin to make sense of our story—when we connect the dots between past and present—something shifts.
We stop mislabeling ourselves.
We stop reacting blindly.
We start responding with intention.
Life doesn’t necessarily get easier in the sense that problems disappear but it becomes more understandable. That kind of clarity reduces a surprising amount of unnecessary suffering.
The Resistance to Looking at Our Story
If all of this is so helpful, why don’t we do it more often?
Because it’s uncomfortable.
Slowing down feels unnatural. Reflection feels inefficient. And looking at parts of our story—especially the painful ones—can feel risky. However, avoidance has a cost. Unexamined stories don’t disappear; they just operate in the background. They shape how we love, how we trust, how we handle stress, and how we interpret God’s presence in our lives. Knowing our story doesn’t eliminate pain, it prevents pain from remaining meaningless.
Where God Is in the Middle of Your Story
From a Catholic lens, this is where things become deeply hopeful. Because your story is not something you are navigating alone. God is not waiting at the end of your life story, evaluating it. He is present within it—especially in the parts that feel confusing or unfinished.
Easter makes this clear. The disciples thought the story was over on Good Friday. From their perspective, everything had fallen apart. But what looked like an ending was actually a transformation. Resurrection didn’t erase the suffering. It gave it meaning. And that same pattern holds true in our lives. The moments that feel unresolved, painful, or unclear are not necessarily the end of the story. They may be the place where something new is quietly beginning.
Often, we don’t recognize God’s presence in real time. We recognize it in hindsight—when we begin to see that what felt like absence was sometimes invitation, and what felt like delay was often formation.
Numbering Your Days, Living Your Story
So what does it actually look like to “number your days”? It looks less like counting and more like noticing. It looks like paying attention to your reactions instead of dismissing them. It looks like reflecting on your experiences instead of rushing past them. It looks like asking honest questions about your life and being willing to sit with the answers. It looks like slowing down enough to see your story—and trusting that even the difficult parts are not wasted. When you begin to understand your story, you begin to live it differently and, perhaps most importantly, with more hope.
A Final Word (and an Invitation)
If Easter tells us anything, it’s that no part of your story is beyond redemption.
Not the painful chapters.
Not the confusing middle.
Not even the parts you’d rather skip entirely.
Story work simply helps you see what has been there all along: that your life is not random, and your story is not finished.
At Holy Family Counseling Center, this is the work happening every day; not quick fixes or surface-level solutions, but the deeper work of helping people understand their stories with honesty and compassion.
Because healing rarely begins with having everything figured out.
It begins with paying attention.
It begins with slowing down.
It begins with being willing to ask, gently and honestly:
What is my story—and what might God be doing in it right now?

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