Saint Colette of Corbie and the Return to Simplicity

When religious life became easier, she chose a different direction.

Colette was born in 1381 in Corbie, France. She lived during the late Middle Ages, a time when many religious communities already existed, but some were no longer living the way they first began.

Sister Colette became part of the Poor Clares, an order founded by Clare of Assisi. In the beginning, the sisters lived very simply. They owned nothing. They depended on God every day. Prayer, silence, and enclosure shaped their daily life. This way of living was hard, but it kept their focus clear.

As years passed, this began to change. Some convents started to own property or depend on regular supporters. Food and living conditions became more secure. The rule was still followed, but it was often adjusted. The life was still religious, but it no longer required the same level of trust and discipline.

This is what Sister Colette noticed.

Instead of creating something new, she chose to bring the order back to how it was first lived. She asked the sisters to return to absolute poverty, strict enclosure, and full observance of the rule. Comforts that had slowly entered convent life were removed so prayer could return to the center.

Not everyone accepted her reform. Some resisted. Others understood what she was trying to restore and followed. Through these communities, the Poor Clare life returned closer to its original spirit.

Today, it is not about removing comfort. It is about removing distraction. When life becomes too full, important things get lost.

Less phone time.
More attention.
Simple routines.
Space to listen and pray.

Clear the noise, and what stays becomes clearer.

Let’s keep learning the saints’ way—day by day.

⌨ ᴛʸᵖⁱⁿᵍ ᴏᵘᵗ ᵒᶠ ᵗʰᵉ ʙˡᵘᵉ ᵈᵃʳᵉᵐ ᵐᵘˢⁱᶜ ᵇˡᵒᵍ

Alone With a Piano • Darem Placer
When love prefers silence.

The Missing Side of Christ

We remember the great deeds of Christ, but His ordinary life is rarely talked about.

For those who’d rather listen.
JC • Darem Placer

Most stories about Jesus focus on the wow moments. Water into wine. Walking on water. Raising the dead. Dying on the cross. All true, all powerful, but also heavy.

Because deep down, we know this. We can admire those stories, but we cannot live them. No one today can walk on water. No one can multiply bread with a prayer. So faith slowly becomes admiration from a distance. A beautiful story. An untouchable life.

What’s missing in the telling is His human side. Not the divine acts, but the human choices.

Jesus lived more years quietly than publicly. Most of His life was not miraculous. It was ordinary. He noticed people others ignored. He stopped when someone interrupted Him. He listened before correcting. He ate with people no one wanted to eat with. He protected dignity instead of winning arguments. He chose gentleness even when He had power.

These were not miracles. They were decisions. And those decisions mattered.

We often think the cross was one sudden heroic act, but we don’t wake up one day ready to give our life for others. We grow into it. We start small. We try to be kind when it costs comfort. We try to listen when we’d rather move on. We try to stay when leaving is easier.

Small goodness trains the heart. It stretches patience. It builds compassion. It strengthens love quietly. Over time, the heart levels up.

So when a harder call comes, standing up for someone, losing something important, choosing love over self, it doesn’t feel foreign anymore. It feels familiar.

Maybe that’s why focusing only on the wow deeds hurts people more than it helps. We love the story, but we give up on living it. We think Christ-likeness begins with the impossible. It doesn’t.

It begins with trying to be human well.

Holiness is not first about dying on a cross. It is about trying to live daily life with love, consistently and quietly. Jesus did not come only to be admired. He came to be followed. Not in miracles, but in the small, ordinary choices that slowly turn a human heart into something strong enough to give itself away.

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Praying Without Words includes JC

⌨ ᴛʸᵖⁱⁿᵍ ᴏᵘᵗ ᵒᶠ ᵗʰᵉ ʙˡᵘᵉ ᵈᵃʳᵉᵐ ᵐᵘˢⁱᶜ ᵇˡᵒᵍ

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