horses When Horses Lie Down — a Glimpse of Wonder entry™ —
There’s something quiet and reverent about it —
when a horse finally lies down.
Most of the time, they sleep on their feet. They can — by design. Jehovah gave them a built-in system called the stay apparatus — tendons and ligaments that brace their legs so they can rest without falling. That’s useful when you’re a prey animal. Grazing in the open. Light sleep, head high, muscles ready to flee.
But for real sleep — the kind that brings dreams — the horse has to lie down.
All the way down.
And that doesn’t happen unless it feels safe.
To enter REM sleep, the brain’s deepest rhythms need the body to relax fully. Not just the legs — the whole frame. No tension. No holding back. The horse has to stretch out or fold in. Chest or side to the ground. Breathing steady. Ears still. Vulnerable.
If something feels off — if danger is near or the surroundings seem unsettled — it will stay standing. Sleep lightly. Wait.
But eventually, the lack of real rest catches up.
A horse deprived of REM sleep may begin to stumble, or collapse mid-step — not because it’s weak, but because it’s exhausted from the inside out. A strong body can’t carry a worn-out mind forever.
And we understand that more than we like to admit.
Some of us keep going because we think we have to. Standing watch. Carrying weight. On our feet — spiritually, emotionally, constantly. We try to convince ourselves it’s strength, but it’s often fear. A fear of what might happen if we actually let go. If we stopped trying to control the world around us. If we let ourselves lie down.
But Jehovah knows the truth of us — and he says:
“In peace I will lie down and sleep, for you alone, O Jehovah, make me dwell in security.” (Psalm 4:8, NWT)
He doesn’t just allow rest — he creates the conditions for it.
His peace isn’t just the pause between storms. It’s the shelter during them. The feeling of being watched over. Of knowing we don’t have to brace ourselves through every moment of life.
That changes how we ask for help.
Sometimes we pray for strength. But maybe, what we really need… is to feel safe.
Safe enough to rest.
Safe enough to surrender.
Safe enough to lie down.
And that doesn’t mean we stop being alert.
Jehovah tells us to keep on the watch — but not like the world does.
The world stays awake out of fear.
We stay alert out of faith.
We’re not pacing, panicking, flinching at shadows.
We’re resting in our Shepherd’s field — eyes open, but hearts calm — because we know he’s the one keeping watch.
That’s when real peace comes.
Not because we’re done with the hard parts. Not because the system has changed.
But because, in that moment… we trust him.
And when we trust him —
we lie down.
Edited by dljbsp
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