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Tales of Fantasy, Mystery and Adventure Under the Influence of Christian Homeschooling

S. A. J. Lyttek, a multiple award-winning writer, always loved writing, but didn’t arrive at the profession in the typical manner. After college and graduate school, she plunged into government consulting. In this environment, she discovered a knack for writing tests, interviews and other measurements. That soon became the focus of her career—reigniting her love for the written word. Thus captivated, she spent evenings freelancing “fun” writing including short stories, poems, articles and cards. When her eldest was a toddler, she quit full-time work to stay home and write. Eager to spend more time with her children, homeschooling intrigued her. From preschool through high school, she homeschooled both sons while continuing to freelance. While an integral part of the homeschooling community, she developed and taught writing classes to a generation of homeschoolers. Married to her childhood sweetheart, Gary, Mrs. Lyttek loves to share her commitment to learners of all ages and her fascination with the written word.

 



Traveling

6/10/2026 6:50:00 AM BY Susan Lyttek

I uploaded this early because today, Gary and I are flying to Chicago. We will show up at the airport around 7:00 AM which means it’s a very early day!

And because we travel home next Wednesday, that post will be uploaded today, too. Because of those logistics, I will enter the winners for these two weeks in the comments, not in the posts themselves.

School is now out, so in the minds of most it is now summer. We know it doesn’t officially begin until June 21st (which happens to be Father’s Day this year and part of the Juneteenth weekend), but it’s warm enough and buggy enough to call it summer. That means that many people are traveling. Whether they’re going to see family, like we are, or vacationing, or kids heading off to camp, people do a lot of moving from place to place this time of year. The odds of adverse weather getting in the way of their plans diminishes (no snowsqualls in June usually) and the calendar is a bit freer without school and its related activities.

Traveling can be fun and stressful. It can be fun to see new places or to revisit old places that you don’t get to see as much because of the pull of life and schedules. It can be fun to do things not part of your routine and see or meet people you don’t interact with on a daily basis.

But it can be stressful because it’s not the norm. Your clock gets thrown out of whack with both the moving around and being in unfamiliar spaces. You get uncomfortable not knowing the plans for the day and/or knowing that so many things related to the traveling are out of your control. Planes can be delayed. Highways can be backlogged. Events can be canceled. How you roll with the glitches determines whether your travels will be remembered as good or bad or somewhere in between.

This is such an easy topic to translate to our spiritual journey!

We are traveling upon this earth, our temporary home, and heading to our permanent home in heaven. The online concordance offers over 200 references to walk and most of these are about how you live your life. Don’t walk in the way of sinners. Walk through the valley. Walk in the light of God’s truth.

There are also a handful of references to running. Don’t run after other gods. Run the race God has given you. Run with your eyes on Jesus. Run with purpose.

Usually, if we’re moving, if we’re traveling towards our goal, the voyage feels purposeful. There’s a reason for what we’re experiencing, good or bad.

Today, when we get through security, we will have to wait. As we have things scheduled, it will probably be an hour before we can board our flight. But, as anyone knows, the hour can extend if the plane is late in arriving or needs any repairs. Then, we just have to wait until everything is resolved.

We don’t like that part of traveling, physically or spiritually.

But my concordance has nearly as many references to waiting, particularly waiting on God, as it does to walking with Him. I wait for the Lord, my whole being waits, and in his word I put my hope. (Psalm 130:5) But if we hope for what we do not yet have, we wait for it patiently. (Romans 8:25)

It can be easier to wait if we sense the reward. For instance, if you smell the meal cooking, you eagerly wait to taste it. But so much waiting as we travel is vague. We don’t know why we’re waiting. We don’t understand why this part of the journey has been put on pause. And we wait for the call.

“Boarding, next destination now boarding.”