“Brothers, and the Tale of Two Paint Brushes”

by DanWolgemuth on May 29, 2026

My brother, Ken, and I were born roughly ten years apart. That means for every “significant” birthday – especially the ones with round numbers – Ken has already blazed the trail.

While Ken and I share the same gene pool, we are different on many fronts. Over the years, those differences have provided wonderful opportunities to support, complement, and cheer for each other.

As I continue to journey through a more reflective season of life, I am increasingly aware of the lessons we can learn from those in our orbit who march to a different drumbeat. Ken is one of those individuals in my life.

Ironically, Ken and I are both painters.

I spent many summers during my high school and college years painting exteriors of residential homes in the heat and humidity of the Chicago suburbs. I was trained by College Craft painters to efficiently use a roller and a wide brush to cover large surface areas quickly.

Ken, on the other hand, spent his time painting with tiny brushes, watercolors, and oils. The success of his work was never measured by the number of boards he covered, but by the beauty he captured. Vivid, alternating colors and shapes that seemed to come alive – that was Ken.

My painting was all about transformation; his was about beauty. My work was about functionality; his was about aesthetics. My work had a five-year life expectancy; Ken’s is enduring.

Painting with a roller and a broad brush is easy. That is true for exterior walls, and it is true in life. If I can aggregate a large population and paint them all with the same brush, things become simpler.

But true beauty comes from smaller brushstrokes: personal engagement and individual connection. What Ken loves to do as a hobby, Jesus did as a lifestyle.

The Samaritans: Written off as a group with a wide brush.

The Samaritan woman at the well: A carefully and sensitively crafted, individual stroke.

Women, especially those with a reputation or a disorder: Rolled over without a second thought by society.

Women, according to the Creator: Beloved, valued, elevated, and healed.

The sick or impoverished: Judged and ignored by the masses, but to the Artist, filled with a beauty to be exposed and celebrated.

Painting with a broad brush is easy – lazy, perhaps. It allows us to dismiss an entire group of people as though they are monochromatic. But that is not how Jesus commands us to live, and He beautifully shows us a better way.

A tale of two painters. A roller and a wide brush versus an artist with concern and care for every stroke. One was good for a summer job; the other is for a lifetime.

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“Heat the Griddle”

by DanWolgemuth on May 15, 2026

Spring.

The invasion of green against the dominant brown.
From black and white to color.
And indeed… an invasion of birds whose behavior suggests that love is in the air.

Spring. Love. Emotion tipping the scale away from reason. Passion eclipsing sensibility. Risk sacking the quarterback named Safety.

1975 and 1976. A rush to win the affections of a college sophomore.

That rush included regular journeys to a tiny local diner by the railroad tracks in downtown Upland, Indiana. We called it the Pink Café. While it was only a mile from the Taylor University campus, it felt a passport away in customers and ambiance. Seasoned local patrons. Unventilated smoke hanging in the air. Conversations that didn’t include calculus, chemistry, or Russian literature.

I was invisible to the locals — perhaps an ignorable distraction from the business of small-town America. But my mission made the awkwardness tolerable, and my patronage, in part, made the transaction palatable for the regulars.

“Two honey buns and two cups of coffee.”

As simple as that.

But these were not your run-of-the-mill honey buns. These were swirled delights placed on a hot griddle lathered with melted butter. A stainless-steel pan top was pressed over the pastry and, for a minute or so, magic happened.

A few moments later, the molten rolls were placed inside Styrofoam containers, and I was out the door. One masterpiece for Mary, and one for her roommate Jeannie. Even as a naïve pursuer, I knew that many late-night conversations would happen in that room that I would not be part of. An advocate on the inside would extend my reach, plead my case, whisper in my favor, and maybe turn the tide. An extra honey bun and cup of coffee was a small price to pay.

I threw a few pebbles at Mary’s second-floor dorm window — a ’70s version of “text me when you get here” — and with the delivery made, I returned to my dorm room. Hopeful. Confident that the return on that caloric investment would justify the early alarm, the gas money, the nicotine-infused clothing, and the awkwardness of my invasion into uncommon territory.

That was then. Yes, 50 years ago. Love was in the air… mixed with the faint aroma of foolishness.

So, with the onslaught of springtime in Denver, the question lingers: “Is love still in the air?”

Have a Social Security check and a Medicare card sucked the spontaneity out of my romance? Does Mary know there are still moments when love dismisses reason as irrelevant? Does she still feel pursued and cherished, not merely safe and secure?

Spring. Love is in the air. The robins reminded me. My memories inspired me.

Never too old. Never too familiar.

Heat the griddle and do something that surprises the people you love.

Now. While you still can.

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“Living the Lyrics”

May 1, 2026

1966. Andraé Crouch. “The Blood Will Never Lose Its Power.” If you’re like me, the mere mention of this song sends the melody and lyrics racing through your mind. But like many songs we sing, the words can dance in our heads without fully landing. The seeds scatter but seldom take root. Providentially—and with renewed […]

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“What’s your favorite app?”

April 17, 2026

I’ve been in several settings where this question sparks lively and helpful conversation. But seriously… what is it? For me, there’s a notable top five—but one stands head and shoulders above the rest. Tucked inside my “Exercise” folder (with only a tangential link to exercise) is the Merlin Bird ID app. Developed and updated by […]

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“The Pivot of all Pivots”

April 3, 2026

Words, like fashion trends, ebb and flow in popularity and usage. At times, this shift is driven by significant cultural or historical events. In 2020, the word pivot vaulted to the top of the charts on a global scale. A pandemic necessitated—and then turbocharged—the idea of massive change in direction. This was true in classrooms, […]

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“The Power of Imitation”

March 20, 2026

It was roughly five years ago when I stepped up to the granite-topped island in our kitchen, my daughter Alli at my side, and we Zoomed into my first-ever online class. Technology made the miles irrelevant, but the British accent of our instructor brought a kind of global clarity. Sara Ward—our primary teacher and owner […]

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“How would you define leadership?”

February 27, 2026

And with that, the podcast interview began. Jake Smith is a talented coach and consultant in the executive coaching arena, and his new podcast, Reframe Fix, is off and rolling. Graciously, Jake invited me to record an episode scheduled to air sometime in the future. His first question was direct and simple. As I’ve reflected […]

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Less Than One Percent

February 13, 2026

Once a year, Mary and I retrieve a couple of plastic tubs from our basement, both loaded with camping gear. We also pull out our tent, our cots, and our five-gallon water container. Then we load everything—along with meals and snacks—and head to a campsite that Chrissy, our family organizer, has reserved for us. The […]

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Not Even A Sparrow

January 23, 2026

Our flight landed late on January 10th at Denver International. Mary and I were returning from a trip we hadn’t planned—but one God had prepared for us. A journey that included long hours at the bedside of my brother Robert as he drew his last breath. This was not part of our 2026 plan. In […]

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From Wuhan to Bethlehem

December 24, 2025

In April of 2020, I wrote the following fragment. Because of its relevance to Christmas, I thought we would run it again. Yes… Christ came. And it changed everything. 6,900 miles. That’s how far it is from Wuhan, China, to Denver.6,900 miles from the genesis of a global disease—a genesis that will be the topic […]

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