The Daily Grind with Matt Clarke

A Glass of Water

Written by Matt Clarke | June 3, 2026

I didn't plan to be up. It was one of those nights where sleep came fast and hard — the kind you feel like you earned. The calendar was clear. The phone was face-down. We got in late and I was planning to “sleep in”….. at least later than usual, and I was out. Then thirst woke me.

 

Just thirst, nothing profound about it. I swung my legs over the side of the bed and felt my way down the stairs in the dark. My calves and heels reminding me that they’ve put on a little mileage and would appreciate a stretch or two before hitting stairs. As I proudly made it to the bottom without falling, I saw a hat on the couch. Hmm, I didn’t leave it there, in fact I didn’t even wear a hat yesterday. Confused and a little disoriented as it was 3:45 and while my legs were upset about being asked to function, my brain was even more so. Then I saw Ethan standing in the kitchen. I knew he had an early flight, and I didn’t expect to see him.

 

Bag sitting by the door, checking his phone for an Uber, we did 3:45 am small talk and then he said, "I know it's early, but if it’s not too much trouble, how about a ride to the airport."

 

I looked at the glass in my hand.

 

I thought about my pillow, and “sleeping in”.

 

I thought about the drive — dark roads, thirty minutes out, thirty minutes back, an alarm that was already going to come too early.

 

And then something settled in me. Not dramatic. Not heroic. Just quiet and simple.

 

"Let me get my keys."

 

On the highway, he talked more than usual. Maybe it was the darkness, or the hour, or the strange permission that 4am gives people to say the things they've been carrying. We covered ground we needed to cover. The kind of conversation that doesn't happen at dinner or on a Sunday afternoon — it only happens when you're moving through the dark together and there's nowhere else to be.

 

By the time we pulled to the curb at departures, and saw all the families getting out of the car with kids excited for the adventure and parents acting like a mix of ring leaders and pack mules, I wasn't tired anymore.

 

I watched him disappear through the sliding doors. I drove home alone, my heart full, and it was one of the best drives of my year.

 

 

"Morning by morning he wakens me and opens my understanding to his will." (Isaiah 50:4) 

I used to read that as a verse about devotion. About quiet time. About getting up early to open the Bible before the day starts. But this morning it means something different to me. I didn't set an alarm. I didn't have a plan. I went downstairs for a glass of water and God used thirst to put me exactly where I needed to be — standing in my kitchen at 3:45am when my son walked through the door needing his father.

 

That's not coincidence. That's waking.

 

God does that. He stirs us. He interrupts our rest not to punish us but to position us. He wakens the ear — not always with a Bible verse or a still small voice — sometimes with a dry throat and bare feet on a cold floor and a son who needs a ride and two men needing a conversation and an undistracted place to have it.

 

Here's what I've learned about availability: you can't manufacture it. You either show up or you don't. And most of the time, the moments that matter most aren't the ones you scheduled — they're the ones you stumbled into because you were present enough to be found.

 

I almost told him to call an Uber……… I'm glad I didn't. The ride was thirty minutes. The conversation was the kind I'll carry for thirty years.

 

God woke me up tonight — not for the airport. He woke me up for my son.

 

Most of life’s best moments and highest accomplishments aren’t stirred out of brilliance, but availability. What is He waking you to today?