Keep Coming Back: Recharge. Realign. Return.
“I always felt I could live more like Jesus when I walked out of church. But then it faded.”
—George Saunders
At the end of every AA meeting, across every timezone, every continent, every dialect—comes the same phrase:
“Keep Coming Back.”
It’s not a slogan.
It’s a spiritual algorithm.
A tactical reminder that grace fades.
And you need to recharge.
Recharge #1: The AA Room
“I don’t know why I feel better after a meeting. I just do.”
That’s not coincidence.
That’s spiritual science.
You sat in a room with people who share your cracks.
You heard your story in someone else’s voice.
You remembered what nearly killed you.
And you felt less alone.
That’s a recharge.
Not emotional fluff—tactical empathy.
Your grace gravity got stronger.
Your spiritual battery got a jolt.
You walked out clearer.
Safer.
More magnetic.
Recharge #2: Other Stations of Grace
“I get the same feeling at Mass. Or at a concert. Or in Florence.”
Exactly.
AA isn’t the only recharge station.
It’s just one of many along your spiritual highway.
Mass. Meditation. Music.
Florence. Nashville. Manhattan.
Anywhere people gather with shared belief, shared ache, shared pursuit—
Grace gets amplified.
You felt it at the ACDC concert.
You felt it in church as a kid.
You feel it now when you’re with people who believe in something bigger.
That’s not nostalgia.
That’s spiritual resonance.
Recharge #3: The Fade
“I felt better yesterday. But today, it’s gone.”
Of course it faded.
Grace is a battery.
Spirituality is a signal.
And signals weaken.
Batteries drain.
You’re not broken.
You’re just low.
So what do you do?
You come back.
To the room.
To the ritual.
To the recharge.
Not because you’re weak.
But because you’re wise.
Tactical Truth: Grace Needs Maintenance
“Keep Coming Back” isn’t passive encouragement.
It’s strategic instruction.
- Recharge your empathy.
- Realign your clarity.
- Return to the signal.
Grace fades.
So you come back.
Again.
And again.
And again.
Jason Bresnehan
Jason is a fixer—of businesses, of broken momentum, and occasionally of entire spiritual frameworks gone sideways. He speaks fluent boardroom and AA, deploys Catholic doctrine with the subtlety of a scalpel, and isn’t afraid to lace his insights with both war-room metaphors and dad-sermon tenderness.
Founder of Evahan, a consultancy built on the idea that legacy and liquidity don’t need to fight, Jason draws on 30 years of commercial grit, tactical leadership, and emotional radar to help people rebuild what entropy took. He works with companies, communities, and recovery misfits alike—often using the same principles to sort both cap tables and chaotic lives.
Jason draws deep inspiration from historical figures who got results—especially those who led from the margins, built with scarce resources, and refused to be shackled by conventional wisdom. He’s known for assembling unorthodox teams of passionate experts to solve complex problems in chaotic environments. Whether in boardrooms, recovery communities, or legacy disputes, Jason’s approach is rooted in common purpose, tactical innovation, and the belief that clarity thrives when paradigms are challenged.