What if the most dangerous spiritual condition isn't doubt - it's the appearance of wholeness?
The night Keith Freeman's daughter asked, "Dad, are we going to be okay?" - he gave her the answer fathers are supposed to give. Steady. Certain. Calm.
But standing alone in that hallway after she fell asleep, he confronted a truth he had been outrunning for months. His family had been displaced from their home. Financial and legal pressure were mounting. He was carrying 306 pounds on a frame quietly registering the cost. And at his center - where his convictions should have been shaping his decisions - something had gone hollow.
He was a spiritual donut.
A donut looks finished. Whole. Complete. But at its center there is nothing - a hole that is not a flaw but a structural reality it was built around. Many of us are living that way. Not through rebellion or conscious choice, but through the quiet accumulation of rationalizations that keep the surface intact while the center slowly empties. Through busyness substituted for reflection. Through success that makes dependence on God feel less urgent. Through the performance of strength that eventually becomes indistinguishable from identity.
This book is the honest account of what it took to recognize the hollow, hit the floor, and rebuild from the inside out - and what emerged on the other side: a marriage that became genuinely intimate, children who knew their father's real self, a body transformed by 100 pounds of daily discipline, and a relationship with God moved from performance to the actual center of a life.
This book walks you through: Why high-functioning people are most vulnerable to spiritual hollowness. The difference between managing the outside and confronting the inside. How success, pace, pride, and isolation quietly replace what only God can fill. What God does when you finally hit the floor. The daily disciplines that rebuild a life from the center outward
This Special Edition includes: The complete text with reflection questions after every chapter. Prayers for the hollow feeling, rebuilding after failure, surrendering control, and reconnecting with God. A personal invitation to begin or restore a sincere relationship with Jesus Christ. Self-assessment, next steps, and resources to carry you forward
For the person still in the middle of it - still performing, still pressing forward, still answering with a steadiness they're not entirely sure they feel.
You were not designed for the hollow. You were designed for this.