Saturday, December 13, 2025

Hold Your Head Up

There will always be days that try to break you—days when the world feels unfair, when people talk without understanding, when life piles on more than it feels like you can carry. But that’s when this truth matters most: hold your head up.

It sounds simple, almost too easy, like something you’d read on a bumper sticker or a T-shirt. But the older I get, the more I realize how profound it really is. Holding your head up isn’t about pretending everything’s fine—it’s about refusing to bow to what’s trying to defeat you. It’s a quiet kind of courage, the kind that doesn’t always roar. Sometimes it’s just the strength to take another breath, another step, another chance.

And if it’s bad, don’t let it get you down—you can take it. Those words feel like a lifeline on the hard days. Because yes, life gets bad sometimes. People disappoint you. Health fails. Plans fall apart. Bills come due when hope feels spent. But “you can take it” isn’t just blind optimism—it’s resilience born out of survival. You’ve made it through worse before. You’re still standing, even when you didn’t think you could.

Hard seasons don’t define you. They refine you. Every hardship, every heartbreak, every tear you’ve ever cried has shaped a strength inside you that can’t be broken. The world doesn’t see it, maybe—but you know. You’ve walked through fire before and come out with the kind of grit that only comes from being tested.

And if it hurts, don’t let them see you cry—you can make it. Those words aren’t about denying your pain. Cry if you need to—God knows tears are sometimes the only prayer we have left. But don’t let the cruelty of others convince you that your softness is weakness. You can hurt and still be strong. You can bend without breaking. You can make it, even when the path ahead looks too long and too lonely.

There will always be people who stare, who judge, who whisper from the sidelines. But if they stare, let them burn their eyes on you moving. Keep going. Keep walking. Keep living your truth boldly, unapologetically, beautifully. Let your perseverance be your response. Because there’s nothing more disarming to those who doubt you than your decision to rise anyway.

And when they shout, when they criticize or mock or question, don’t let it change a thing that you’re doing. Let them talk. Let them misunderstand. You weren’t made to please the noise—you were made to walk in purpose. Every step forward is a declaration that you will not be defined by the opinions of others.

Holding your head up doesn’t mean arrogance—it means dignity. It means remembering who you are, even when the world tries to make you forget. It’s choosing hope when despair would be easier. It’s believing in your worth when everything around you tells you otherwise.

Sometimes holding your head up means looking up—literally and spiritually. Because when you lift your eyes off the chaos around you and fix them on something greater—on faith, on purpose, on love—you find strength you didn’t know you had. You remember that storms pass, that pain softens, that new days still come.

When Tim’s PNES first began, there were so many moments when I wanted to collapse under the weight of it all—the uncertainty, the fear, the constant waiting for the next seizure. But time and faith have taught me this: you can’t live forever with your head bowed in worry. You have to lift it, even when it shakes, even when you’re exhausted, and keep moving. Because if you let fear keep you down, you’ll miss the moments of light that still find their way in.

And that’s what this song, this sentiment, is really about: resilience. It’s about finding that spark of strength when everything around you feels dark. It’s about refusing to let circumstances steal your joy, your peace, your belief in better days.

Hold your head up—not because life is easy, but because you’ve earned the right to. Because you’ve survived too much to quit now. Because there’s still purpose in your breath and light in your future. Because every time you lift your head, even when it’s heavy, you declare to the world that you’re not done yet.

You are stronger than the stares. Braver than the whispers. Tougher than the pain. And loved beyond measure by a God who sees every battle you fight, even the ones you don’t speak of.

So hold your head up, even if it trembles. Walk forward, even if the ground feels unsteady. Keep believing, even if the miracle hasn’t come yet. You can take it. You can make it. You already have.

And one day, when you look back, you’ll see what others couldn’t: that every time life tried to break you, you held your head a little higher—and that’s what saved you.

Friday, December 12, 2025

Before You Judge

To all the mean people of the world—the ones quick to roll their eyes, to whisper behind backs, to cut others down because it makes them feel taller—this one’s for you. You want to judge me by what you think you see, by the version of my life you’ve created in your mind. You think you know me, but you don’t. You’ve seen a snapshot and decided it’s the whole story. You’ve taken a single moment—a look, a word, a reaction—and turned it into a definition. But here’s the truth: you haven't seen anything yet. Not until you’ve walked a while in my shoes.

It’s easy to judge from the sidelines, isn’t it? To sit back, cross your arms, and decide who someone is based on what’s visible. It takes no effort to point out flaws, to assume motives, to label people without ever knowing what it costs them just to stand where they are. But life—real life—isn’t lived on the surface. It’s in the quiet battles no one sees. The ones fought behind closed doors, in hospital rooms, at kitchen tables, and in long, sleepless nights when the weight of it all feels unbearable.

You think you know struggle? Maybe you do. But that doesn’t make you the authority on someone else’s pain. It doesn’t give you the right to mock, to belittle, or to dismiss. Because here’s the thing—everyone’s carrying something. Some burdens are visible, others are buried deep beneath forced smiles and brave faces. Some people are just trying to make it through the day without breaking down completely. And when you rush to judge, when you speak cruelty without thought, you’re throwing stones at wounds you can’t even see.

If you took even a moment to walk in my shoes—to live my days, to feel my fears—you’d see things differently. You’d understand why I fight the way I do, why I stumble sometimes, why I don’t always have the strength to smile. You’d know what it’s like to carry the weight of watching someone you love struggle, to live each day balancing hope and heartbreak. You’d know that behind every calm face is a story that would make you stop judging and start understanding.

We live in a world that has grown so casual with cruelty. Social media makes it easy to attack from behind a screen. People tear each other apart over opinions, appearances, or mistakes. We’ve forgotten how to listen. We’ve forgotten that kindness costs nothing. We’ve forgotten that silence is sometimes the most compassionate response. Instead, we’ve become critics of each other’s lives—measuring worth through comparison, empathy through convenience.

But here’s the thing, mean people: someday life will give you a pair of shoes you never wanted to wear. Someday you’ll face something that humbles you, breaks you, or brings you to your knees. And when that day comes, you’ll hope for grace. You’ll hope for someone to understand without judging, to love without demanding explanations. You’ll hope that the world will look at you not for what you appear to be, but for who you truly are beneath the pain.

So before you judge, stop. Look closer. That woman you mocked for being quiet—she might be exhausted from holding her family together. That man you laughed at for stumbling—he might be carrying a grief you can’t imagine. That couple you called “weak”—they might be surviving something you couldn’t handle for a single day. The world is full of stories you’ll never fully know.

And for those of us who’ve been on the receiving end of cruelty, here’s the truth we have to hold onto: their judgment doesn’t define you. Their words don’t diminish your worth. The ones who lash out often do so from their own brokenness, trying to mask insecurity with arrogance, fear with superiority. Don’t let their bitterness infect your spirit. Let it remind you instead of who you refuse to become.

Walk your road with grace. Hold your head high. The world may not always be kind, but that doesn’t mean you have to harden your heart. Keep your compassion. Keep your faith. Keep believing that there’s still goodness in people, even when it’s hard to find.

Because when you’ve truly walked through pain, you start to see others differently. You start to understand that everyone is fighting something invisible. You start to realize that what people need most isn’t judgment—it’s gentleness. Not condemnation, but care. And maybe, if more people paused long enough to see each other that way, the world would start to heal a little.

So, to all the mean people of the world: you don’t have to stay that way. You can choose better. You can choose empathy over ego, compassion over cruelty, humility over hate. You can stop tearing people down and start lifting them up. You can stop assuming and start asking. You can stop judging and start understanding.

And to those who’ve been hurt by them—don’t let their cruelty convince you to close off your heart. Your softness is not weakness; it’s strength in its purest form. Keep showing kindness, even when the world doesn’t deserve it. Because one day, someone else who’s walking through their own storm will cross your path—and your compassion might just be the light that keeps them going.

At the end of the day, we’re all walking our own winding roads. Some are smooth; others are full of rocks and thorns. Some of us have shoes worn thin from the miles we’ve traveled. Some of us are still learning how to walk again after being knocked down. None of us get through this life without scars.

So if you really want to know who I am—if you really want to understand me—don’t judge me from afar. Walk beside me. Listen. Learn. Feel the weight I carry. Only then will you see that what you thought you knew was only the surface. Only then will you understand that empathy is stronger than judgment, and love will always be louder than hate.

Because until you’ve walked a while in my shoes,
you have no idea how far I’ve come just to still be standing.

Thursday, December 11, 2025

Light A Candle

There is something sacred about a single flame in the dark. A candle doesn’t try to solve everything. It doesn’t pretend to fix the world. It simply burns—quietly, steadily, offering what it can: light in a place where there wasn’t light before. And maybe that’s why these words feel so heavy with truth, especially during the winter months when life grows still, nights grow long, and Christmas becomes a mirror reflecting both joy and ache in equal parts.


Light a candle for the old man who sits staring out a frosty windowpane.

We all know someone like him—a man whose world has grown smaller with age, whose memories now outnumber his tomorrows, who watches the world through glass because he no longer feels part of it. A candle in his honor is not just a flame; it is a gesture that says, You are seen. You are remembered. Your story still matters.


Light a candle for the woman who is lonely and every Christmas it’s the same.

Loneliness is the silent ache of the holidays, the one pain that doesn’t show up wrapped in a cast or written on a chart. For the woman who sets one place at the table, who decorates because she hopes it helps, who feels the weight of empty spaces—lighting a candle is like whispering into the dark, You are not forgotten. Your presence matters. You belong.


Light a candle for the children who need more than presents can bring.

So often we forget that some needs can’t be wrapped. Some hurts can’t be solved with ribbons or toys. There are children who need safety more than dolls, love more than video games, hope more than anything that comes in a box. A candle for them is a kind of prayer—that they may one day know what it feels like to be cherished, treasured, and home.


Light a candle for the homeless and the hungry.

Winter is cruel to those without walls. The world grows sharper, colder, more unforgiving. A candle doesn’t erase their suffering, but it reminds us that we still carry responsibility—that compassion is not seasonal, and justice is not optional. A candle keeps their humanity alive in our consciousness, refusing to let us look away.


Light a candle for the broken and forgotten.

That group is bigger than we realize. The world is full of quiet wounds—marriages barely holding on, bodies fighting invisible battles, hearts that have been carrying more than they were built to bear. To light a candle for them is to say, This season is not only for the joyful; it is also for the weary, the grieving, and the lost.


And then comes the question that holds everything together:

Can we open our hearts to shine through the dark?


Because candles don’t start outside of us. They begin here—in the willingness to care. To soften. To notice. To act. Every flame begins with a choice: to let empathy rise, to let compassion breathe, to let love take form in something as small as a wick and a spark.


When the lyrics say, Light the dark with every flame that burns, they are reminding us that darkness is not defeated with grand gestures. It is driven back inch by inch—by each act of love, each moment of kindness, each effort to make someone’s load a little easier to bear.


We must somehow learn

that love’s the greatest gift

that we could ever give.


This is the heart of it all. Not the tree, not the lights, not the expectations we tie to the season. The greatest gift has always been love—love that reaches out, love that sees the unseen, love that shows up where it’s needed most. Love is the candle that cannot be extinguished.


And then the words shift into something beautifully reciprocal:


Light the world

Light a heart or two

Light a candle for me

I’ll light a candle for you.


There’s something profoundly human in that exchange. It acknowledges that we are all walking through something. That we all need light sometimes—and we all have light to give. When we burn for one another, the world becomes a little warmer. A little softer. A little more like the kingdom Jesus came to build.


A single candle flickers, yes. It bends. It wavers. But it never apologizes for being small. Even a tiny flame can guide someone home. Even a tiny flame can break the spell of darkness. And when one flame lights another, and then another, and then another—the impossible becomes possible. The world grows brighter in ways we may never fully see.


So tonight, light a candle.

For someone who aches.

For someone who’s forgotten.

For someone who’s grieving.

For someone who’s hungry.

For someone who’s afraid.

For someone who’s alone.

For someone who once held out a light for you.


And as your candle glows, remember:

The world is not healed by one great act of love…

but by thousands of small ones.


Light a candle for me.

I’ll light a candle for you.

And together, we’ll push back the dark.


Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Here Comes a Miracle

There’s something sacred about the way faith feels when it’s alive—when it isn’t just words on a page or songs on a Sunday, but breath and heartbeat and movement. I imagine that’s what it must have been like for those who followed Jesus along those dusty roads so long ago. They didn’t follow Him out of routine or obligation. They followed because they knew something extraordinary was happening. The air itself seemed to shimmer when He walked by, as if creation recognized its Creator and stood still in reverence. They had seen too much not to believe—blind eyes opened, the lame leaping, the broken restored. And though they might not have understood it all, one thing was certain: when Jesus was near, miracles happened.

I can almost hear the whispers moving through the crowds—the sound of sandals on dry ground, the low hum of hope rising as they pressed closer together. “Here comes a miracle,” someone might have said, and the words spread like wildfire. Those words carried a kind of faith that pulsed with life, the kind that believed the impossible was not only possible, but imminent. People came from every direction—mothers carrying sick children, friends guiding blind men by the hand, lepers keeping their distance but daring to hope that He might still see them. Each step they took toward Him was a step away from despair.

They didn’t come because they were perfect. They came because they were desperate. And desperation, when pointed toward Jesus, becomes faith in motion. That’s the beauty of the stories in Scripture—the people who came to Jesus weren’t saints or scholars; they were the hurting, the overlooked, the ones who had nowhere else to turn. And yet, they were the ones who saw the miracles first.

There’s something profoundly beautiful about the way Jesus met people where they were. He didn’t wait for them to prove themselves worthy or recite the right words. He simply looked at them with compassion, reached out His hand, and said, “Be healed.” And they were. The lame walked. The deaf heard. The blind saw. Those who had been bound for years—by illness, by shame, by hopelessness—were suddenly set free. But maybe the most incredible miracles weren’t the physical ones at all. Maybe the real miracles were the ones that happened in the unseen places—the quiet transformations taking root in hearts that dared to believe again.

The man who had given up on life suddenly found purpose. The woman who had lived in hiding finally felt seen. The outcast, the sinner, the forgotten—they all found themselves known and loved. That’s what made Jesus so different. When He looked at people, He didn’t just see what was wrong with them; He saw what was still possible within them. He saw who they could be, not just who they were.

When Jesus was near, everything changed.

And yet, those miracles weren’t confined to dusty roads or ancient crowds. They didn’t end when the disciples grew weary or when the world moved on. The same Jesus who healed the broken then still heals the broken now. He still meets the fearful, the anxious, the weary, and the wounded. He still speaks peace into chaos and hope into despair. He still breathes life into what seems lifeless and whispers, “I’m here.”

Here comes a miracle.

It might not always look the way we expect. Sometimes miracles are loud and public, but more often, they’re quiet and slow—like a sunrise inching across the sky, lighting one dark corner at a time. A miracle might look like strength you didn’t know you had, peace that doesn’t make sense, or the courage to keep going when you swore you couldn’t. Sometimes the miracle isn’t the mountain moving—it’s the heart learning how to climb.

Faith, at its core, is a choice. It’s believing that even when life doesn’t make sense, even when the answers don’t come, even when the pain lingers longer than you think you can endure, God is still who He says He is. It’s trusting that the same power that opened blind eyes and calmed raging seas still works in your life today.

We live in a world that has forgotten how to expect miracles. We’ve become so trained to look for logic and proof that we’ve lost touch with wonder. But miracles don’t live in the realm of logic—they live in the heart of faith. They happen when we say, “I believe You can.”

That’s what the woman with the issue of blood said when she reached out just to touch His robe. That’s what the blind man said when he cried out louder after being told to be quiet. That’s what the paralyzed man’s friends believed when they tore open a roof just to get him close to Jesus. Every one of them had a choice—to stay where they were or to reach out in faith. And every one of them saw the miracle.

The roads may not be dusty anymore, and the crowds may not gather the same way, but the presence of Jesus is no less real. He still walks with us through the unseen corners of our days. The same power that raised Him from the grave still lives within us. The same compassion that made Him stop for the hurting still moves His heart for us now.

The world may be noisy, cynical, and distracted, but that doesn’t change the truth: nothing is impossible with God. He still makes a way when there is no way. He still parts seas and calms storms. He still multiplies what little we have into more than enough. And even when the miracle doesn’t come in the way we expect—even when healing looks different, or restoration takes longer—it doesn’t mean He’s not working. It means He’s doing something eternal, something that will make sense when we finally see the whole picture.

The song says, “And still today we follow Him. We claim His Word is true. And nothing is impossible. What He says, He will do.” That’s the heartbeat of faith—to keep walking when the path feels long, to keep believing when the world calls you foolish, to keep waiting with expectant hope because you know the One who promised is faithful.

Someday, every doubt will fade. Every eye will see. Every heart will know what faith has always whispered—that Jesus was, is, and always will be the God of miracles. Until that day comes, we walk like those early followers did—with eyes of wonder, with hearts full of expectation, and with faith that says, “He is near, and where He is, miracles happen.”

Maybe that’s the miracle the world needs most right now—not just physical healing, but the healing of hearts. The miracle of peace in chaos. The miracle of compassion in a world that’s forgotten how to care. The miracle of hope in a time that feels uncertain. Every time a broken heart dares to believe again, that’s a miracle. Every time someone forgives when it would have been easier to hate, that’s a miracle. Every time a weary soul finds the strength to rise again, that’s a miracle.

The same Jesus who walked those ancient roads still walks beside us today. His glory is still in this place. His Spirit still breathes life into dry bones. And if you listen closely—past the noise, past the worry, past the fear—you can almost hear it again. That soft, familiar whisper that stirs your heart and lifts your eyes.

Here comes a miracle.

It may not come the way you thought it would. It may not arrive when you expected. But it’s coming. Because He’s still the same God. The one who gave sight to the blind still gives vision to those who can’t see a way forward. The one who made the lame walk still strengthens those who’ve fallen under the weight of their trials. The one who called Lazarus from the tomb still calls us out of despair and into light.

And even though the world may doubt and mock and turn away, one day all will see. One day, every heart will know that He was never just a teacher or a prophet. He is the living Son of God. The Redeemer. The Healer. The Miracle Worker.

And when that day comes—when we see Him in the air, when faith becomes sight, and every pain, every fear, every unanswered prayer finally makes sense—we’ll understand what those early followers felt. We’ll know what it means to say with complete certainty: Here comes a miracle.

Until then, we keep walking. We keep trusting. We keep believing that Jesus is still near and that where He is, anything is possible. His glory is in this place. His power still flows through the weary and the willing. His love still redeems, restores, and renews.

So, when the road feels long, when the world feels heavy, when you start to wonder if God still moves—lift your eyes. Because He’s still here. The same yesterday, today, and forever. The same voice that spoke life into the world still whispers to your soul. And if you listen closely, if you open your heart, you’ll feel it—faith stirring, hope rising, and the quiet assurance that miracles aren’t a thing of the past.

They’re still happening. Right here. Right now.

Here comes a miracle.

Tuesday, December 9, 2025

The Unredeemable Lie

There’s a question that lives quietly in the corners of the human heart, one that rarely gets spoken aloud but often lingers like a shadow in the soul: Am I forever unredeemable? It’s the kind of thought that creeps in when we’re alone with our memories—when the weight of past mistakes, regrets, or disappointments starts to whisper that we’ve gone too far, fallen too hard, or failed too often to ever make things right again.

But the truth, the real truth, is that there is no such thing as an unredeemable life.

Redemption is not something we earn; it’s something we are offered. And it’s not reserved for the perfect, the polished, or the ones who got it right the first time—it’s for the messy, the bruised, the broken, and the ones who are still trying to figure out who they are after everything fell apart.

The song these words come from, “Unredeemable,” asks the kind of questions that sit deep in the gut. It speaks of someone who’s spent a lifetime taking, running, burning bridges, and leaving wreckage behind. Someone who has come face to face with the ruin they created and is left wondering if there’s anything left worth saving.

And though most of us haven’t lived the exact same story, we all know what it’s like to wonder if the damage we’ve caused—to others, to ourselves, or even to our faith—can ever be undone. We’ve all felt that ache of regret, that moment when the mirror shows us not who we hoped to be, but who we became along the way.

But that’s the beauty of redemption—it doesn’t deny where we’ve been, it transforms it.

It doesn’t erase the past; it redeems it. It takes the ashes and turns them into something that glows again. It turns the wound into wisdom, the failure into testimony, and the shame into strength.

The world often tells us that worth is measured by success, by reputation, by how many people approve of who we are. But grace—true, unfiltered, life-changing grace—plays by different rules. Grace says that even at your lowest, even when you’ve messed up more times than you can count, you are still worthy of love.

And not because you’ve done everything right, but because you were created with purpose.

The idea that any soul could be “unredeemable” is one of the greatest lies ever told. It’s the lie that keeps people stuck in shame instead of stepping into healing. It’s the lie that convinces hearts to give up before the miracle happens. It’s the lie that says the story is over when God is still holding the pen.

We’ve all burned bridges. We’ve all wounded others, sometimes without realizing it, and sometimes with full awareness. We’ve all made choices we’d give anything to take back. But the measure of a person’s life isn’t found in their mistakes—it’s found in what they do after them.

The beauty of redemption is that it begins the moment we turn around. The moment we say, “I want to be better. I want to heal what I’ve broken.” That single act of humility opens the door to something miraculous.

Because here’s the thing: none of us are meant to stay stuck in the wreckage.

No matter how many bridges we’ve burned, there’s always a path back to light. It might not look like the one we imagined. It might take time, humility, and a lot of grace. But there’s no life too tangled for God to untie.

And maybe that’s the deeper message hiding behind this song—it’s not just about one person asking if they can change. It’s about all of us realizing that redemption isn’t just possible—it’s promised.

When we finally stop running, when we sit down with the ruins of what we’ve built and admit that we can’t fix it on our own, that’s when the healing begins. That’s when grace rushes in. That’s when the whisper of hope becomes louder than the voice of shame.

There’s a beautiful truth hidden in the question “Can my worst be left behind?”

Yes. It can.

Because what’s behind you doesn’t define what’s ahead of you.

The things you regret, the moments you wish you could erase—they don’t disqualify you from being loved or used for good. In fact, they can become the very foundation of your purpose. Sometimes it’s the people who’ve fallen the hardest who end up helping others rise. Sometimes it’s the broken who become the most compassionate healers.

When you’ve known darkness deeply, you begin to understand the value of light.

The song also asks, “Do I deserve to find there’s a soul who could see any good in me?” And the answer is yes—you do. Every person on this earth deserves to be seen for more than their mistakes. You are not the sum of your failures. You are the image of a Creator who sees every scar and still calls you worthy.

And when you start to believe that, you begin to see that redemption isn’t just something that happens to you—it’s something that begins to happen through you.

Because once you’ve tasted grace, you can’t help but extend it.

When you’ve been forgiven, you start to forgive others more easily. When you’ve been lifted from despair, you learn how to lift others. And when you’ve been loved at your lowest, you start to see that love is the most powerful force in the universe—it changes everything it touches.

The closing lines say, “You know that you can achieve something miraculous if you’d only dare.”

That word—dare—is important. Because redemption always requires courage. It takes courage to face yourself honestly. Courage to admit that you want to change. Courage to believe that your life can still matter, even after everything.

It’s easy to stay in guilt. Guilt is familiar. It feels like punishment, but it also feels safe—it’s predictable. Hope, on the other hand, is risky. Hope asks us to believe in something we can’t yet see.

But hope is what leads to miracles.

When you dare to believe that your life can still hold beauty, even after heartbreak, you open the door to something divine. When you dare to believe that your past doesn’t define your future, you start to walk in freedom. When you dare to believe that there is still good in you, even when the world has told you otherwise—you start to rise.

And that rising? That’s redemption in motion.

The world is full of people who think they’ve gone too far, done too much, or failed too deeply to ever be made new again. But if we could lift our eyes for just a moment, we’d see that we are surrounded by stories of grace—people who’ve rebuilt from ashes, hearts that have found peace after chaos, lives that have found purpose after pain.

Redemption doesn’t erase the past—it gives it meaning.

So, to anyone who feels “unredeemable,” hear this: You are not the worst thing you’ve ever done. You are not your failures. You are not your regret. You are a story still being written, a soul still being refined, a life still capable of love and purpose.

And if you’re brave enough to believe that—even just a little—something miraculous begins to unfold.

Because grace has a way of turning the most broken lives into the most beautiful testimonies.

You were never unredeemable. You were simply waiting for the moment you’d dare to believe you weren’t.

Monday, December 8, 2025

The Song Remembers When

There are moments in life that sneak up on you—ordinary seconds that suddenly pull you back in time, unraveling all the walls you thought you’d built around your heart. It might be the scent of a certain kind of rain, the sight of an old photograph, or, more often than not, a song. Music has a way of finding us when we least expect it—of remembering for us when we’ve forgotten, of reminding us that the story isn’t over even when life has changed beyond recognition.

You can be standing somewhere so normal—at a counter waiting for change, your mind caught up in the humdrum of another day—and then, out of nowhere, the first few notes of an old familiar tune begin to play. And suddenly, everything stops. The air changes. The moment shifts. It’s like a lighted match tossed into your soul, setting fire to memories you didn’t even realize were still smoldering.

That’s what music does. It breaks open the dam in your heart and lets everything you’ve been holding back come rushing through—grief, joy, love, loss, all tangled together.

For some of us, those songs carry reminders of who we used to be—before life changed, before illness or tragedy, before the weight of reality bent us in ways we didn’t think we could recover from. They remind us of laughter that came easier, of dreams that still felt possible, of a kind of innocence that believed nothing bad could touch us.

And yet, even as the ache of remembering hits, there’s something healing in it too. Because it proves that those pieces of who we were are still alive somewhere inside us. It reminds us that love doesn’t die, that hope doesn’t vanish—it just waits quietly for us to remember.

For anyone who has walked through life-altering diagnosis, heartache, or loss, you know what it means to feel like you’ve taken every detour. You’ve gotten lost so many times that you’re not sure there’s even a way back anymore. You’ve fought to forget the life you used to have, to stop comparing it to what is now, because the pain of remembering felt too heavy.

But then, one small moment—one song, one sound—pulls it all back. And in that moment, something beautiful happens. You realize that you didn’t lose everything. That even when life took a turn you never asked for, you still carried pieces of that old light within you.

“The song remembers when.” Those words aren’t just about nostalgia—they’re about connection. About how certain melodies know us better than we know ourselves. They hold the emotions we were too afraid to feel, the prayers we couldn’t speak, the joy we thought had been buried for good.

When you’ve lived through something like a diagnosis—especially one that changes the course of your life—it’s easy to feel like you’ve stepped off the map completely. Like the life you planned has vanished, replaced by one you never saw coming. There’s grief in that—grief for what was, for what could have been, for the parts of yourself you had to let go of.

But then, the song plays.

And in that sacred, unexpected moment, you remember. You remember that life didn’t end—it shifted. That love didn’t disappear—it deepened. That even in the heartbreak, even in the fear, even in the long nights where sleep never comes and faith feels thin, there’s still a heartbeat of grace underneath it all.

Music brings that truth back to life.

For me, and for so many others walking through uncertainty or illness, those moments matter more than we often admit. They remind us that we are still living. That we still have a story unfolding, even if it looks nothing like the one we imagined. They remind us that joy still exists, tucked in unexpected places—sometimes in the hum of a melody, sometimes in the softness of a memory, sometimes in the stillness that follows.

And that’s the thing about life—it changes us, yes. It reshapes us. But it doesn’t erase us.

Every detour, every wrong turn, every painful chapter—it’s all part of the same song. Sometimes the melody shifts; sometimes it slows. Sometimes it feels like silence has taken over entirely. But eventually, the music returns, and when it does, it carries both the ache and the beauty of everything we’ve survived.

We can’t always find our way back to who we were—but maybe we’re not supposed to. Maybe the song doesn’t play to remind us of what we lost, but of what we still have. Of what’s still possible.

When that familiar music plays, it doesn’t just take us back—it brings us forward too. It says, You’re still here. You’re still breathing. You still have love in your life and purpose in your steps. It reminds us that even with the weight of diagnosis, even with the uncertainty, even with the exhaustion and fear that sometimes shadow the days—we still have life.

And that life, as imperfect and unpredictable as it is, still holds beauty.

Maybe that’s what the song really remembers—not just when, but who. Who we were before, who we’ve become, and who we’re still meant to be. It remembers the joy of simpler times but also honors the strength we’ve found in the hard ones. It remembers the laughter, but it also holds the tears. It remembers the light, even when we can’t see it ourselves.

Music has a way of speaking to the soul in languages words can’t. It finds the cracks and fills them with reminders that love still wins. That grace still sings. That even when we’ve forgotten, even when the world feels too heavy to carry, the melody keeps going—because life keeps going.

So the next time you find yourself somewhere ordinary—a grocery store, a cafĂ©, a parking lot—and a song you haven’t heard in years starts to play, don’t rush past it. Let it wash over you. Let it remind you. Let it make you feel something again.

Because the song remembers when.

It remembers the joy, the laughter, the beginnings. It remembers the heartbreak, too, and the strength that grew in the middle of it. It remembers all the parts of your story that you thought were lost.

And most of all—it remembers you.

Not just who you were before life changed, but who you are now. The one still standing, still breathing, still finding ways to love and to hope, even after everything.

So let the song play. Let the memories come. Let the tears fall if they need to. Because somewhere in that melody, you’ll find the proof that even though the road has changed, your story isn’t over.

You still have a life.
You still have music.
And the song—it still remembers when.

Sunday, December 7, 2025

Just How Far the Ripples Go

Every day I wake up with a single dream running through my head—to throw a little stone into a mighty stream and watch the ripples as they spread. It’s such a simple image, isn’t it? One small stone, one small action, causing movement far beyond what we can see. But that’s the thing about life—the smallest things often carry the greatest power.

We live in a world that tells us to play it safe. To stay within the lines. To follow the rules, keep quiet, and not stir the waters too much. We measure success by comfort, not courage. We’ve been taught that making waves is risky, that rocking the boat could tip it. And yet, every great movement, every act of kindness, every soul that changed the world for the better started with someone who dared to throw a stone. Someone who believed that even small ripples matter.

We fall in line because it feels safe. We do what’s expected because it’s easier. But deep down, most of us know that treading water in the kiddie pool isn’t why we’re here. We weren’t made for shallow living. We were made for oceans—wide, deep, uncharted. The kind of places where faith is required and comfort is left behind. The kind of places where you risk sinking, but find out you can actually swim.

Every day, the world gives us chances to make ripples—to speak kindness where there’s cruelty, to offer forgiveness where there’s bitterness, to stand for truth even when it’s not popular. These moments rarely come with fanfare. Sometimes they’re quiet—smiling at a stranger, standing beside someone who feels unseen, praying for a world that seems unfixable. But they matter. They always matter. Because love, when released into the world, never disappears. It moves outward, multiplying in ways we’ll never fully understand.

“If you wanna make a ripple, if you wanna make a wave, playing safe and thinking small doesn’t move the ball at all.”

Those words hit deeply because they call out the comfort we cling to. It’s not that we don’t care about the world—it’s that sometimes, caring feels too big. The problems seem too vast, the pain too heavy, and so we tell ourselves that what we do won’t make a difference. But what if that’s exactly what the world wants us to believe? What if the smallest act of courage, compassion, or conviction is the very thing that tips the balance toward good?

There’s humanity to save, and it starts one ripple at a time.

Maybe it’s reaching out to someone who’s struggling. Maybe it’s speaking up when silence would be easier. Maybe it’s believing that your prayers still matter, even when the world feels dark. The truth is, no ripple is too small. Because ripples don’t stay still—they grow, they collide, they multiply. One spark of love can ignite another, and before long, a wave begins.

We can’t wait for someone else to change the world. We can’t sit with our feet up, floating comfortably, hoping the tide will turn itself. If we want to see compassion, we have to live it. If we want to see healing, we have to start forgiving. If we want to see hope, we have to plant it in the soil of despair and believe that it will grow.

It’s easy to think that our lives are too ordinary to matter, that the big work of changing the world belongs to someone else. But history has never been written by those who stayed in the shallow end. It’s written by people who dared to believe that what they carried inside—a word, a vision, a bit of kindness—was enough to start something.

Even faith itself is like a ripple. Jesus never built armies or empires; He loved people one by one. A conversation by a well, a meal shared with outcasts, a hand reaching to heal the broken. And yet, those simple ripples became a wave that still moves through hearts thousands of years later.

Maybe that’s the lesson: the size of the ripple doesn’t matter. What matters is that we throw the stone.

Every act of goodness counts. Every moment of bravery echoes. Every time we love when it would be easier not to, we’re helping to turn the tide.

The truth is, we all have oceans within us—depths of potential, kindness, and courage waiting to be released. But too often, we’re content to float, watching the horizon and wondering what might be out there. Fear tells us that stepping out of comfort means risking failure. But maybe failure isn’t in trying and falling short. Maybe failure is never trying at all.

What if the only thing standing between us and the miracle we’re meant to create is the fear of rocking the boat? What if the wave we’ve been praying for starts with our own ripple?

There’s humanity to save, yes—but there’s also something divine in that work. Every time we act in love, we’re reflecting the Creator’s heart. Every time we take a step into deeper waters, we’re proving that faith still exists in a world that desperately needs it.

And maybe that’s why this message feels so important now. The world feels divided and weary, full of people treading water and trying to stay afloat. But we weren’t made to just survive—we were made to impact. To influence. To bring light into dark places.

So let’s stop measuring the worth of our actions by how big they look. Let’s start measuring them by how much love they carry. The smallest kindness—a text, a prayer, a smile, a gesture—can ripple farther than we’ll ever see.

We’ll never know how far the ripples go. But that’s the beauty of it.

Our job isn’t to control the outcome. It’s to keep throwing stones of love, mercy, and faith into the waters of a hurting world. It’s to believe that every ripple matters because every soul matters. It’s to keep trusting that even when we can’t see the wave, God is still moving beneath the surface.

So tomorrow, when you wake up and feel the weight of the world pressing in, remember your dream. Pick up your stone. Throw it bravely into the stream. Speak the word, show the kindness, take the step.

Because one ripple of goodness can change everything.
Because courage isn’t found in playing it safe—it’s found in stepping out anyway.
Because faith was never meant for shallow water—it was meant for oceans.

And one day, when the ripples you started meet the ripples of others, you’ll see it. The tide will begin to turn. The current of hope will grow stronger. And you’ll realize you were never just throwing stones.

You were building waves.

Saturday, December 6, 2025

Until I Found You

There’s a moment in every life—sometimes quiet, sometimes crashing—when the soul finally admits it’s tired of searching. When the things that once promised satisfaction lose their shine, and the noise of the world grows hollow. I’ve been there. Maybe you have too. Searching through the Earth for something that could fill the ache, something that could bring peace to the hurt buried too deep for words. We chase it in people, in success, in distraction. We tell ourselves that if we can just fix the next thing, earn the next thing, or feel the next thing, we’ll finally be okay. But it never works for long, does it?

There comes a point where your heart whispers what your mind has been avoiding: None of this is enough.

It took me years to understand that emptiness isn’t failure—it’s invitation. An invitation from God to stop trying to patch the hole with temporary things and finally let Him fill it with something eternal.

I searched and searched—through all the bright, noisy places this world told me to look. But peace was never there. It was waiting for me in the quiet, when I finally ran out of strength to keep pretending I was fine. Knees on the floor, tears I didn’t even know I was still holding back spilling freely—and that’s when it happened. Not a lightning strike, not an instant fix, but a slow, gentle awakening. The kind of peace that doesn’t make sense but settles anyway. The kind of presence that wraps around you and whispers, “You were never alone.”

That was the moment everything began to change.

I finally found what I’d been searching for, and it wasn’t something—it was Someone.

The world makes promises it can’t keep. It offers comfort, but only for a while. It offers happiness, but it fades. It offers love, but it’s often conditional. But when I found Him—really found Him—I discovered something different. Something that didn’t depend on my performance or my perfection. Something steady, constant, unchanging.

You lifted my soul and opened up my eyes.

That’s what God does when you let Him in. He doesn’t just polish the surface; He transforms from the inside out. He takes the fragments, the shattered pieces, the things you thought were beyond repair—and He rewrites the story. Suddenly, what was broken becomes beautiful. What was lost begins to find its way home.

I had spent so long trying to build my own peace that I didn’t realize peace was never something to build—it was something to receive. It’s the kind that only comes when you let go, when you surrender control, when you trust that the One who made you knows how to heal you.

And oh, how He heals. Not just the wounds the world can see, but the deep ones—the disappointments that hardened your heart, the regrets that whisper at night, the griefs that never quite leave. He doesn’t rush the process; He just stays. Patient. Gentle. Unmoving. Until little by little, you start to believe again.

I never knew anything could last forever until I found Him.

Because everything else I’d ever known had an ending. Relationships fade. Beauty fades. Strength fades. Even joy, in its worldly form, fades. But His love—His love endures. It outlasts the pain, the questions, the doubts. It reaches farther than failure and deeper than fear. It doesn’t demand perfection—it offers presence. It doesn’t say, “Earn this.” It says, “Come as you are.”

And for the first time in my life, that was enough.

He’s rewriting my story, and I am brand new like a morning.

That line holds so much truth for me. Because every morning since I met Him truly, I’ve woken up with the awareness that yesterday’s weight doesn’t have to define today. The sun still rises. Grace still comes. Forgiveness still waits. That’s the power of His love—it doesn’t erase the past, it redeems it. It takes what was meant for harm and turns it into healing.

When I think about how far I’ve come from the day I fell to my knees, I don’t see perfection. I see transformation. I see how He took my worn-out soul and breathed life back into it. I see how He taught me to see beauty in the ordinary again. To find gratitude in the small things. To find strength in surrender.

It’s easy to talk about faith when everything’s going well, but it’s in the struggle that you learn what faith really is. Faith isn’t pretending the pain doesn’t exist—it’s believing God is still good even when it does. It’s trusting Him when the path is dark, when sleep won’t come, when answers are slow. It’s praising Him not because life is perfect, but because He is.

And maybe that’s what I had to learn all along: peace isn’t the absence of pain—it’s the presence of God in the middle of it.

I used to think finding faith meant finding clarity. But now I know it’s not about clarity—it’s about connection. I still don’t have all the answers, but I don’t need them. I have Him. And that’s enough.

Every day, He’s still rewriting my story.

There are chapters I wish I could erase, pages marked with tears and regret, moments I thought would break me. But He keeps reminding me that those are the very pages where His grace shines brightest. The scars don’t disqualify me—they tell the story of how He found me, how He stayed, how He carried me when I couldn’t move.

And maybe that’s the most beautiful thing about being found by God—you stop being defined by what broke you and start being defined by who healed you.

If you’ve ever searched—really searched—for something to make life make sense, I want to tell you this: it’s okay to be tired. It’s okay to be empty. It’s okay to not have it all figured out. Because the One who made you is still waiting, patient and kind, to fill the space you’ve been trying to fill on your own. He doesn’t ask for perfection, just permission—to enter, to heal, to rewrite.

When you find Him—or maybe when you finally realize He’s been there all along—you’ll understand what forever really means.

Forever isn’t just a measure of time. It’s the peace that settles when love finally finds you and stays. It’s knowing that no matter what happens next, you’ll never be alone again.

I never knew anything could last forever until I found Him. But now I know. And that knowledge changes everything.

Now when I wake up each morning, even in the middle of chaos or uncertainty, I feel the quiet hum of something eternal inside me. It’s hope. It’s peace. It’s love that doesn’t leave when life gets messy. It’s the sound of my story being rewritten by hands far more capable than mine.

I still have my moments—days when I stumble, nights when fear whispers again—but I don’t live there anymore. Because I’ve found the One who calls me new every morning.

And when I look back on the long road that brought me here—the searching, the tears, the moments of surrender—I can see now that none of it was wasted. Every detour led me closer to grace. Every broken piece became part of something beautiful.

So no, I didn’t find peace in the world. I found it on my knees. I found it in the quiet, where all that was left of me was enough for God to rebuild.

And now I can say with certainty: I never knew anything could last forever—until I found Him.

Because everything else fades.
But His love—His unshakable, unconditional, unstoppable love—
that lasts forever.

Friday, December 5, 2025

Love Will Hold Us Together

We live in a world that’s quick to measure worth in dollars, degrees, and headlines. A world that tells us success is the sum of what we own or how high we climb. But when life shakes—when the storms roll in and the ground gives way—it’s not the job, the house, or the title that keeps us standing. It’s love.

Not the kind of love that fades when things get hard or costs us nothing. I’m talking about the kind of love that shows up. The kind that rolls up its sleeves and holds on when everything else is falling apart. The kind that says, “I’m here. You’re not alone.”

Because love doesn’t pay your bills or buy you a mansion in Beverly Hills. It won’t solve your life in five easy steps or come neatly wrapped with a bow. But it will do something greater—it will hold you together when the world feels like it’s coming undone.

That’s what I’ve come to believe: love is the thread that keeps the fabric of humanity from unraveling completely. It’s the small, quiet gestures that rebuild what fear and hate tear down. It’s the hand extended to someone on their knees. It’s the text you send when you know someone’s hurting. It’s showing up, again and again, even when you don’t have the right words.

We’re all going to face storms—some that come out of nowhere, some that last far longer than we think we can endure. And in those moments, it’s love that becomes the shelter. Love that covers us when the rain won’t stop. Love that says, “Lean on me until the sun comes back out.”

Love doesn’t make life perfect. It makes it possible.

And maybe that’s what the world needs most right now—not more rules or quick fixes, not more shouting across the divide, but more people willing to be keepers of each other’s hearts.

“I’ll be my brother’s keeper.”

That line—it’s not just a lyric. It’s a calling. It’s a reminder that we are connected, every single one of us, whether we act like it or not. When one of us hurts, the whole body aches. When one of us is lost, the whole world feels it. And when one of us reaches out in love, the ripple stretches farther than we’ll ever know.

Being your brother’s keeper means you care even when it’s inconvenient. You love even when it’s not returned. You forgive even when it still stings. It’s the radical, world-changing truth that we were never meant to walk through this life alone.

Because love is what God built this whole fragile, beautiful world upon. Not wealth, not power, not politics—love. The kind that doesn’t need to be explained, only lived. The kind that looks like Jesus, stooping down to wash feet, breaking bread with the broken, holding space for the hurting.

And in a world that feels more divided than ever, maybe our greatest act of rebellion is to love fiercely anyway. To build bridges when others build walls. To see each other as souls instead of sides. To believe that compassion can still change hearts, one at a time.

It’s easy to feel small in a world so full of noise. To think, What difference can I make? But here’s the truth: every act of love matters. Every kindness counts. Every time you choose to love when you could have turned away, you add a bit more light to a world that desperately needs it.

You might not be able to fix everything—but love was never about fixing. It’s about being present. It’s about sitting in the storm with someone else and saying, “You don’t have to face this alone.”

That’s the kind of love that changes things. The kind that turns fear into faith. The kind that holds families together, keeps friendships strong, and reminds strangers that someone still sees them.

So tonight, as I think about this messy, beautiful world, I find myself praying not for more answers—but for more love. For the courage to keep showing up, to keep caring, to keep believing that love still has the final word.

Because one day, all the things we chase will fade. The jobs, the houses, the achievements—they’ll pass away. But love? Love will remain. Love will hold us together when nothing else can.

It will make us a shelter to weather the storm.
It will remind us that we are never alone.
And if we let it—if we truly live it—it will heal this world one heart at a time.

So no, love won’t fix your life in five easy steps.
It won’t buy you a home or erase every pain.
But it will do something far greater—
it will give you a reason to keep going,
and it will give this world a reason to hope again.

And maybe that’s all we ever really needed.

Hold Your Head Up

There will always be days that try to break you—days when the world feels unfair, when people talk without understanding, when life piles on...