Monday, March 2, 2026

This Is My Story, I Testify

This is my story. I testify. Not because my life has been easy, not because I’ve done everything right, and not because I’ve earned anything that has come my way — but because when I look back, truly look back, I see a thread of goodness woven through every season. I see blessings layered over blessings, mercy stacked on top of mercy, grace poured out in ways I didn’t even recognize at the time. And when I start remembering how good You’ve been, everything shifts.


There were days when I couldn’t see it. Days when fear felt louder than faith. Days when the weight of uncertainty pressed so hard against my chest that I wondered how much longer I could carry it. But even then — especially then — You were pouring blessings into my life. Some were obvious, tangible, visible. Others were quiet and hidden, disguised as strength I didn’t know I had or peace that made no logical sense. You were working behind the scenes of my own chaos, steady and faithful.


When I start remembering how good You’ve been, fear loses its grip. It doesn’t vanish instantly, but it weakens. It no longer has the authority it once claimed. What once felt overwhelming becomes manageable because I can trace Your fingerprints through every past storm. Fear turns to worship because memory becomes evidence. Tears turn to praise because I realize those tears were never wasted. You saw every one of them. You counted them. You met me in them.


There were chains in my life that felt permanent. Chains of depression that whispered lies about my worth. Chains of hopelessness that told me this was just how things would always be. There were nights when the darkness felt thicker than my prayers and mornings when I woke up already tired. But grace has a way of breaking what we thought was unbreakable. Not always loudly. Not always instantly. Sometimes it breaks chains link by link, day by day, through therapy appointments, through whispered prayers, through choosing to get up one more time. But grace breaks them nonetheless.


When I start remembering how good You’ve been, I see how those chains didn’t fall because I was strong — they fell because You were. Because grace stepped into spaces where I had run out of fight. Because love refused to leave me buried. Because You carried what I could not.


The enemy’s weapons fell to the ground more times than I even realized. Plans meant to discourage me, derail me, divide me — they didn’t prosper. Lies meant to define me did not get the final word. Circumstances meant to destroy my peace ended up strengthening my faith. Armies of heaven were always surrounding me, even when I felt alone. I couldn’t see them, but I can see the aftermath now — doors that opened when others closed, protection I didn’t know I needed, timing that made no sense until it did.


How many times did You carry my cross when I was too weary to lift it? How many times did You absorb the weight of consequences, the heaviness of regret, the shame I thought would bury me? You didn’t just stand at a distance and cheer me on. You stepped in. You took what was mine to carry and shouldered it Yourself. You bore burdens I didn’t even know how to name.


You’ve been so, so, so, so, so, so good to me.


From morning to night. In the ordinary rhythms of life. In the quiet breakfasts and the long drives. In hospital rooms and living rooms. In laughter and in grief. In the lows and the highs, You remained consistent. When my emotions fluctuated, You did not. When my circumstances shifted, You did not. When my faith wavered, You did not.


I look back on my life now, and I see patterns I missed in the moment. I see protection wrapped in disappointment. I see redirection hidden in rejection. I see growth disguised as loss. There were things I prayed for that didn’t happen — and now I’m grateful. There were doors I desperately wanted opened that remained shut — and now I understand why. You were not withholding from me. You were preserving me.


You called me by name.


Not generically. Not vaguely. Not as part of a crowd. You called me personally. You saw me before I understood myself. You loved me like I was — flawed, insecure, imperfect — but You loved me too much to leave me that way. That kind of love is rare. It doesn’t flatter dysfunction or excuse destruction. It restores. It refines. It transforms.


There was a version of me that felt spiritually lifeless. Going through motions. Surviving more than thriving. Smiling while internally crumbling. I was breathing, but I wasn’t fully alive. And then something shifted. Grace awakened me. Truth penetrated numbness. Hope pushed through soil that felt too hardened to grow anything.


I was dead — and now I live.


That’s what You did.


You revived dreams I thought were foolish. You rebuilt confidence that had eroded. You restored joy that I thought was permanently gone. You breathed life into places I had written off as beyond repair. And You did it patiently. Faithfully. Over time.


There were seasons when I questioned everything. When I wondered if You were still near. When silence felt like absence. But looking back, I see that silence was often preparation. That waiting was often alignment. That stillness was often strengthening roots deep beneath the surface.


You have been good to me in ways I can articulate and in ways I cannot.


You have been good to me through relationships that stretched me and through relationships that sustained me. Through heartbreak that reshaped my priorities and through love that reminded me what home feels like. Through financial uncertainty and unexpected provision. Through mental battles and moments of breakthrough clarity.


Even in the seasons I wouldn’t choose again, I can now say this with conviction: You were there.


You were there in the therapy rooms.

You were there in the late-night prayers.

You were there when anxiety tried to narrate my future.

You were there when depression tried to define my identity.

You were there when fear whispered worst-case scenarios.


And because You were there, I made it through.


This is my story. I testify.


Not to my resilience, but to Your faithfulness. Not to my strength, but to Your sustaining power. Not to my perfection, but to Your redemption. The story is not that I avoided hardship. The story is that hardship did not destroy me. The story is that grace met me every single time.


When I start remembering how good You’ve been, gratitude rises up like a reflex. Worship becomes natural. Praise becomes honest. Not forced. Not performative. Just deeply sincere. Because memory has become proof.


You have been good when I felt undeserving. Good when I was inconsistent. Good when I was confused. Good when I doubted myself. Good when I doubted You.


And somehow, even my doubts didn’t disqualify me from Your love.


If I could go back and speak to the version of myself who felt lost, I would tell her this: Hold on. The story is not finished. The night will not last forever. The chains you feel today will not define your tomorrow. Grace is already at work. Heaven is already surrounding you. And one day, you will look back and see that every tear was watering something beautiful.


I testify because testimony builds faith — in myself and in others. When I say You’ve been good, I’m declaring that goodness is not theoretical. It’s personal. It’s experiential. It’s real. It’s woven into the details of my everyday life.


From morning to night, from lows to highs, from breakdowns to breakthroughs, from death to life — You have been so, so, so, so, so, so good to me.


And when I start remembering, I cannot stay silent.


This is my story.


I testify.


Sunday, March 1, 2026

Hope Changes Everything

There was a time when our lives were spinning in a way that felt impossible to steady. A season where everything seemed fragile, uncertain, and heavy with questions that had no easy answers. We were living in a fallen world, surrounded by brokenness that felt bigger than our strength and deeper than our understanding. Hope felt distant then—not because we didn’t want to believe, but because the weight of reality made belief feel risky. Change seemed unlikely. Healing felt out of reach. And yet, even in that place, our cries did not go unheard.


Heaven heard us. That truth alone changes everything. God did not turn away from the pain of this world or the desperation of our hearts. Instead, He stepped into it. Jesus came not because we had it all together, but because we didn’t. He came into the mess, into the darkness, into the places where hope had worn thin. He came carrying light for people who had forgotten what light felt like, and love for people who had begun to believe they were beyond saving.


And now, because of Him, the story doesn’t end with despair. Now it’s up to us—not to fix the world, not to have all the answers, but to give His love away. To live in a way that reflects the hope we’ve been given. Hope was never meant to be hoarded or hidden; it was meant to be shared, especially with those who feel like they’re standing at the edge of their strength.


When we lift up the hope of Christ and hold it high, we are making a declaration—not just with words, but with our lives. We are saying that darkness does not get the final word. That pain is not the end of the story. That love still reaches farther than fear. Hope changes everything because it reminds people that they are not alone, that their suffering is seen, and that redemption is possible even when circumstances remain hard.


The faith we wear is not meant to stay comfortable or contained. It is meant to move outward, toward hurting people everywhere. Toward those who feel forgotten. Toward those who are exhausted from carrying burdens too heavy to bear alone. Sometimes the greatest act of faith is simply showing up with compassion, listening without judgment, and loving without conditions. In a world aching for connection, faith expressed through love becomes a lifeline.


No matter how dark or troubled someone’s life may seem, hope still has power there. I believe that with all my heart. I’ve seen how a single reminder of God’s presence can steady a shaking soul. How kindness can interrupt despair. How truth can slowly rebuild what fear has torn down. Hope does not deny the reality of pain—it meets it, walks through it, and transforms it from the inside out.


Hope changes everything because it points us back to Jesus—the One who came when we were lost, who stayed when it cost Him everything, and who continues to work through ordinary people willing to love boldly. When we carry His hope into the world, we become part of that ongoing miracle. Not because we are extraordinary, but because His love is.


And so we lift it high. We give it away. We believe that even in the hardest places, hope still breathes life. Because when heaven heard our cries, it didn’t remain silent—and because of that, everything has changed.


Saturday, February 28, 2026

On the Edge of Spring

There’s something quietly tender about the last day of February. It doesn’t announce itself or ask for attention—it simply arrives, carrying the soft understanding that winter is loosening its grip. February has always felt like a month of endurance, a stretch of days where the cold lingers and the light is just beginning to return. And on this final day, there’s a sense of relief mixed with gratitude, as if we’ve made it through something unseen but deeply felt.


The air still holds winter’s chill, but it’s different now. It’s lighter. The sun lingers a little longer in the sky, casting shadows that feel less heavy than they did weeks ago. Even the quiet sounds different, as though the world itself is inhaling, preparing for what comes next. There is a promise woven into this day—not loud or dramatic, but steady and sure. Spring is no longer a distant hope; it’s on its way.


The last day of February invites reflection. It asks us to look back at what this season has carried—what we survived, what we learned, what we released. Winter has a way of stripping life down to its essentials, of revealing what endures when everything else falls away. On this final day, we can honor that process. We can acknowledge the stillness, the waiting, the quiet strength it took to keep going when growth wasn’t visible.


And yet, there is anticipation here, too. Beneath the frozen ground, life has been stirring all along. Seeds have been waiting patiently, roots have been strengthening, and change has been preparing itself in secret. The last day of February reminds us that transformation doesn’t begin when we see it—it begins long before, in darkness and trust. Spring doesn’t rush; it arrives exactly when it’s ready.


There is comfort in knowing that the seasons move forward whether we are ready or not. That light returns even after the longest nights. That what felt dormant was never truly gone. As we step out of February and toward spring, we carry with us the quiet assurance that renewal is not something we have to force—it comes naturally, in its own time.


So today, on this gentle threshold between seasons, we pause. We breathe in the cold one last time and let hope warm us from the inside. We trust that brighter days are ahead, that growth is already underway, and that just like the earth, we, too, are preparing to bloom.


Friday, February 27, 2026

The Courage To Be Seen

There is a moment many of us reach in life when the image we present to the world no longer matches the person we feel ourselves to be inside. It isn’t always dramatic or sudden. Sometimes it creeps in quietly, through exhaustion, through frustration, through the sense that no matter how hard you try, you’re playing a role that doesn’t quite fit. You do everything that is expected of you, yet something inside remains unsettled, whispering that this isn’t the whole truth of who you are.


That feeling is at the heart of reflection—the pause where you finally ask yourself who you are beneath the layers of expectation, obligation, and performance. It’s the moment you stand still long enough to look inward and admit that you’ve been hiding, even from yourself. Not out of dishonesty, but out of survival. Because sometimes it feels safer to be who the world wants than to risk being fully seen.


From the outside, things can look fine. You may appear capable, dependable, put together. You may be praised for meeting standards, fulfilling roles, keeping everything moving smoothly. But inside, there’s a disconnect—a longing to stop pretending, to stop shrinking or reshaping yourself to fit a mold you never chose. There’s a quiet ache that asks, When will I be enough as I am?


Reflection forces us to confront the masks we wear. The smiles we practice. The strengths we exaggerate and the vulnerabilities we bury. It reveals how often we trade authenticity for approval, believing that love must be earned through conformity. Over time, that trade becomes heavy. You begin to feel like you’re disappearing behind the version of yourself everyone else recognizes.


What makes this struggle so painful is that it often comes from a good place. We want to honor our families. We want to meet expectations. We want to belong. We want to make others proud. But somewhere along the way, those desires can drown out our own voice. We forget that identity is not something assigned to us—it is something uncovered.


Looking at your reflection can be unsettling because it doesn’t lie. It shows you the gap between who you are and who you’re pretending to be. It asks uncomfortable questions. Is this truly me? Or is this who I’ve learned to become to stay safe? Those questions don’t always come with immediate answers, but they mark the beginning of honesty.


There is fear in that honesty. Fear of disappointing others. Fear of being misunderstood. Fear of losing acceptance. Fear that if you step out of line, the love you rely on will disappear. So many people remain silent at this crossroads, choosing familiarity over truth. But silence has a cost. It slowly erodes joy, confidence, and self-trust.


Reflection is the courage to acknowledge that cost.


It’s recognizing that living divided—one self for the world and another hidden inside—creates a constant tension. You feel it when you’re praised for something that doesn’t feel like you. You feel it when you’re exhausted by maintaining an image. You feel it when you ache to speak honestly but swallow the words instead.


Yet within reflection there is also hope. Because naming the disconnect is the first step toward healing it. When you finally admit, This isn’t fully me, you open the door to becoming more whole. You begin to understand that your worth does not come from meeting expectations but from existing truthfully.


The journey toward authenticity is rarely easy. It often requires standing alone for a while. It requires letting go of certainty and walking into vulnerability. It requires trusting that the version of you that feels hidden, uncertain, or different is not a flaw—but a strength waiting to be honored.


Reflection teaches us that identity is not static. We are allowed to grow beyond what others expect of us. We are allowed to redefine ourselves. We are allowed to become someone new without betraying who we were. Growth does not erase the past—it integrates it.


There is also grief in reflection. Grief for the time spent hiding. Grief for the younger version of yourself who tried so hard to be “right.” Grief for the parts of you that learned to stay quiet to keep the peace. Allowing yourself to feel that grief is not weakness—it is compassion turned inward.


At the same time, reflection invites self-forgiveness. You did what you knew how to do with what you had. You adapted because you needed to. You survived the best way you could. Honoring that truth allows you to move forward without shame.


The most powerful realization that comes through reflection is this: you were never wrong for being different. You were never broken for feeling out of place. Often, the discomfort you feel is not a sign that something is wrong with you, but that something within you is asking to grow.


Stepping into authenticity does not mean rejecting everyone or everything you love. It means learning how to stand honestly within your relationships. It means allowing others to see you clearly, even if that clarity feels risky. Some people will struggle with the change. Others will surprise you with their understanding. Either way, you will no longer be disappearing.


Reflection is the moment you stop asking, Who should I be? and start asking, Who am I becoming? It is the shift from performing to living. From hiding to embodying. From shrinking to standing fully in your own skin.


There is strength in that shift, even when it feels fragile at first. Authenticity doesn’t always roar. Sometimes it whispers. Sometimes it trembles. Sometimes it simply says, This is me, and waits.


And perhaps the most beautiful part of reflection is realizing that the person you’ve been searching for—the one you hoped would see you, understand you, accept you—has been there all along. Waiting patiently beneath the layers. Ready to emerge when you finally gave yourself permission.


When you look at your reflection with honesty instead of judgment, you don’t just see who you are. You see who you’ve always been trying to become. And in that moment, the distance between the two begins to close.


That is the quiet triumph of reflection: not becoming someone else, but finally allowing yourself to be real.


This Is My Story, I Testify

This is my story. I testify. Not because my life has been easy, not because I’ve done everything right, and not because I’ve earned anything...