Monday, March 16, 2026

Still Someone’s Daughter

There is a strange kind of quiet that comes when both of your parents are gone. It isn’t loud grief anymore. It isn’t always sharp or fresh. It’s something deeper — a quiet awareness that the two people who knew you from the very beginning are no longer on this earth. The ones who held your first cries, who watched your first steps, who carried the early chapters of your story in their own hearts — they are no longer here to answer the phone.


And no matter how old you are when it happens, there is a part of you that feels like a child again.


When the last parent passes, something shifts. You realize there is no one left who remembers you before you remember yourself. No one left who can say, “I was there the day you were born.” It can feel like standing in the world without a net beneath you. Like the covering you didn’t even realize you still leaned on has quietly lifted.


It feels, in some ways, like being an orphan.


Even as an adult. Even with a full life, responsibilities, relationships, and your own family. There is still something deeply vulnerable about knowing that the earthly roots that anchored you are no longer physically present. The world can feel a little wider. A little lonelier. A little more exposed.


You begin to carry memories differently. They become sacred heirlooms instead of shared experiences. You can’t call and ask about family stories. You can’t hear their voices on the other end of a line. You can’t run back for comfort in quite the same way. And there are moments — quiet ones, unexpected ones — when the ache surfaces and reminds you that grief doesn’t disappear; it just softens around the edges.


But here is the truth that steadies me:


I am not truly an orphan.


Because while my earthly parents are no longer here, I still have a Father.


A Heavenly Father who knew me before they did. Who saw me before I took my first breath. Who wrote my days before I ever lived them. A Father who does not age, does not weaken, does not leave.


There is something profoundly comforting in knowing that even when the human covering is gone, the divine covering remains.


When I feel that childlike ache — that quiet longing to be cared for, to be reassured, to be reminded that I am safe — I remember that I am still someone’s daughter. Not just in memory. Not just in legacy. But in eternity.


God does not forget my beginning.


He knows the details of my childhood, the things I barely remember. He remembers my mother’s prayers and my father’s hopes. He carries the full story — the chapters before I was aware and the chapters still unfolding. There is no moment of my life that is unaccounted for in His care.


And maybe that is the most beautiful part.


When both parents are gone, you can feel untethered. But God becomes the anchor in a new way. Not abstractly. Not symbolically. Tangibly. Personally. He becomes the One I look to when I need wisdom. The One I cry to when grief catches me off guard. The One who holds the space where their voices used to be.


He is not a replacement — because no one replaces a mother or father.


But He is a covering.


He is steady when my emotions are not. He is present in the quiet house. He is close in the middle of memory. He is gentle when the tears come unexpectedly. He is patient with the days when I feel strong and the days when I don’t.


There is something sacred about knowing that even when you feel parentless on earth, you are never fatherless in heaven.


And in a way, the loss has deepened my understanding of His love. Because I now know what it feels like to miss being someone’s little girl. I understand more fully the tenderness of being protected and guided. And in that understanding, I see Him differently — not distant, not formal, but near.


Abba.


Father.


The word feels softer now.


I may no longer have parents I can see, but I have a Father who sees me completely. A Father who does not grow tired. A Father who does not leave me navigating this world alone. A Father who carries both my grief and my future.


So yes, there are days when I feel the weight of being the last generation standing. When I feel the ache of not being able to call home in the way I once could. When I feel the quiet vulnerability of walking forward without their earthly presence.


But I am not abandoned.


I am still held.


I am still guided.


I am still someone’s daughter.


And even as I carry the memory of the two people who gave me life, I walk forward knowing the One who gave me eternal life walks with me still.


That is not the absence of grief.


It is the presence of hope.


Sunday, March 15, 2026

The Wonderful Cross

When I pause long enough to truly consider the Cross, something inside me grows quiet. The noise of comparison fades. The urgency of achievement softens. The pride I didn’t even realize I was carrying begins to loosen its grip. When I survey the wondrous Cross — not as a distant symbol, but as the place where love was proven beyond question — everything else falls into proper perspective. The Prince of Glory died there. Not a powerless man overtaken by events, but the King of Heaven choosing surrender. The weight of that truth humbles me in ways nothing else can.

What once felt important begins to look small. My accomplishments, my accolades, the things I once counted as proof of worth — they lose their shine in the shadow of that sacrifice. My richest gain, I count but loss. Not because those things are evil, but because they are insufficient. They cannot compare to the depth of mercy poured out on that hill. They cannot rival the cost of grace. And in that realization, pride has nowhere left to stand. It dissolves in the presence of something infinitely greater.

There is something overwhelming about imagining that moment — sorrow and love flowing mingled down. From His head, His hands, His feet. Pain was undeniable. The wounds were real. The thorns were not symbolic; they pierced. The nails were not metaphorical; they held. And yet, what flowed from that suffering was not bitterness, not vengeance, not regret — but love. A love so fierce it absorbed wrath. A love so steadfast it endured humiliation. A love so pure it chose the cross over escape.

Did ever such love and sorrow meet?

It is difficult for the human heart to comprehend a love that willingly suffers for the undeserving. We are accustomed to earning. To proving. To reciprocating. But the Cross interrupts that pattern. It stands as a declaration that grace is not achieved — it is given. That forgiveness is not negotiated — it is offered. That redemption is not partial — it is complete.

The thorns that composed that crown were meant to mock. They were intended as ridicule, a cruel parody of kingship. And yet, in heaven’s economy, they became something else entirely. What looked like shame was glory. What looked like defeat was victory. What looked like an ending was the beginning of hope for all who would believe. The Cross transformed the worst of human cruelty into the greatest expression of divine love.

Oh, the wonderful Cross.

Wonderful not because of the suffering, but because of what the suffering accomplished. Wonderful because it bridged the chasm between holiness and brokenness. Wonderful because it absorbed my sin and silenced my shame. Wonderful because it speaks a better word over my life than condemnation ever could.

When I stand before it — even in my imagination — I cannot remain unchanged. The Cross calls me to humility. It calls me to gratitude. It calls me to lay down the illusion that I could ever save myself. It reminds me that love is costly, that grace is extravagant, and that mercy is deeper than my failures.

It also calls me to surrender.

To lay my pride at its feet. To release my need to prove myself. To abandon the striving that says I must earn what has already been purchased. In the light of the Cross, comparison loses meaning. Status fades. Self-righteousness crumbles. All that remains is awe.

There is a tenderness in knowing that the One who hung there knew every flaw in me and chose the Cross anyway. He saw my worst days before I ever lived them. He saw my doubts, my wandering, my weakness. And still, He stayed. Still, He endured. Still, He loved.

That is the wonder.

Not that I am worthy — but that He is gracious. Not that I am strong — but that He is faithful. Not that I could climb my way to righteousness — but that He descended into my brokenness to lift me up.

When I survey the wondrous Cross, I am reminded that love is not fragile. It is fierce. It does not retreat in the face of suffering; it moves toward it. It does not withhold when wounded; it forgives. The Cross redefines power. It shows that true authority is expressed in sacrifice, that true kingship is revealed in humility.

And in that revelation, my heart bows.

Because the Cross is not just a symbol of what happened — it is a declaration of who He is. And who I am because of Him. Forgiven. Redeemed. Loved beyond measure.

Oh, the wonderful Cross — where sorrow met mercy, where justice met grace, where death was defeated by love. And every time I truly see it, I am undone and made new all at once.


Saturday, March 14, 2026

Two Years Since the Day Everything Changed

Two years ago today, life split into a before and an after.


At the time, we didn’t know that was what was happening. We didn’t know we were standing at the edge of a life we would never return to. We just knew that something was terribly wrong, and that the man I loved—my sweet Tim—was collapsing right in front of me.


I still remember that day with a clarity that feels cruel. The way the air felt heavier. The way time stretched and then collapsed in on itself. The way fear took over every rational thought and replaced it with a single, desperate prayer: Please let him be okay.


When Tim went down, it wasn’t dramatic in the way television portrays medical emergencies. There was no neat storyline, no quick answers, no heroic moment where everything snapped back into place. It was confusing. Frightening. Unsettling in a way that lodged itself deep into my bones. I remember watching him, helpless, as his body did things neither of us understood. I remember the panic rising in my chest, the kind that steals your breath and makes your hands shake.


I remember thinking, This can’t be happening to us.


But it was.


That day marked the beginning of a journey neither of us asked for—a journey through emergency rooms, tests, specialists, unanswered questions, and an overwhelming sense that the ground beneath our feet was no longer solid.


At first, we searched for the obvious answers. Stroke. Epilepsy. Brain injury. Anything that could be seen on a scan or measured by a test. We clung to the idea that if we could just name what was happening, we could fix it. That medicine would step in, do what medicine does best, and return our life to us.


Instead, we entered the long, lonely space of not knowing.


When the diagnosis finally came—Psychogenic Non-Epileptic Seizures—it didn’t arrive with relief. It arrived with confusion, grief, and a weight that neither of us were prepared to carry. PNES doesn’t come with a clear roadmap. It doesn’t offer simple solutions or fast recovery timelines. It lives at the intersection of the mind and the body, tangled up in trauma, depression, and emotional wounds that are often invisible to the outside world.


And the hardest truth of all was this: Tim wasn’t broken. His body was responding the only way it knew how to survive pain that had gone unspoken for far too long.


That understanding didn’t make it easier.


In many ways, the diagnosis was just the beginning of another collapse—the collapse of normalcy, independence, and the life we thought we were building. Suddenly, everything had to be reconsidered. Work. Finances. Travel. Safety. Even the simplest daily plans came with a layer of caution and uncertainty.


We learned quickly that PNES doesn’t just affect the person having seizures. It reshapes the lives of everyone who loves them.


I became a watcher. A listener. A constant gauge of Tim’s energy, mood, and emotional state. I learned the subtle signs that something might be coming—the quiet withdrawal, the heaviness behind his eyes, the moments when depression wrapped itself around him like a fog. I learned how to stay calm when everything inside me was screaming.


And Tim—my strong, kind, gentle Tim—had to grieve a version of himself he no longer recognized. A man who once moved through the world with confidence now questioned his own body. His own mind. His own worth.


There were days when the seizures felt relentless. Days when hope felt thin. Days when the depression spoke louder than reason and whispered lies that terrified me. Suicidal ideation is a word people say carefully, but living alongside it is something else entirely. It’s watching someone you love battle thoughts you can’t fight for them. It’s loving fiercely while feeling utterly powerless.


Two years in, I can say this honestly: this journey has been the hardest thing either of us has ever faced.


It has tested our marriage in ways I never imagined. It has exhausted us emotionally, mentally, and financially. It has stripped away illusions about fairness and control. And it has forced us to learn how to live in uncertainty.


But it has also revealed something else.


Resilience.


Not the loud, inspirational kind people like to post about. Not the tidy version with a happy ending tied in a bow. But the quiet, stubborn resilience of waking up and choosing to keep going even when you’re tired of being strong.


Tim is still here. Still fighting. Still showing up for therapy. Still doing the hard, painful work of facing his depression and learning how to live in a body that sometimes betrays him. That alone is an act of courage most people will never fully understand.


And I am still here too.


Still loving him. Still advocating. Still holding space for his pain while trying not to lose myself in the process. Some days I do better than others. Some days I am strong; some days I am simply surviving. Both are allowed.


Two years later, life looks nothing like it did before that day of collapse. We have lost things we can’t get back. We have had dreams altered, delayed, or abandoned altogether. And yet, we have also gained a deeper understanding of each other, of compassion, and of what it truly means to fight forward together.


PNES doesn’t define Tim—but it is part of our story. A chapter we didn’t choose, but one we are still writing.


Today, I honor that day—not because it was good, but because we survived it. Because Tim survived it. Because we are still standing, still loving, still hoping in small, fragile ways that feel monumental when stacked together.


If there is one thing I have learned in these two years, it is this: healing is not linear, and strength does not always look brave. Sometimes strength looks like rest. Sometimes it looks like tears. Sometimes it looks like asking for help. And sometimes it looks like simply staying.


So today, two years later, I remember the fear, the heartbreak, and the uncertainty—but I also recognize the quiet miracle of now. Of another day together. Of another chance to keep fighting forward.


And that, for us, is enough.


Still Someone’s Daughter

There is a strange kind of quiet that comes when both of your parents are gone. It isn’t loud grief anymore. It isn’t always sharp or fresh....