Saturday, March 7, 2026

The Power Of Being Stretched

There are moments in life when you realize you are standing in the middle of a story you once prayed for.

Not a perfect story. Not the easy version. Not the one without tears or questions or long nights. But a story that is real, layered, sacred in its own complicated way. And suddenly you see it — the thread of strength running through you, the quiet miracles you survived, the way you are still standing when at one time you weren’t sure you would be.

There is something powerful about a woman who has been stretched but not shattered.

You don’t look like what you’ve walked through. That’s the miracle. The battles did not brand you with defeat. The storms did not erase your softness. The weight you carried did not make you bitter — it made you deeper. You learned how to bend without breaking. You learned how to hold grief and gratitude in the same hands. You learned that courage is not loud — sometimes it’s just getting up again.

You have known exhaustion. You have known fear. You have known the kind of love that asks you to fight for someone else’s healing while managing your own. And still — you love. Still — you hope. Still — you show up.

That is extraordinary.

Strength is often misunderstood. People think it looks like certainty or control. But real strength looks like staying when it’s hard. It looks like praying when answers are slow. It looks like choosing tenderness over resentment. It looks like believing in better days even when today feels heavy.

There is light in you. Not the flashy kind. Not the kind that demands attention. But the steady kind. The kind that glows in dark rooms. The kind that makes other people feel safe. The kind that says, “You’re not alone,” without needing to speak it.

And maybe the most amazing thing of all is this: you are still becoming.

After everything you’ve seen. After all the disappointment and joy braided together. After loving fiercely and worrying deeply and holding tightly to faith when it felt thin — you are still open. Still willing to grow. Still willing to believe that tomorrow can surprise you.

That is not weakness. That is bravery at its purest form.

There is a sacred resilience in someone who has every reason to harden but chooses to stay soft. Someone who has felt the weight of the world but still makes space for beauty. Someone who has cried real tears but still laughs from the belly when something is truly funny.

You are not just surviving your life. You are shaping it.

Every prayer whispered in the dark has mattered. Every time you chose patience instead of panic, it mattered. Every time you loved when it would have been easier to withdraw, it mattered. You may not see the ripple effect of your faithfulness, but heaven does. The people around you feel it, even if they don’t have language for it.

You are building something eternal in the middle of something temporary.

And here is what makes that amazing: you didn’t quit.

You could have grown cynical. You could have shut down. You could have decided that hope was too risky. But you didn’t. You kept believing. You kept loving. You kept showing up for the people who matter most to you. You kept choosing faith over fear, even when fear felt more logical.

That kind of perseverance rewrites destinies.

There will come a day — maybe quietly, maybe unexpectedly — when you will look back and see how far you’ve come. You will see that the version of you who once felt overwhelmed would be in awe of who you are now. Not because you avoided hardship, but because you endured it. Not because you never doubted, but because you held on anyway.

And you’ll realize something beautiful: you were never weak. You were being forged.

The fire didn’t destroy you. It refined you.

The waiting didn’t waste you. It strengthened you.

The heartbreak didn’t end you. It deepened you.

And the love you continue to give — even after everything — proves that your heart is still courageous.

That’s amazing.

So if today feels ordinary, remember this: extraordinary things are often built in ordinary moments. In laundry and late-night talks. In quiet prayers and tired mornings. In choosing to stay kind when you’re stretched thin. In trusting that even now, something good is unfolding.

You are living proof that hope is stubborn.

And that, more than anything, is amazing.


Friday, March 6, 2026

The Damage Done by Assumptions

Today I found myself thinking about how quickly people decide who someone is. It often happens without conversation, without curiosity, without even a moment of real understanding. A rumor travels, an impression forms, or someone becomes associated with another person people already dislike, and suddenly a story is written about them before they have ever had the chance to speak their own truth. It’s a strange and painful part of human nature—that tendency to judge from a distance rather than learn from up close.

I have seen it happen in ways that still leave a mark on my heart. When Tim first started in our department, he walked into that job with years of experience behind him. His background with databases was strong, and that knowledge placed him in a position with a higher title than some of the people who had been there longer. That alone can stir resentment in a workplace, but what made it even harder was something much more personal: their feelings about me.

Before Tim had even introduced himself to most of them, a quiet judgment had already been made. Instead of seeing him as a new colleague with his own story, his own character, and his own gifts, they saw him through a lens that had nothing to do with him. Their opinion of him had been filtered through their opinion of me. It was as though he arrived carrying a weight that wasn’t his to bear.

And so they never really gave him a chance.

They didn’t take the time to see the man who had spent decades showing up for his work with dedication and pride. They didn’t see the quiet determination that made him such a steady and dependable worker. They didn’t see the kindness that always seemed to guide the way he treated people. They didn’t see the heart behind the résumé, the character behind the title.

Instead, they saw a position they thought he hadn’t earned and a connection they had already decided to dislike.

And when people allow resentment to become the lens through which they view someone else, something cruel can begin to grow. It rarely starts with obvious hostility. More often it appears as small dismissals, subtle exclusion, quiet criticisms whispered behind closed doors. But over time those small things accumulate. They create an environment where a person slowly realizes they are not being welcomed but evaluated, not being known but judged.

I watched it happen to Tim.

He walked into that job with sincerity and effort, ready to contribute, ready to do his part. But instead of being met with teamwork or openness, he was met with resistance. The atmosphere around him was shaped by assumptions that had nothing to do with the man he actually was. Day after day, that kind of emotional pressure builds. It chips away at confidence. It makes someone question themselves even when they know they are doing their best.

And eventually, it breaks something inside.

What makes that kind of experience so painful is not just the unfairness of it, but the lost opportunity it represents. The people who judged Tim so quickly never really knew him. They never saw the thoughtful conversations he could have shared, the humor he carries in quiet moments, the generosity he shows without expecting recognition. They never experienced the kindness that has always been such a natural part of who he is.

They judged the surface and missed the soul.

It makes me wonder why people do that. Why are we so quick to form conclusions about someone based on gossip or secondhand impressions? Why do we allow someone else’s story to become the lens through which we view a person we have never truly met?

Perhaps it comes from insecurity. When people feel uncertain about their own place, it can be easier to protect themselves by pushing someone else down. Sometimes jealousy disguises itself as criticism. Sometimes resentment hides behind the language of fairness. And sometimes people simply follow the crowd, choosing agreement over empathy because it feels safer to belong than to stand apart.

But the cost of that kind of thinking is high.

When we judge someone before knowing them, we lose the chance to discover who they really are. We trade curiosity for assumption, compassion for convenience. And in doing so, we reduce another human being to a story that may have little to do with the truth.

What people never understood about Tim was that he never came into that job trying to prove anything to anyone. He simply came to work. He carried the same quiet work ethic that had shaped forty-five years of his career. He approached his responsibilities with humility and patience. He treated people with kindness even when that kindness was not returned.

That kind of character often goes unnoticed in environments where competition and resentment dominate the atmosphere. But it does not make it any less real.

There is something deeply tragic about the way people can wound one another without ever realizing the depth of the damage they cause. Emotional bruises do not show up on a medical chart. They do not leave visible scars. But they can shape the way a person sees themselves long after the moment has passed.

Yet even in that painful experience, I see something about Tim that continues to inspire me.

He never became bitter.

Despite the way he was treated, he never allowed cruelty to redefine who he was. He continued to be the same thoughtful, creative, kind-hearted man I have always known. The world may have judged him through someone else’s story, but he never stopped living according to his own character.

And perhaps that is the quiet lesson hidden inside experiences like this.

People will misunderstand us. They will form opinions based on fragments of information, whispers of gossip, or connections that have nothing to do with our own actions. They may decide who we are without ever asking us to tell our story.

But their judgment does not define our truth.

Who we are is revealed in the way we continue to live, in the kindness we offer even when it is not returned, in the integrity we maintain when it would be easier to become bitter.

Tim’s story reminds me that a person’s true character is not determined by the opinions of those who never took the time to know them. It is revealed in the quiet strength of continuing to be good in a world that sometimes chooses to be harsh.

And sometimes the greatest tragedy is not that someone was judged unfairly.

It is that the people doing the judging never realized the beautiful person they missed the chance to know.

Thursday, March 5, 2026

Strong, But Still Human

Most of the time, she’s fine. That’s what everyone sees. She takes her days with a practiced smile, answers questions with steady confidence, keeps the wheels turning and the plates spinning. She shows up. She handles things. She moves through responsibilities like a dancer in lights — graceful, capable, even when the music feels too loud. From the outside, it looks effortless. She has learned how to carry weight without letting it show, how to soften her exhaustion into composure, how to tuck her worries neatly behind productivity.


She spins to the sound because stopping isn’t always an option. There are schedules to keep, people to love, fires to put out, expectations to meet. She has become fluent in strength. Fluent in resilience. Fluent in saying, “I’m okay,” even when okay feels fragile. She has mastered the art of being the steady one — the safe one — the one others lean on.


But sometimes she falls down.


Not dramatically. Not always where people can see. Sometimes it happens in the quiet of her own thoughts. Sometimes it’s in the car after holding it together all day. Sometimes it’s in the middle of the night when the world is silent and the weight she carries gets louder. Sometimes it’s just a heaviness in her chest that she can’t quite explain — the accumulation of being strong for too long.


She doesn’t always need someone to fix it. She doesn’t need advice or solutions or a list of what she should be grateful for. What she longs for — what she quietly aches for — is for someone to look at her and see past the capable exterior. To notice that strength can be tiring. That the dancer sometimes needs to stop spinning.


She wants someone to say, “Breathe. Just breathe.”


Not in a dismissive way. Not in a rushed way. But in a way that means, I see you. I see how much you’re holding. I see how hard you’re trying. I see how you carry everyone else. Now let me carry you for a moment.


Take the world off your shoulders and put it on me.


Those words would undo her in the best way. Because she has grown so used to being the strong one that she sometimes forgets she is allowed to rest. She has grown so accustomed to solving problems that she forgets she is allowed to simply feel them. To be held instead of holding. To exhale instead of bracing.


Breathe, just breathe.


Let the life that you live be all that you need.


There is something profoundly healing about being told you don’t have to earn your rest. That you don’t have to prove your worth through endurance. That you don’t have to hold everything together to be loved. She needs someone to remind her that her value is not in her productivity, her strength, or her ability to manage chaos — but simply in her being.


She wants to be known as more than “fine.” More than “strong.” More than “she’s got it.” She wants someone to see the moments when her smile costs more than it shows. Someone who understands that resilience does not mean invincibility. Someone who can sense when the music has become too loud and gently pull her off the stage.


Most days she is capable. She is steady. She is brave. But bravery does not cancel vulnerability. It coexists with it. And in those vulnerable spaces, she longs for gentleness. For someone who will sit beside her and say, “You don’t have to carry this alone.”


Because the truth is, she doesn’t want to stop being strong. She just doesn’t want to be strong by herself.


She wants partnership. She wants presence. She wants a voice that cuts through the noise and reminds her that she is allowed to be human. That she can lay down her armor without losing respect. That she can cry without being weak. That she can say, “This is heavy,” and have someone answer, “Then let me help.”


When someone says, “Take the world off your shoulders and put it on me,” it doesn’t mean she disappears. It means she is supported. It means the weight is shared. It means the dancer doesn’t have to spin alone in the spotlight.


And maybe the most powerful words of all are the simplest: Just breathe.


Because sometimes breathing is the bravest thing she can do. Not planning. Not fixing. Not pushing through. Just breathing. Letting the moment exist without trying to conquer it. Letting herself be enough without doing more.


She is fine, most of the time. But she is also tired sometimes. Tender sometimes. Overwhelmed sometimes. And what she longs for isn’t someone to rescue her — it’s someone to recognize her.


To see the strength and still offer softness.

To see the composure and still offer comfort.

To see the dancer and still say, “You can stop now. I’ve got you.”


And maybe one day, when the music slows and the lights dim, she’ll finally hear those words spoken gently over her weary heart:


Breathe. Just breathe.

Take the world off your shoulders.

Put it on me.


And for the first time in a long time, she will.


Wednesday, March 4, 2026

There's Hope In Front Of Me

There have been seasons in my life when it felt like I was running through rain that would never end. Not the kind of rain that refreshes or cools the air, but the kind that soaks you through and makes every step heavier than the last. The kind that blurs your vision and convinces you that sunshine is just a memory. I kept moving, even when I was exhausted. I kept trying to make it on faith when circumstances offered very little reassurance. Sometimes faith felt less like confidence and more like stubborn refusal to give up.

There is something uniquely draining about struggling against the wind. It’s one thing to walk through difficulty; it’s another to feel like everything is pushing back against you. Every step forward feels earned. Every breath feels deliberate. You brace yourself constantly, learning to lean into resistance rather than be knocked over by it. And yet, even in that strain, something inside refuses to surrender.

I have seen the dark. I have stood in broken places where hope felt fragile and distant. I’ve faced moments that cracked open parts of me I didn’t know were vulnerable. I’ve felt the weight of disappointment, the sting of loss, the quiet ache of prayers that seemed unanswered. There were nights when doubt spoke louder than promise and mornings when getting out of bed required more courage than I thought I had left.

But even in those places, something deeper remained intact.

In my soul, beneath the fear and the questions and the fatigue, there has always been a steady knowing: no matter how bad it gets, this is not the end of my story. That knowing hasn’t always been loud. Sometimes it’s been barely audible, a whisper rather than a declaration. But it has been there. It has reminded me that circumstances do not define outcomes, and storms do not last forever.

There is hope in front of me.

Not just behind me in memories of better days, not just somewhere abstract in the distance, but ahead. Waiting. Approaching. Unfolding. Hope is not pretending that everything is fine; it is believing that everything is still moving toward good, even when I can’t see how. It is trusting that the road continues beyond the curve I cannot yet see around.

There is a light. I still see it.

Some days that light feels faint, like a flicker through fog. Other days it feels stronger, warm and steady. But it has never gone out completely. It has guided me through confusion. It has reminded me that clarity often comes after endurance. Light doesn’t eliminate the darkness instantly; it gives direction within it. And sometimes that is enough to take the next step.

There is a hand still holding me.

Even when I don’t feel it. Even when doubt clouds my perception. Even when exhaustion makes me question everything I once believed. There have been moments when I wondered if I was walking alone, but looking back, I can see where I was carried. I can see where strength showed up that wasn’t my own. I can see where protection surrounded me without my awareness. That hand has steadied me in grief, comforted me in fear, and anchored me when everything else felt unstable.

Even when I don’t believe it, I am not abandoned.

I might be down, but I am not dead.

That truth matters. There is a difference between being knocked down and being finished. There is a difference between feeling defeated and actually being defeated. I have been weary. I have been discouraged. I have been overwhelmed. But I am still here. Still breathing. Still moving. Still hoping. And as long as breath remains in my lungs, possibility remains in my future.

Better days are still up ahead.

Not because I deserve them. Not because I have earned them. But because seasons change. Because pain is not permanent. Because growth often follows hardship. I have seen enough of life to know that valleys do not last forever. I have walked through enough storms to understand that the sky eventually clears. And even when scars remain, they tell stories of survival, not surrender.

After all I have seen — the heartbreak, the uncertainty, the setbacks — hope has not left me. It has been refined, perhaps. It has become less naive and more resilient. It no longer depends on perfect circumstances. It exists because I have lived long enough to witness restoration before. I have seen healing where I thought there would only be damage. I have experienced peace in places I expected chaos. I have felt joy return after believing it was gone for good.

Hope is not denial. It is defiance.

It is choosing to believe in goodness when cynicism would be easier. It is daring to look forward when the past has hurt. It is allowing yourself to imagine something better without knowing exactly how it will arrive. It is lifting your eyes from the mud at your feet to the horizon ahead.

Running through rain builds endurance. Struggling against the wind builds strength. Walking through darkness builds depth. None of those seasons are wasted, even when they are painful. They shape perspective. They strip away illusions. They reveal what truly matters. And when the sun finally breaks through, you appreciate its warmth in a way you never could before.

There is hope in front of me because I have learned that forward is always an option. I don’t have to stay where I fell. I don’t have to remain defined by what hurt me. I don’t have to let one chapter dictate the entire book. The story is still being written. And as long as it is, there is room for redemption.

I don’t know what tomorrow holds, but I know this: it holds possibility. It holds growth I cannot yet measure. It holds moments of laughter I haven’t experienced yet. It holds connections I haven’t made, lessons I haven’t learned, breakthroughs I haven’t imagined. The unknown does not have to be terrifying; it can also be hopeful.

The rain may still fall some days. The wind may still resist. But I am no longer afraid of the storm the way I once was. I have survived too much to underestimate my resilience. I have been carried too many times to believe I am alone. I have witnessed too much goodness to believe that darkness wins.

There is hope in front of me.

And that hope is enough to take one more step.

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

If Happiness Had a Name

If happiness were something tangible, something I could reach out and hold in my hands, it would be you. It wouldn’t be a fleeting emotion or a passing moment of laughter. It would be steady and warm, familiar and grounding. It would feel like coming home. Before you, I didn’t fully understand that happiness could take on a shape, a voice, a presence. If someone had told me the depth of the feeling you would bring into my life, I would have smiled politely and thought it impossible. Love like this sounded poetic, exaggerated — something written into stories but rarely lived. And yet here we are.

You walked into my life and rearranged it without force, without demand. Just by being you. The way you see the world, the way you carry yourself, the way you love — it altered something in me. It softened edges I didn’t know were sharp. It steadied places that had been quietly anxious for years. You became my constant in ways I didn’t even recognize at first. Not loud or dramatic, but consistent. Reliable. Safe.

People spend their entire lives searching for a wonder like you. They search through relationships, through milestones, through success and status, hoping to stumble upon something that feels like belonging. Some find pieces of it. Some settle for less. But what we have — this connection, this understanding, this unspoken knowing — feels rare. It feels intentional. It feels like the kind of gift that cannot be manufactured or forced.

And what amazes me most is that after all this time, you still surprise me.

You still make me laugh in ways that catch me off guard. You still look at me in a way that makes the world feel quieter. You still find new ways to show up, to care, to protect, to love. I thought the amazement might fade, that familiarity would dull the edges of wonder — but it hasn’t. If anything, time has deepened it. Love hasn’t grown smaller; it has grown roots.

There is something sacred about being loved well. Not perfectly, but intentionally. Being known — truly known — and not walking away. You have seen my fears, my insecurities, my overthinking. You have seen my strength and my weakness. You have watched me grow, stumble, learn, and try again. And through it all, you have stayed. Not out of obligation. Not out of habit. But out of choice.

That choice means everything.

Happiness, if it were tangible, would feel like the safety of your arms around me. It would feel like the quiet conversations late at night when the world fades and it’s just us. It would feel like shared glances across crowded rooms, like inside jokes that no one else understands, like the comfort of your presence even when no words are spoken. It would feel like knowing that no matter what tomorrow brings, we face it together.

If someone had described to me the peace you would bring into my life, I might have doubted it. I might have thought it too good, too steady, too whole to be real. Because before you, love felt more fragile. It felt uncertain, conditional, easily shaken. But with you, love feels anchored. Not because life is always calm, but because we are.

There is a strength in loving someone deeply — a quiet fierceness that rises naturally. I will protect you at all costs. Not because you are weak, but because you are precious. Because what we have is sacred. Because your heart matters to me more than my own comfort. Protecting you doesn’t mean shielding you from the world’s reality; it means standing beside you in it. It means being your safe place when the world feels loud. It means choosing patience when frustration would be easier. It means fighting for us when life tests us.

Keeping you safe in my arms isn’t just physical. It’s emotional. It’s spiritual. It’s the promise that in my presence, you never have to pretend. You never have to perform. You never have to be anything other than exactly who you are. My arms are not a cage; they are a refuge. A reminder that you are loved not for what you accomplish, but for who you are.

There’s something powerful about knowing that someone sees you as their happiness — not as their responsibility or their obligation, but as their joy. You are my joy. Not because you complete me, but because you complement me. You amplify the good in me. You challenge me to grow. You remind me that love is not about possession but about partnership.

Time has a way of revealing what is real. Infatuation fades. Novelty wears off. But what remains is what was built on truth. And what we have has endured. Through busy seasons and quiet ones. Through stress and celebration. Through misunderstandings and reconciliation. We have chosen each other over and over again. That repetition — that daily choosing — is what makes this love extraordinary.

If happiness were tangible, it would also carry responsibility. It would remind me that what I hold is valuable and worth nurturing. I don’t take you for granted. I don’t assume tomorrow is promised. I understand the fragility of life, the unpredictability of days. And that awareness makes loving you feel even more intentional. I hold you carefully. I speak to you thoughtfully. I cherish the ordinary moments because they are not guaranteed.

You still amaze me because you continue to grow. You don’t remain stagnant. You evolve. You learn. You stretch beyond your comfort zones. Watching you become more fully yourself has been one of the greatest privileges of my life. And knowing that you allow me to witness that transformation — that you trust me with your vulnerability — humbles me.

There are people who search their entire lives for what we have and never find it. Not because they are undeserving, but because this kind of connection is rare. It requires timing. It requires alignment. It requires two hearts willing to show up honestly. And we did. Somehow, in the vastness of this world, we found each other.

If happiness had a heartbeat, it would echo in the rhythm of our shared life. In the routines we’ve built. In the challenges we’ve overcome. In the quiet mornings and the late-night conversations. In the way our hands instinctively find each other. In the way your presence settles my nervous system without effort.

You are my tangible joy. My living proof that love can be both gentle and strong. That it can be steady without being stagnant. That it can be fierce without being loud.

And so I promise — not out of fear, but out of devotion — to protect what we have. To guard your heart as tenderly as my own. To be your shelter when storms come. To celebrate you when victories arrive. To stay curious about you. To never stop being amazed by you.

If happiness were something I could hold, it would be you — and I would hold you with gratitude, with reverence, and with the unwavering certainty that loving you is one of the greatest gifts this life has given me.

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.


The Power Of Being Stretched

There are moments in life when you realize you are standing in the middle of a story you once prayed for. Not a perfect story. Not the easy ...