Monday, February 23, 2026

Tim You Are My Sunshine

You are my sunshine—not because our days have always been easy or our path smooth, but because you are the light that remains when everything else feels uncertain. Loving you has taught me that sunshine isn’t something that guarantees clear skies; it’s something that shows up faithfully, even when the clouds refuse to lift. Through the unpredictability of PNES, through moments of fear, exhaustion, and unanswered questions, you have been my constant. When the world feels unsteady and our plans change without warning, you are the place my heart returns to, the warmth that reminds me I’m not walking this road alone.


There have been seasons where joy felt fragile, where we measured days in small victories and learned to celebrate moments others might overlook. PNES has asked so much of us—patience we didn’t know we had, strength we didn’t ask for, resilience forged in moments we never imagined facing. Yet even in those seasons, love has never left the room. We have learned how to sit with uncertainty, how to breathe through fear, and how to hold each other when words fall short. In those quiet moments, when the noise of the world fades and it’s just us, I am reminded that sunshine isn’t loud or flashy—it’s steady, soft, and enduring.


You are my sunshine because you keep showing up, even on the days when your body and mind are fighting battles no one else can see. Your courage doesn’t always look like standing tall; sometimes it looks like resting, trusting, and letting yourself be held. Watching you walk this journey has deepened my love in ways I never expected. It has taught me compassion that goes beyond words and a tenderness that lives in the smallest acts—shared glances, squeezed hands, quiet reassurances that say, “We’re still here.”


We have weathered storms together that could have pulled us apart, but instead, they have woven us closer. We’ve learned how to grieve the life we thought we’d have while still choosing to love the life we are living. We’ve learned that hope doesn’t disappear just because the road changes—it simply takes a different shape. And through it all, you have remained my sunshine, not by fixing everything, but by loving me faithfully in the middle of it.


No matter how heavy the days become or how uncertain tomorrow feels, my heart knows this truth: I would choose this life with you, again and again. I would choose the hard days and the healing days, the questions and the quiet moments, because love like ours is worth it. As long as we face whatever comes hand in hand, my sunshine will never fade—and neither will my belief that even in the darkest seasons, light still lives here, right between us.


Sunday, February 22, 2026

The Stories a Church Pew Could Tell

I sat down in an old church pew the same way I always do, my body remembering the motion before my mind even caught up. The wood was worn smooth in places, chipped in others, darkened by decades of hands resting where prayers were whispered and knuckles clenched. Every Sunday morning since I was a kid, I’ve slid into a pew like this one, sometimes eager, sometimes resistant, sometimes barely awake, but always arriving. There’s something about the familiarity of it that feels like muscle memory for the soul. Before a single hymn is sung or a word is spoken, the pew itself seems to hold me in place, as if to say, you’ve been here before, and you’re allowed to be here again.


For some reason that morning, I couldn’t stop thinking about the tales that bench could tell if it had a voice. Not sermons or scripture, but the quiet human stories pressed into its grain. Stories of people who sat there just like this, feet planted on the same floor, eyes lifted to the same front of the sanctuary, hearts carrying burdens that never made it into prayer requests. I imagined the pew as a silent witness, collecting fragments of lives week after week, year after year, never interrupting, never judging, just holding the weight.


There have been people full of faith sitting on this very bench, the kind of faith that feels solid and sure, like they walked in already knowing everything would be okay. You can almost sense them sometimes, backs straight, voices strong when they sing, hands open instead of clenched. Their faith spills over into the space around them, steady and confident, like a lighthouse kind of belief. The pew has felt the lightness of those moments, the way hope can feel almost tangible when someone truly believes without hesitation.


But there have also been people full of doubt, and the pew knows them just as well. People who came because they didn’t know where else to go, or because someone insisted, or because habit carried them in even when belief felt thin and fragile. They sat quietly, maybe not singing, maybe staring at the floor, wondering if God was real, or if He cared, or if they themselves were beyond caring for. Doubt has its own weight, and the pew has held that too, absorbing the heaviness without complaint.


Most of the people who’ve sat there, though, weren’t extremes of faith or doubt. They were just people trying their best to figure it all out. Parents overwhelmed by responsibility, teenagers unsure of who they were becoming, older souls wondering where time went and what it all meant. People carrying joy and grief at the same time, not knowing how both could coexist. The pew has been a meeting place for confusion and hope, often sitting side by side, sometimes in the same person.


Church pews, they’ve got stories, and not the kind that make headlines or get written down. They’ve seen whispered apologies and silent promises. They’ve supported trembling knees during altar calls and stiff backs during long sermons. They’ve been present for laughter that bubbled up unexpectedly and sobs that had nowhere else to go. They’ve watched people arrive whole and leave broken, and others arrive broken and leave held together just enough to make it through another week.


They’ve seen the best of saints, those moments when people are generous, kind, forgiving, and brave. When they show up with casseroles and open arms, when they sit beside someone they don’t know just so that person won’t feel alone. The pew remembers the warmth of those moments, the way goodness can feel contagious in a shared space. It has felt the shift in the room when love becomes visible.


And they’ve seen the worst of sinners too, though “worst” often looks less like evil and more like pain. They’ve held people who lied, cheated, relapsed, lashed out, or ran away. People who promised they’d change and then didn’t, or couldn’t, or didn’t know how. The pew doesn’t flinch at that. It doesn’t recoil. It stays where it is, offering the same space to the sinner as it does to the saint, because every bit of in between belongs here too.


We all come for different reasons, even if we sit shoulder to shoulder. Some come searching for answers, others for comfort. Some come out of obligation, others out of desperation. Some are celebrating, some are barely surviving. The pew doesn’t ask why you walked through the door. It doesn’t demand an explanation or a polished version of yourself. It just receives you as you are, with whatever you’re carrying.


Lord knows we all need Jesus, though we don’t always admit it, and we don’t always mean the same thing when we say it. Sometimes needing Jesus looks like needing forgiveness. Sometimes it looks like needing rest, or peace, or a reason not to give up. Sometimes it’s just needing someone to sit with you in the quiet and not leave. And somehow, there’s always room. Always another spot on the bench. Always space made where you thought there wasn’t any left.


Right here in this church pew, room is saved again and again. For the newcomer who slips in late and hopes no one notices. For the long-timer who’s been there so often they could find their seat in the dark. For the person who hasn’t been in years and feels out of place the moment they sit down. The pew doesn’t rank anyone. It doesn’t keep score. It simply stays open.


There have been funeral flowers set near these benches, their scent heavy in the air, reminding everyone how fragile life is. The pew has held bodies slumped in grief, shoulders shaking, hands clutching tissues or each other. It has heard the soft echo of hymns sung through tears and felt the stillness that settles when words aren’t enough. In those moments, the pew becomes less like furniture and more like a lifeline, something solid to cling to when everything else feels unsteady.


There have also been wedding rings, fingers nervously twisting them during vows, hearts pounding with hope and fear all at once. The pew has witnessed promises made with shining eyes and untested confidence. It has felt the joy of celebration, the nervous laughter, the whispered prayers for a future just beginning. It knows that not all those promises will be kept, but it holds the beauty of the moment anyway.


It has supported users trying to just get clean, people sitting there counting days, hours, sometimes minutes since their last mistake. People who came in ashamed and unsure if they belonged in a place like this. The pew didn’t argue. It didn’t remind them of their past. It simply held them while they tried to believe in a different future. It has felt the tension of clenched jaws and restless legs, the quiet courage it takes just to show up.


It doesn’t matter why we’re walking through that door. The pew has learned that over time. What matters is that we did. That we crossed the threshold with whatever strength we could gather and sat down, even if we didn’t know what we were hoping for. The act of sitting, of staying, of being present, is its own kind of prayer.


Those echoes of “Amazing Grace” keep ringing through this place, not just from the songs themselves but from the lives lived in response to them. Grace echoing in apologies offered and forgiveness accepted. Grace echoing in second chances and third and fourth. Grace echoing in quiet moments when someone realizes they’re not as alone as they thought. The pew absorbs those echoes, holding onto them long after the music fades.


And somehow, we leave different than we were before, even when we can’t quite explain how. Sometimes the change is dramatic, a sudden clarity or decision. Other times it’s subtle, barely noticeable, like a weight lifted just enough to breathe easier. The pew has felt that shift countless times, the way someone stands up a little straighter or exhales a little deeper when it’s time to go.


It has seen people lifting hands in surrender or praise, arms raised not because everything is perfect but because something inside them needs to reach upward. It has felt the vibration of voices singing loudly and off-key, hearts full and unashamed. It has supported the ones who couldn’t lift their hands at all, whose worship was simply staying seated and not leaving.


It has felt people crying tears, quiet and loud, controlled and uncontrollable. Tears of grief, relief, gratitude, and exhaustion. Tears that come when walls finally crack and something honest spills out. The pew doesn’t rush those tears. It doesn’t try to fix them. It just stays steady beneath the weight of emotion.


The beautiful and the broken have always been welcome here, though we don’t always believe that about ourselves. The pew knows the truth of it. It has held polished shoes and muddy boots, pressed suits and worn jeans. It has supported confident strides and hesitant shuffles. It has welcomed people who look like they belong and people who are sure they don’t.


Sitting there, I realized that the pew has been a constant in a world that keeps changing. People come and go, seasons shift, beliefs evolve, but the pew remains, offering the same simple invitation every time: sit, stay, be. It doesn’t promise answers or easy solutions. It promises presence.


In a way, the pew mirrors the faith it supports. Quiet, unassuming, often overlooked, but deeply necessary. It doesn’t draw attention to itself, yet without it, something essential would be missing. It holds space for the sacred and the ordinary to collide, for heaven and humanity to brush against each other in the most unremarkable way.


As I sat there, I thought about all the versions of myself that have occupied that same spot over the years. The child who believed without question. The teenager who rolled their eyes and counted the minutes. The adult who came desperate, angry, hopeful, numb. The pew has held all of them without distinction. It never asked me to be consistent, only present.


When I finally stood to leave, I ran my hand along the back of the bench, feeling the grooves worn by countless others. I felt connected, not just to God, but to people I’d never meet, whose stories had intersected with mine through shared space and shared silence. The pew had held us all, one after another, story after story.


And I knew I’d be back, sliding into that same spot again, carrying whatever new questions or hopes the next week would bring. Because no matter where I am in my faith or my doubt, there’s a place waiting for me. Right here, in this old church pew.


Saturday, February 21, 2026

That’s What Could Have Been

When I think about what God has done for me, when I really step back and allow myself to consider it honestly and without rushing past it, something happens inside me. I don’t just feel thankful—I start trembling. It’s not fear, and it’s not doubt. It’s the overwhelming realization that grace is far bigger than I am, and mercy reaches far deeper than I deserve. When I truly sit with that truth, I can’t help but feel undone by it. I start to think about where I’ve been, what I’ve thought, what I’ve done, and what I’ve carried, and I honestly can’t believe that God would still choose me.


The words “amazing grace” aren’t just a familiar hymn lyric in those moments. They feel startlingly literal. Amazing grace would save a wretch like me—not a cleaned-up, perfected, well-behaved version of me, but the real one. The flawed one. The one who has wrestled with doubt, fear, pride, and selfishness. The one who has failed more times than I care to count. When I let myself think about it that way, I realize how unqualified I am by every human standard. I am nothing that’s of value to a king. I don’t bring status or power or righteousness of my own. I don’t bring anything impressive to the table. And yet, somehow, I am wanted.


That’s the part that still stops me in my tracks. I can’t believe that He would die for me. Not just in theory, not as a distant theological idea, but personally. For my sins. For my brokenness. For the mess I try to hide even from myself. I can understand sacrifice in abstract terms, but when I place myself at the center of it—when I realize that Jesus chose the cross knowing exactly who I am—it humbles me in a way nothing else ever has. It forces me to confront the depth of love that doesn’t hesitate when faced with human ugliness.


I am so glad He saved my soul, because when I imagine the alternative, it’s terrifyingly clear where my life would have gone without Him. If He hadn’t stepped in, all I would know is darkness. Not always loud, dramatic darkness, but the quiet kind that slowly settles in and becomes normal. The kind that dulls hope and convinces you that emptiness is just part of being alive. Without God, there would be no true source of light—no steady truth to return to when everything else feels uncertain. I would be left navigating life on my own limited understanding, mistaking self-reliance for strength and control for peace.


Without Him, I know I would have built cages throughout my life. Not all at once, and not intentionally. They would have been constructed through small choices, compromises, and coping mechanisms that felt necessary at the time. I would have called them protection. I would have told myself I was just being realistic, just doing what I had to do to survive. But slowly, those choices would have boxed me in. Fear would have become routine. Sin would have felt manageable—until it wasn’t. And one day I would have realized that I was trapped, with no key in sight, wondering how I ended up living so far from freedom.


Chaos would have wrestled my mind constantly. I know that version of myself well enough to recognize it. My thoughts would spiral unchecked, cycling through worry, regret, shame, and what-ifs. Anxiety would dictate my decisions. Fear would shape my expectations. I would be bracing for impact even in moments of calm, unable to rest because there would be nothing solid underneath me. Without God, there would be no peace that passes understanding—only noise, confusion, and the exhausting effort of trying to hold everything together on my own.


Eventually, I know I would have grown tired. Truly tired. The kind of tired that isn’t fixed by sleep or distraction. The kind that seeps into your bones and makes you question whether the fight is even worth it. Helpless, I would have given up—not in one dramatic moment, but slowly, quietly, over time. I would have stopped believing that change was possible. I would have settled for less than life, calling it acceptance when it was really resignation.


Without Him, I would have been left in my sin. Not just aware of it, but crushed under its weight. I would have carried guilt like a permanent stain, trying to outrun it through busyness or bury it through denial. Shame would have whispered that I was beyond forgiveness, that grace was for better people, more faithful people, people who didn’t struggle the way I do. I would have been paying a debt I could never afford, living under condemnation instead of mercy.


That’s what could have been. That’s the road I was already on before grace intervened. And when I think about it honestly, I know that outcome wasn’t exaggerated—it was inevitable. Because left to myself, I don’t drift toward light. I drift toward control, fear, and self-preservation. I drift toward building walls instead of trust, cages instead of freedom.


And if Jesus had never stepped down from His throne, if heaven had remained distant and untouched by human pain, I would have been left for dead—lost and alone. I would have been drenched in shame, constantly afraid of being exposed for who I really am. Every failure would have confirmed my worst fears about myself. Every mistake would have felt final. Without the blood, without the cross, there would have been no bridge back to God. I would have been forced to pay the cost for my sin myself, a cost I could never fully pay.


But that’s not how the story ends.


Because Jesus did step down. He did choose the cross. He did pay the price I couldn’t. And because of that, my life is not defined by what could have been, but by what He has done. Grace changed the trajectory of my story. Mercy interrupted my destruction. Love met me in my unworthiness and didn’t turn away.


That realization still makes me tremble. And honestly, I hope it always does.


Friday, February 20, 2026

The Quiet Goodness Still Holding Is Together

Here’s a heartfelt, uplifting piece—written to be gentle, hopeful, and grounding, the kind of thing you read slowly and breathe through. 🌿



There are days when the world feels unbearably loud. Headlines shout, timelines scroll endlessly, and everyone seems to be arguing about something we don’t have the energy to understand, let alone fix. On those days, it’s easy to believe the lie that goodness is rare, that kindness is fading, that hope is naïve. But the truth is quieter than that. It doesn’t demand attention. It waits patiently to be noticed.


The truth is this: there is more good in this world than we are ever shown.


It lives in small, ordinary places. In moments so simple we often overlook them because they don’t feel big enough to matter. But they do. They matter more than we know.


Goodness shows up in the way someone holds a door open even when they’re in a hurry. In the way a stranger smiles without expecting anything in return. In the text message that says, “I was thinking about you,” sent at just the right moment. These things don’t trend. They don’t go viral. But they keep the world stitched together.


We all need to hear that we are not failing just because life feels hard right now.


Struggling does not mean you’re weak. Being tired does not mean you’re ungrateful. Feeling overwhelmed does not cancel out the good you’ve done or the love you’ve given. Sometimes it simply means you’ve been strong for a very long time, and strength, even the quiet kind, requires rest.


There is a strange pressure in the world to have everything figured out, to present a polished version of ourselves that looks confident and capable at all times. But real life doesn’t work like that. Real growth is messy. Real healing is uneven. Real joy often exists alongside grief, not instead of it.


And that’s okay.


You are allowed to be a work in progress and still be worthy of good things. You don’t have to wait until you’re “better,” “stronger,” or “more put together” to deserve peace or love or rest. You already belong. Right here. As you are.


Sometimes the most uplifting truth is also the simplest one: you are doing better than you think.


You’ve survived days you didn’t believe you would. You’ve adapted to changes you never asked for. You’ve kept going even when motivation disappeared and faith felt thin. Even showing up today, even reading these words, is evidence of a quiet resilience that deserves to be honored.


There is beauty in persistence, even when it doesn’t feel heroic.


The world often celebrates the loud wins—the promotions, the milestones, the dramatic turnarounds. But there is profound beauty in the unseen victories too. In getting out of bed when it would have been easier to stay down. In choosing kindness when bitterness felt justified. In continuing to care in a world that sometimes rewards indifference.


Those choices matter. They shape the kind of person you are becoming.


We all need the reminder that goodness still finds its way through cracks.


It finds its way through tired hearts and imperfect lives. It shows up in people who keep loving even after they’ve been hurt. In those who choose compassion even when they’ve been misunderstood. In those who forgive—not because it was easy, but because carrying anger became heavier than letting it go.


Goodness does not require perfection. It only requires willingness.


There will be days when you don’t feel hopeful, and that doesn’t mean hope has left you. Hope has a way of lingering quietly in the background, waiting for the moment you’re ready to notice it again. Sometimes hope looks like nothing more than taking the next small step instead of giving up entirely.


And sometimes, that is more than enough.


You don’t need to change the world to matter. You don’t need a platform or a spotlight or a perfectly worded message. Your presence in the lives you touch already creates ripples you may never see. A kind word spoken in passing. A moment of patience. A listening ear. These things echo longer than you realize.


Someone out there is still standing because of something you said or did, even if you’ll never know their name.


We need to hear that joy is allowed to exist without guilt.


You are not betraying your past pain by laughing again. You are not forgetting what you’ve lost by enjoying what you still have. Joy does not erase grief; it coexists with it, offering moments of light so the darkness doesn’t consume everything.


You are allowed to smile even when life isn’t perfect. You are allowed to rest even when things remain unfinished. You are allowed to choose peace even when the world insists on chaos.


There is strength in softness, despite what we’re often told.


Gentleness is not weakness. Sensitivity is not fragility. Caring deeply in a harsh world is an act of courage. It takes bravery to stay tender when life keeps trying to harden you. To keep believing in goodness when disappointment has every reason to make you cynical.


If you are still trying, still hoping, still loving—quietly or loudly—you are braver than you know.


We all need the reassurance that it’s okay to slow down.


You don’t have to rush your healing. You don’t have to have all the answers right now. Life is not a race, no matter how often it feels like one. Some of the most meaningful growth happens in stillness, in reflection, in moments when nothing outwardly impressive is happening at all.


Progress doesn’t always look like movement. Sometimes it looks like patience.


And maybe the most uplifting truth of all is this: you are not alone in the way you feel.


The doubts you carry, the fears you wrestle with, the quiet questions you don’t always voice—others are carrying them too. You are part of a shared human experience, even on the days you feel isolated. Connection exists in knowing that none of us have it all together, and yet we keep going anyway.


There is something deeply hopeful about that.


Tomorrow does not have to be perfect to be meaningful. It only has to arrive. And when it does, you will meet it with whatever strength you have, just like you always do. Some days that strength will feel abundant. Other days it will be barely enough. Both are valid. Both count.


You are allowed to trust that better moments are ahead, even if you can’t see them yet.


Because goodness has a way of surprising us. It shows up in conversations we didn’t expect, in moments of clarity that arrive quietly, in reminders that life is still offering us something worth holding onto.


And sometimes, all we really need to hear is this:


You matter. Your story matters. Your presence matters.

And the world is better because you are in it.


Even on the days it doesn’t feel like it.


Tim You Are My Sunshine

You are my sunshine—not because our days have always been easy or our path smooth, but because you are the light that remains when everythin...