Friday, March 27, 2026

The Day the Weight Lifted

There are moments in life that divide everything into before and after, moments so heavy with meaning that even years later you can still feel the air shift around them. Today became one of those moments for me. Not because something grand or dramatic happened on the outside, but because something that had been pressing down on my chest for so long finally lifted. And when it did, I realized just how much I had been carrying without even knowing the full weight of it.

This journey didn’t begin with a hearing. It didn’t begin with paperwork or deadlines or medical records stacked higher than I ever thought possible. It began before the collapse with small changes, subtle shifts, the kind you try to explain away at first because accepting them would mean admitting that something bigger is happening. It began with watching someone you love slowly struggle in ways that don’t always make sense, in ways that don’t fit neatly into boxes or explanations that other people understand. It culminated with his collapse and diagnosis. 

Loving someone through PNES, through depression, through anxiety, is not something you can fully prepare for. There is no manual that tells you how to stand steady while the ground beneath both of you feels like it’s constantly moving. There is no checklist that prepares you for the moments when you question everything—what’s happening, why it’s happening, how long it will last, and whether you are strong enough to keep going through it. There are only days. Days where you wake up and decide, again, to keep going. Days where you hold space for someone else’s pain while quietly carrying your own.

And somewhere along the way, the system enters your life. Forms, appointments, documentation, evaluations. Words like “qualification,” “eligibility,” and “approval” start to take on a weight that feels disproportionate to their size. Because suddenly, those words are not just administrative—they are tied to survival. They are tied to validation. They are tied to whether or not the world will recognize what you have been living through behind closed doors.

The process of applying for disability is not just about proving a condition exists. It is about telling your story over and over again in ways that feel stripped down and clinical, even when the reality of it is anything but. It is about gathering evidence of pain, of limitation, of struggle, and placing it into a system that asks you to quantify something that often feels impossible to measure. How do you explain the unpredictability of a day when seizures can come without warning? How do you explain the weight of depression that doesn’t always show up in visible ways? How do you prove something that has already taken so much?

There were days when the paperwork felt endless, when the waiting felt unbearable, when the uncertainty sat so heavily in my chest that it was hard to breathe. And through all of it, there was this quiet fear that never fully left: what if it isn’t enough? What if everything we have gone through, everything he has endured, everything we have documented and explained and relived, is still somehow not enough to be seen?

That fear is something I don’t think people talk about enough. The fear of not being believed. The fear that someone, somewhere, will look at your life and decide that it doesn’t meet the criteria for help. The fear that after everything, you will still be left standing in the same place, carrying the same weight, but now with the added burden of rejection.

And so you keep going. You gather more records. You attend more appointments. You answer more questions. You prepare for a hearing that begins to feel like more than just a step in a process—it begins to feel like a moment where everything could either shift or stay the same.

The days leading up to the hearing were filled with a quiet kind of tension. Not loud or chaotic, but steady and constant. The kind that hums in the background of everything you do. The kind that follows you into your thoughts when you try to rest, that sits with you when you try to distract yourself, that reminds you, gently but persistently, that something important is coming.

And then the day arrives.

There is something surreal about moments like that. You sit there, knowing that what is about to happen carries so much weight, and yet the world around you continues as if it is just another day. Time doesn’t slow down. The air doesn’t change. But inside, everything feels heightened, sharpened, fragile.

When the judge began speaking, I remember feeling like I was holding my breath without realizing it. Every word mattered. Every pause felt significant. And in those seconds, there was a lifetime of emotion compressed into something so small and fleeting.

And then it happened.

Approval.

Such a simple word. Such a small word. And yet it carried with it the release of months, years even, of fear, pressure, and uncertainty. It was not just a decision. It was validation. It was acknowledgment. It was someone looking at everything we had been through and saying, “We see it. We understand it. It matters.”

I didn’t expect what came next.

The tears started immediately. Not the kind you can quietly wipe away and move past, but the kind that come from somewhere deep, somewhere that has been holding on for far too long. I couldn’t stop them, and for the first time in a long time, I didn’t try to. Because in that moment, I understood that this wasn’t just about the hearing. This was about everything that had led up to it.

It was about every night spent worrying about the future. Every moment of doubt. Every time I had to be strong when I didn’t feel strong. Every time I watched him struggle and wished I could take it away. Every silent prayer that things would somehow work out.

All of it came out at once.

And as the tears fell, something else happened. That tightness in my chest—the one that had been there for so long that I had almost forgotten what it felt like not to have it—began to ease. The pressure lifted. The weight shifted. And in its place, there was something unfamiliar but welcome.

Relief.

Not the kind that solves everything overnight. Not the kind that erases the challenges we still face. But the kind that gives you space to breathe again. The kind that reminds you that you are not standing on the edge of uncertainty anymore. The kind that allows you, even just for a moment, to feel safe.

Tomorrow is his birthday.

And there is something profoundly beautiful about that timing. Because for so long, so many moments have been overshadowed by what we were going through. Celebrations felt quieter. Joy felt more fragile. Everything carried an undercurrent of “what if.”

But this birthday feels different.

Not because everything is suddenly perfect, but because something has shifted. There is a sense of possibility that wasn’t there before. There is a lightness that has replaced some of the heaviness. There is a reminder that even in the middle of some of the hardest seasons of life, there can still be moments where things turn in your favor.

If you are reading this and you are in the middle of your own journey—whether it is with disability, with illness, with uncertainty, or with something else entirely—I want you to know this: the waiting is real, the fear is real, the exhaustion is real. But so is the possibility that things can change.

So is the possibility that one day, you will sit in a moment that feels like this one.

A moment where the weight lifts.

A moment where the tears come, not from fear or frustration, but from release.

A moment where you realize that everything you have been carrying has not been in vain.

You may not know when that moment will come. You may not know how it will unfold. But it is not out of reach.

And when it does come, let yourself feel it. Let yourself cry. Let yourself breathe. Let yourself sit in the quiet after the storm and recognize how far you have come.

Because you have come far.

Further than you probably give yourself credit for.

And one day, you will look back on this moment—not just as the day something was approved, but as the day something shifted inside of you. The day you realized that even in the hardest seasons, there is still hope.

Even here.

Especially here.

Thursday, March 26, 2026

Well-Dressed Wrecks

Sometimes I feel like a well-dressed wreck. On the outside everything looks put together. The smile is there, the responsibilities are handled, the conversations flow easily enough. If someone were to glance quickly, they might think everything is fine. But underneath the carefully presented exterior is a person who sometimes feels like a made-up mess, trying hard to hold things together while the inside feels far less steady. Life has a way of teaching us how to present strength, how to appear capable, how to keep moving forward even when our hearts feel tired.


So we work hard to keep everybody impressed. We answer the questions the way people expect. We check the boxes, fulfill the roles, meet the responsibilities. We show up at work, in our families, in our friendships with a polished version of ourselves that says, “I’m doing okay.” The world often rewards that version of us. It celebrates the composed exterior and the quiet endurance that makes it look like we have everything under control. Yet all the while, something inside may be slowly unraveling. We carry worries we don’t speak out loud. We wrestle with doubts that never make it into conversation. We try to keep the pieces together while feeling like we’re quietly falling apart on the inside.


There are moments when I look around and wonder if anyone else feels the same way. When you’re carrying that kind of hidden struggle, it’s easy to believe you’re the only one. Everyone else seems confident, steady, and certain. Their lives appear organized and purposeful while yours feels like it’s held together with invisible thread. At first glance, it can feel like you’re standing alone in the middle of a sea of people who have figured something out that you somehow missed.


But then something changes when you look again, and you look a little deeper.


If you listen closely to the conversations people have when they finally let their guard down, if you watch the moments when someone admits they’re tired or uncertain, you begin to realize something quietly profound. The struggles you thought were uniquely yours are shared by more people than you ever imagined. The pressure to appear strong, the fear of not being enough, the exhaustion of trying to keep everything together—these are not isolated experiences.


We’re all in the same boat.


Every person you meet is carrying something beneath the surface. Some carry grief that hasn’t fully healed. Others carry anxiety about the future or regret about the past. Some wrestle with loneliness even when surrounded by people who love them. Others feel the weight of responsibility pressing on their shoulders in ways no one else can see. The human experience is full of these quiet battles that rarely make themselves known at first glance.


Once you realize that, something inside you softens. The comparison fades a little. The pressure to maintain the illusion of perfection loses some of its grip. You start to see that the person who seemed so confident might be fighting fears of their own. The one who always appears cheerful may be holding together a fragile heart. The friend who seems to have everything figured out might be praying desperately for clarity behind closed doors.


We all just need to know that we’re not alone in this.


There is a strange kind of comfort in the realization that everyone carries some form of brokenness. Not because suffering is good, but because it reminds us that perfection was never the expectation. None of us were designed to navigate life without scars. None of us were meant to have all the answers. We are human beings learning as we go, trying to balance strength with honesty and hope with reality.


And the truth that eventually rises above all of it is simple but powerful: we are all broken.


Broken doesn’t mean worthless. It doesn’t mean beyond repair. It means we are unfinished, imperfect, and in need of something greater than our own ability to hold everything together. Our brokenness shows up in different ways—through fear, through pride, through insecurity, through pain—but it is part of the shared condition of being human.


For a long time, people try to hide that truth. We try to mask it with success, with humor, with busyness, with carefully crafted appearances. But the deeper we go into life, the more we realize that pretending to be whole when we’re not only makes the weight heavier. Healing begins when we stop pretending we don’t need help.


Because we do need help.


Not just from each other, though community matters deeply. Not just from time, though time does soften some wounds. What we need is something deeper, something stronger than our own attempts at self-repair. What we need is a Savior.


The moment we acknowledge that truth is the moment the pressure begins to lift. When you realize that you don’t have to fix every broken piece of your life by yourself, something shifts. You begin to understand that grace exists precisely because none of us can carry everything alone. Faith becomes less about appearing strong and more about admitting weakness and trusting that God meets us there.


A Savior does not come for the perfect. He comes for the weary, the wounded, the uncertain. He comes for the people who feel like well-dressed wrecks trying to keep it all together. He comes for the ones who smile through the day but whisper prayers at night because they don’t know how to face tomorrow. He comes for people exactly where they are.


That realization changes the way you see the world around you. Instead of comparing yourself to others, you begin to recognize shared humanity. Instead of assuming you’re the only one struggling, you begin to see compassion everywhere. The person sitting beside you in church, the coworker across the office, the neighbor walking their dog down the street—they are all carrying stories you cannot see.


And every one of those stories is touched by the same truth: we are all broken, and we all need a Savior.


There is humility in that truth, but there is also hope. Because brokenness is not the end of the story. In fact, it is often the place where redemption begins. God does not reject broken hearts; He restores them. He does not turn away from messiness; He steps into it with grace. The places where we feel most fragile are often the very places where His presence becomes most visible.


So the next time you feel like a well-dressed wreck, remember that you are not the only one trying to hold things together. Remember that the people around you are navigating their own unseen struggles. Remember that the need you feel for help, for grace, for healing is not a sign of failure—it is part of what connects us all.


We are all in the same boat, moving through uncertain waters, trying to find our way. And the good news is that we do not have to navigate it alone. The Savior who understands brokenness better than anyone walks with us, steadying us when the waves rise and reminding us that even in our imperfection, we are deeply loved.


Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Living Proof That Love Remains

We are born one fine day, completely unaware of the story we are stepping into. A mother smiles through tears she didn’t know she had in her, and a father cries in a way that surprises even him. A tiny life lies between them, fragile and perfect, a miracle before their eyes. In that moment, nothing else matters. The world outside the hospital room or quiet bedroom continues spinning, but inside that sacred space, eternity feels close. A child has arrived, and love has already begun its lifelong work. From that first breath forward, we are held, protected, and shaped by the people who welcomed us into the world.

They guard us through childhood with a fierce tenderness that only parents understand. They lose sleep, they offer guidance, they discipline and defend, they cheer at school events and sit beside us through disappointments. They teach us how to tie our shoes, how to say please and thank you, how to pray when we are afraid. Through scraped knees and broken hearts, through teenage rebellion and uncertain futures, love remains. It is not always perfect or polished, but it is steady. It endures misunderstandings and stretches across generational gaps. It carries us until the day comes when we are strong enough to stand on our own.

And then one day, that boy moves on. He steps out from under his parents’ covering and into a covenant of his own. He takes a bride, and suddenly the love he observed growing up becomes the love he must now cultivate with his own hands. She stands faithful by his side, not just on the wedding day when promises are easy and hopeful, but in the ordinary mornings and unpredictable nights that follow. Together they begin the sacred, demanding work of building a life. Tears and sweat mix together as they create a home, not merely with walls and furniture, but with patience, forgiveness, and shared determination. They learn one another’s rhythms. They discover strengths and weaknesses. They choose each other again and again when life presses hard.

In time, children may fill that home with noise and wonder, and the cycle of love continues. There are seasons of abundance and seasons of uncertainty. There are days of laughter that echo through hallways and nights of worry that stretch longer than expected. They share joy and they share pain, and through it all, love remains. It remains not because life is easy, but because they decide it will. It remains because covenant is stronger than convenience. It remains because two people have anchored themselves in something deeper than fleeting emotion.

Kingdoms rise and fall around them. Headlines shift. Culture changes. What once felt urgent fades into memory. Before they realize it, the future they once dreamed about has become the past they now reminisce over. Children grow up. Parents age. Houses grow quiet. Time, which once felt slow, begins to feel swift. And yet, in spite of what has been lost or what has been gained, they find themselves living proof that love remains. Not naïve love, untouched by hardship, but refined love, strengthened by fire. The kind of love that has walked through fear and come out steadier on the other side.

I don’t know, Tim, what I would do on this earth without you. Those words hold more weight now than they ever did in youth. After walking through valleys together, after facing challenges we never would have chosen, after holding each other up when strength felt thin, the bond is no longer theoretical. It is lived. It is tested. It is sacred. Loving you is not just part of my life story; it is woven into every chapter. We have shared tears and triumphs, quiet evenings and overwhelming days. We have seen how fragile life can be, and how fiercely love can endure.

We all live, and we all die. That truth grows clearer with age. We see it when parents pass on and when friends leave too soon. We feel it in our own bodies as seasons change and strength shifts. It would be easy to let that truth feel heavy, to let it cast a shadow over everything we hold dear. But the end is not goodbye. That is the promise that steadies me. The sun still rises each morning, and seasons continue their faithful rhythm. Winter yields to spring. Spring blossoms into summer. Summer softens into autumn. Even when leaves fall and trees look barren, life continues beneath the surface.

Through every season, love remains. It remains when youth gives way to maturity and when certainty gives way to trust. It remains when health is strong and when it feels fragile. It remains when laughter comes easily and when silence feels thick. Love is not erased by hardship; it is deepened by it. It becomes an eternal burning flame, not flashy or dramatic, but steady and enduring. It glows in the small moments—a hand held during prayer, a shared glance across a room, a familiar voice calling your name.

As we grow older together, I see more clearly that the only things which truly endure are the things built in love. Titles fade. Possessions change hands. Achievements are eventually forgotten. But love leaves an imprint that stretches beyond our years. It shapes children. It influences generations. It echoes into eternity. That is why, no matter what the world looks like around us, hope lives on. Hope does not live because circumstances are always kind. It lives because love is stronger than fear, and because the God who authored love promises that it does not end at a graveside.

We were born into love. We learned love from those who raised us. We chose love in marriage. We carried love through hardship. And someday, when our earthly story closes, love will not vanish. It will continue, because the end is not goodbye. The same God who joined our hands together and walked with us through every season is the One who assures us that what is rooted in Him cannot be destroyed by time.

So as the sun rises and sets over our lives, as years quietly add themselves to our story, I hold tightly to this truth: through childhood and covenant, through joy and sorrow, through gain and loss, through life and death, love remains. It remains as an eternal flame, steady and bright. It remains as living proof that what is built in faith and devotion cannot be undone. Hope lives on, even when circumstances shift. And long after kingdoms fade and seasons change, love remains.

Tuesday, March 24, 2026

When My World Feels Like Sand

There are nights when Your promises feel distant and my circumstances feel loud. You say everything is going to be alright, but what I see in front of me argues otherwise. The problems don’t shrink just because I am trying to believe. The uncertainty doesn’t soften simply because I whisper Your name. Sometimes it feels like I won’t last through the night, like the weight of everything pressing in is more than I can carry. I know what You have said. I know Your character. I have lived long enough to see Your faithfulness. But in the middle of exhaustion, when fear creeps in and sleep feels far away, I need more than memory. I need You right now.

I need Your Word to hold me steady. Not as a verse I recite out of habit, but as something living that steadies my breathing and quiets my thoughts. I need it to interrupt the lies that tell me this is too much, that I am too small, that I cannot endure. I need You to pull me through the places where my strength runs out. There are moments when I don’t need advice, or explanations, or timelines. I need a miracle. I need breakthrough. I need You.

They say You hold the whole universe in Your hand, that You measure the oceans and name the stars, that nothing is beyond Your power. I believe that. I truly do. But when my own small world feels like it is crumbling like sand slipping through my fingers, it is hard not to feel insignificant. It is hard not to wonder if my struggles are too small in the vastness of everything else. When my plans unravel and stability feels fragile, I sometimes ask the question I am almost afraid to say out loud: am I small enough to slip through the cracks? Can my pain be overlooked? Can my prayers get lost?

Yet even as I ask that, something deeper reminds me that You are not overwhelmed by the scale of creation, nor are You distracted from the details of my life. The same hands that hold galaxies also hold my heart. The same voice that spoke light into darkness still speaks peace into fear. You do not misplace Your children. You do not lose track of the ones You formed. If You care for sparrows, You care for me. If You sustain the universe, You can sustain this moment.

What I need most is for You to take my broken pieces and put them back together. Sometimes the greatest fear is not the circumstance itself, but what it is doing inside me. The weariness that settles into my bones. The doubt that whispers late at night. The quiet discouragement that tries to convince me that this is permanent. I do not want to harden. I do not want to lose hope. I do not want to become someone who stops believing because life became difficult. So I ask You to restore what feels fractured. Gather what feels scattered. Strengthen what feels fragile.

Give me faith to believe You are on my side. Not faith that ignores reality, but faith that anchors itself in who You are. Open my eyes to see You working in my life, even when I cannot trace every step. Sometimes I am so focused on what is not happening that I miss the subtle ways You are already moving. Maybe You are strengthening me in ways I do not yet recognize. Maybe You are protecting me from things I will never see. Maybe You are building something deeper than the immediate outcome I am asking for.

Let the past remind me that You have never failed. When I look back, I see moments that once felt unbearable and yet somehow I am still here. I see prayers that were answered in ways I did not expect. I see doors that opened when I thought they were sealed shut. I see strength that came when I had none left to give. You have carried me through nights before. You have steadied me when I thought I would fall. Your faithfulness has never depended on my emotional stability. It has never wavered because I was tired. It has never been withdrawn because I questioned.

So tell my soul, even now, that it is well. Not because everything is resolved. Not because the mountain has disappeared. But because You are still God in the middle of it. It is well because I am not alone. It is well because You are present. It is well because this night does not get the final word. Peace does not come from perfect circumstances; it comes from trusting the One who stands steady within them.

Father, I need You. I need You in the quiet moments when doubt grows loud. I need You in the uncertainty I cannot control. I need You to be the strength I do not feel and the calm I cannot manufacture. If the miracle is immediate, I will praise You. If the breakthrough takes time, I will still trust You. And if the answer looks different than I imagined, I will lean on what I know to be true: You never fail.

Even when my world feels unstable, You are my Rock. Even when I feel small, I am fully seen. Even when everything seems uncertain, Your love remains steady. So tonight, when fear tries to take hold, I will choose to remember. I will choose to believe that You are on my side. I will whisper to my own soul what You have been whispering all along — that it is well.

Monday, March 23, 2026

Move the Immovable

There will always be voices that say, “It can’t be done.” They speak with certainty. They cite statistics. They measure odds. They look at the mountain in front of you — tall, jagged, immovable — and they declare it permanent. They look at the chains wrapped around your circumstances and call them unbreakable. They don’t say it cruelly most of the time. They say it realistically.


But realism without faith is just limitation dressed up as wisdom.


They say this mountain can’t be moved. They say this diagnosis is final. They say this struggle will always define you. They say this pattern will never change. They say this heartbreak is irreversible. They say these chains will never break.


But they don’t know You like we do.


There is a difference between knowing about God and knowing Him. Knowing about Him says, “He can.” Knowing Him says, “He will.” Knowing about Him reads stories of miracles. Knowing Him has lived through them. When you have walked through valleys and seen doors open that shouldn’t have opened, when you have felt strength rise up in weakness, when you have watched provision arrive at the last possible moment — you begin to speak differently.


There is power in Your name.


Not abstract power. Not poetic power. Real power. The kind that shifts atmospheres. The kind that steadies hearts. The kind that makes fear hesitate. His name has carried me through nights that felt endless. His name has silenced lies that tried to take root. His name has held authority in rooms where uncertainty tried to reign.


Mountains look permanent until they aren’t.


History is full of things once called impossible. Walls that fell. Seas that parted. Tombs that opened. Hearts that healed. Addictions broken. Marriages restored. Minds renewed. Bodies strengthened. The world says, “It’s too far gone.” Heaven says, “Watch Me.”


Move the immovable.


It is a bold prayer. It refuses to shrink faith down to what seems manageable. It dares to believe that what stands in front of us is not bigger than the One who stands beside us. Moving mountains doesn’t always look dramatic. Sometimes it looks like one small breakthrough after another. Sometimes it looks like courage returning. Sometimes it looks like peace where panic once ruled.


Break the unbreakable.


Chains are sneaky. Some are visible — circumstances, diagnoses, situations. Others are internal — fear, doubt, generational patterns, shame. The world may label them permanent. But nothing is permanent in the presence of the One who conquered death itself. What feels welded shut to us is not beyond His reach.


God, we believe.


Belief is not denial of difficulty. It is defiance against it. It acknowledges the mountain while trusting the Mover. It recognizes the chain while calling on the Breaker. It feels the weight of reality but refuses to surrender to it.


There are moments when belief feels strong and steady. And there are moments when belief feels fragile, like a flickering flame in the wind. But even a flicker is still light. Even a trembling prayer still rises. Even faith the size of a mustard seed still moves things unseen.


God, we believe for it.


We believe for healing. We believe for restoration. We believe for freedom. We believe for clarity. We believe for peace. We believe for doors that have not yet opened and paths that have not yet been revealed. We believe not because circumstances are convincing, but because You are.


There is something powerful about collective belief — about standing together and saying, “We know Who He is.” The world may measure outcomes; we measure faithfulness. The world may point to statistics; we point to testimony. The world may highlight limits; we highlight legacy.


They don’t know You like we do.


They didn’t see You carry us before. They didn’t watch You provide in scarcity. They didn’t feel the shift when despair turned into hope. They didn’t witness the quiet miracles that never made headlines but changed everything.


Mountains have stood in front of me before. Chains have wrapped tight before. And every time I thought, “This is it. This is the thing that won’t move,” something happened. Not always instantly. Not always dramatically. But faithfully. A crack formed. A door opened. Strength rose. Peace came. Hope returned.


Impossible is not a threat to God.


It is an invitation.


An invitation for Him to reveal Himself again. To show that His power has not diminished. That His authority has not weakened. That His name still carries weight.


Move the immovable.


Break the unbreakable.


And while we wait — because sometimes we do wait — anchor us in belief. Anchor us in the kind of faith that does not depend on immediate results. Anchor us in the truth that mountains are temporary, but You are eternal.


Because at the end of the day, faith is not about pretending mountains don’t exist. It’s about remembering that the One who formed them can reshape them.


God, we believe.


Not because we are naïve. Not because we are unaware of reality. But because we have seen too much to doubt You now.


And even if the mountain stands longer than we expect… even if the chains take time to loosen… we will still believe.


Because there is power in Your name.

And we know you.

The Day the Weight Lifted

There are moments in life that divide everything into before and after, moments so heavy with meaning that even years later you can still fe...