Tuesday, March 10, 2026

I'm Still Counting

 It feels like it was yesterday.

I can still picture the version of me who sat on the edge of the bed, hands folded tightly, whispering prayers that felt fragile. I remember the uncertainty. The ache. The fear of hoping too much and being disappointed again. I was praying for a miracle — not the flashy kind, not the dramatic headline kind — but the kind that changes everything quietly. The kind that steadies a trembling heart. The kind that restores what feels like it’s slipping away.

Back then, hope felt risky. I was scared to let myself believe too deeply because disappointment had visited before. I had learned how to brace myself. How to manage expectations. How to say, “Whatever happens,” instead of daring to ask for what I truly longed for. Praying felt vulnerable. It meant admitting I needed something I could not fix on my own.

And now, looking back today, I can see what I couldn’t see then.

I can see Your hand in places that once felt empty. I can see how You were moving when I thought nothing was happening. I can see how what felt like silence was actually preparation. And when I begin to trace all the ways You’ve shown up — all the ways You’ve provided, protected, healed, sustained — I can’t even add them up.

One, two, three… up to infinity.

I would run out of numbers before I could thank You for everything.

There are blessings that were obvious: doors opening at just the right time, resources arriving when they were needed most, strength showing up in moments when I thought I had none left. But there are also blessings hidden in the details — the kind I didn’t recognize until much later. The conversations that redirected my path. The “no” that protected me from a future I wasn’t meant to carry. The delay that deepened my faith. The hardship that refined my character.

God, I’m still counting my blessings.

And the more I look, the more I find.

It’s almost overwhelming, the way goodness weaves through even the hardest seasons. There were days I thought were marked only by struggle, but now I can see threads of grace running through them. I see how You sustained me in ways I took for granted. How You held me steady when my emotions were anything but. How You provided peace that didn’t make sense, courage that wasn’t natural, hope that didn’t feel logical.

The more that I look in the details, the more of Your goodness I find.

It’s in the ordinary, too. In the quiet mornings. In the routine days. In the laughter that returned when I thought joy had permanently faded. In the resilience that grew slowly, almost invisibly. In the love that endured through pressure and uncertainty. Sometimes the greatest miracles are not the dramatic turnarounds, but the steady faithfulness that carries us through.

There were seasons when I didn’t know how things would work out. When I couldn’t see the next step clearly. When the future felt like fog. And yet, step by step, You guided me. Not always with flashing signs, but with gentle nudges. With subtle confirmations. With a peace that whispered, “Keep going.”

Father, on this side of heaven, I know I’ll run out of time.

There will never be enough days for me to articulate all the ways You’ve been faithful. There will never be enough words to fully express gratitude for what You’ve rescued me from, what You’ve grown in me, what You’ve restored around me. Even if I wrote every single day for the rest of my life, I would still fall short of capturing it all.

But I will keep counting.

Because counting changes perspective.

When I count what’s missing, my heart grows restless. When I count what went wrong, my mind fills with regret. But when I count my blessings, something shifts inside me. Gratitude rises. Peace settles. Comparison fades. Anxiety loses volume. Counting reminds me that You have been present — consistently, patiently, generously.

And I know that seasons never last forever.

That truth used to scare me. Change felt threatening. Stability felt fragile. But now I see the beauty in it. The hard seasons don’t last forever — and neither do the mountaintop ones. Life moves. Chapters turn. Circumstances shift. But Your faithfulness does not fluctuate with the season.

So God, I will remember.

I will remember the nights You carried me when sleep wouldn’t come. I will remember the days You strengthened me when responsibility felt too heavy. I will remember the times You surprised me with joy in the middle of grief. I will remember how You met me in weakness and did not shame me for it. I will remember how You answered prayers in ways I didn’t expect but needed.

My heart has reasons to be grateful.

So many reasons.

I think about the times I almost gave up — when discouragement felt persuasive and quitting seemed reasonable. And yet something held me steady. Something kept me moving forward. Something whispered that the story wasn’t finished. That something was You.

I think about the relationships You preserved. The healing You initiated. The growth You cultivated slowly over time. I think about how different I am now — not perfect, not without struggle, but deeper. Softer. Stronger in ways that matter.

All the times You’ve been faithful to me.

Not just when I was confident. Not just when my faith was strong. But when I doubted. When I questioned. When I hesitated. When I was tired. You were faithful when my prayers were messy and my trust was thin. You were faithful when I misunderstood what You were doing. You were faithful when I couldn’t see the bigger picture.

That kind of consistency changes a person.

Gratitude is no longer something I try to manufacture. It flows naturally when I pause long enough to look back. And looking back does not anchor me in the past — it propels me forward with confidence. Because if You were faithful then, You will be faithful now. If You carried me through that season, You will carry me through this one.

There are still prayers I’m praying. Still hopes I’m holding. Still miracles I’m waiting to see. But I wait differently now. Not with panic. Not with desperation. But with remembrance. With the steady assurance that the same God who showed up before will show up again.

I’m still counting my blessings.

In the mundane.
In the miraculous.
In the messy middle.

I’m counting the breath in my lungs. The love in my home. The lessons learned the hard way. The strength forged through struggle. The unexpected joys. The quiet provisions. The moments of clarity. The healing in progress.

And I know I can’t count that high.

Because blessings multiply in ways we don’t even notice. Sometimes they look like protection from what could have happened. Sometimes they look like growth that only becomes visible in hindsight. Sometimes they look like peace that makes no logical sense.

There will come a day when faith becomes sight. When I will see fully what I now only glimpse. When I will understand completely what I now trust partially. And on that day, I know I’ll realize that even my most grateful seasons underestimated Your goodness.

But until then, on this side of heaven, I will keep counting.

I will count even in transition.
I will count even in uncertainty.
I will count even when life feels ordinary.

Because gratitude is not denial of hardship — it is defiance against despair. It is choosing to acknowledge that goodness exists alongside difficulty. It is recognizing that You have been writing a beautiful story even in chapters I would not have chosen.

It’s like it was yesterday that I was praying for a miracle.

And now I am living inside so many answered prayers that I almost forget they were once requests. That’s the miracle of perspective. Yesterday’s desperation becomes today’s gratitude. Yesterday’s tears become today’s testimony.

God, I’m still counting.

And I always will be.


Monday, March 9, 2026

Life's A Dance You Learn As You Go

Life has a rhythm to it, even when we don’t recognize the music. Sometimes it moves fast and bright, filled with spinning lights and loud crescendos. Other times it slows to something almost silent, where the only sound is your own breathing and the steady beat of your heart. We spend so much of our lives trying to predict the next step, trying to memorize the choreography before the song even begins, but the truth is far simpler and far more freeing: life is a dance, and you learn it as you go.

No one begins knowing the steps.

As children, we stumble forward without self-consciousness. We move because movement feels natural. We try, we fall, we laugh, we try again. Somewhere along the way, though, we begin to believe we’re supposed to know more than we do. We begin to measure ourselves against other dancers. We watch their confidence and assume they must have been handed a different set of instructions. We forget that they, too, once stood unsure of where to place their feet.

Sometimes you lead.

There are seasons when strength rises up in you and you don’t even recognize yourself. You make decisions boldly. You carry responsibility with steadiness. People look to you for direction, for reassurance, for clarity. Leadership doesn’t always feel glamorous; often it feels heavy. It means stepping forward when others hesitate. It means trusting your instincts when the outcome isn’t guaranteed. It means taking the next step even when you’re not certain it’s perfect.

Leading requires courage. It requires accepting that you won’t always get it right. That sometimes you’ll step on toes. That sometimes the rhythm will shift and you’ll have to adjust mid-movement. But there’s beauty in that stretch. Growth doesn’t happen when everything feels natural; it happens when you rise to meet what feels slightly beyond you.

And sometimes you follow.

Following is not weakness. It is not surrendering your identity. It is choosing trust. It is allowing someone else to carry the weight for a while. It is recognizing that you don’t have to control every beat of the song. There are seasons when following teaches more than leading ever could. It teaches humility. It teaches patience. It teaches listening.

We don’t talk enough about how sacred it is to rest in someone else’s steadiness. To let yourself be guided. To admit you don’t have all the answers and that it’s okay. In a world that praises independence and control, following can feel uncomfortable. But sometimes the most powerful thing you can do is let go and allow the dance to unfold without forcing it.

Life’s a dance, and you learn as you go.

There is no rehearsal. No rewind. No chance to practice the exact moment you’re living in right now. And yet, somehow, that is what makes it beautiful. The improvisation. The vulnerability. The way you adapt when the music changes tempo. We imagine that peace will come when we finally “know enough,” but peace often comes when we accept that we never will.

Don’t worry about what you don’t know.

There is freedom in that sentence. So much of our anxiety stems from the unknown — the next diagnosis, the next season, the next decision. We try to plan our way around uncertainty, but uncertainty is woven into the very fabric of life. You will not know every turn before it arrives. You will not foresee every challenge. You will not understand every outcome.

And that’s okay.

Because the learning happens in motion.

You discover resilience by walking through hardship, not by studying it from a distance. You discover strength by carrying weight, not by imagining it. You discover grace by making mistakes and forgiving yourself afterward. The wisdom you crave isn’t handed to you all at once — it accumulates, step by step, stumble by stumble.

Sometimes the dance floor feels crowded and overwhelming. Responsibilities press in. Expectations echo loudly. You might feel out of sync with everyone around you. But remember: comparison distorts rhythm. The tempo of your life is uniquely yours. Some people spin quickly through milestones. Others move slowly, intentionally, savoring each measure. Neither is wrong. The beauty is not in matching someone else’s steps — it’s in finding your own.

There will be moments when you trip.

When you say the wrong thing. Make the wrong choice. Trust the wrong person. Stay too long or leave too soon. Those missteps do not disqualify you from the dance. They are part of it. Every dancer has felt the sting of imbalance. What matters is not perfection, but persistence. Getting back up. Finding the rhythm again.

Sometimes the music slows unexpectedly. A loss. A setback. A change you didn’t ask for. The fast-paced routine you had memorized dissolves, and you’re left standing in unfamiliar silence. Those pauses can feel frightening. But silence isn’t the absence of movement; it’s preparation for the next phrase. It’s a chance to breathe. To recalibrate. To listen more closely.

And then, without warning, the music swells again.

New opportunities. Fresh joy. Unexpected connection. Laughter that surprises you. You realize that the hard season didn’t end you; it reshaped you. It taught you steps you didn’t know you needed. It strengthened muscles you didn’t know were weak.

Life’s a dance, and the beauty is not in mastering it — it’s in participating fully.

It’s in saying yes to the invitation even when you’re unsure. It’s in holding someone close and trusting the rhythm between you. It’s in laughing at your missteps instead of shaming yourself for them. It’s in letting go of the illusion that you must choreograph every detail.

Sometimes you lead with confidence.

Sometimes you follow with trust.

And sometimes you simply sway in place, waiting for clarity.

All of it counts.

There is grace in learning as you go. Grace for the awkward beginnings. Grace for the wrong turns. Grace for the days you feel out of sync. Grace for the moments when you’re not sure whether you’re leading or following or simply trying to keep up.

If you look back over your life, you’ll see it. The way you’ve grown. The way your steps have become steadier. The way your heart has softened and strengthened at the same time. You didn’t learn those things overnight. You learned them in motion.

The truth is, no one has it all figured out. The people who look confident are still adjusting their footing. The people who seem fearless still feel the music shift beneath them. We are all learning. All adapting. All trying to stay in rhythm.

So don’t worry about what you don’t know.

Trust that you will learn it when you need to. Trust that you are capable of adjusting when the tempo changes. Trust that the same strength that carried you through previous seasons will carry you through this one.

Life’s a dance.

It’s messy and beautiful and unpredictable. It’s slow in some moments and breathtakingly fast in others. It’s filled with partners who come and go, lessons that linger, and rhythms that surprise you.

And you don’t have to know every step before you take it.

You just have to be willing to move.


Sunday, March 8, 2026

Yours The Victory

There are nights that feel endless.

Nights where the silence is thick and hope feels buried. Nights when prayers seem to echo back unanswered and the weight of waiting presses heavy against your chest. There are seasons in life that resemble a tomb — dark, sealed, unmoving. You stand outside what feels dead and wonder if it will ever live again. Dreams. Joy. Strength. Faith. Sometimes even parts of yourself.

But then comes the morning.

Morning does not ask permission from the night. It does not negotiate with darkness. It simply arrives — steady, unstoppable, radiant. And when it comes, it does more than bring light. It seals the promise that darkness was never permanent.

There was a morning like that once. A morning that rewrote history. A morning that turned despair into declaration. A morning when a buried body began to breathe.

Think about that.

Breath returned to what had been declared finished. Life stirred where finality had been pronounced. The silence that once mocked hope was shattered by something stronger — by victory. Not loud in panic, but loud in authority. Out of that silence, the Roaring Lion rose, and with Him came a truth that still shakes the foundations of fear: the grave has no claim.

Not on Him.
And not on you.

There is something deeply personal about resurrection. It is not just an event we celebrate — it is a reality we live inside. Because the same power that broke through sealed stone still moves. It still breathes life into places we thought were too far gone. It still calls hope out of hiding. It still declares that what looks like the end is often the beginning.

Maybe you’ve known silence like that.

The kind that follows heartbreak. The kind that lingers after disappointment. The kind that sits heavy after loss or diagnosis or unanswered prayer. The kind where it feels like something precious has been laid in the ground and sealed away.

But resurrection doesn’t consult your timeline.

The promise was never canceled. It was waiting for morning.

There are areas in your life where you thought, “This is over.” Relationships that fractured. Confidence that collapsed. Faith that felt suffocated. Joy that seemed unreachable. And yet — here you are. Breathing. Believing. Becoming again.

That’s resurrection.

The enemy whispers that what’s buried stays buried. That what’s broken stays broken. That what’s lost is gone forever. But the Roaring Lion speaks louder. His voice does not tremble. It declares. It announces. It settles the matter.

The grave has no claim on me.

Not the grave of fear.
Not the grave of depression.
Not the grave of regret.
Not the grave of shame.

Those things may try to seal you in, but they do not own you. They do not define you. They do not get the final word.

Jesus does.

And Jesus speaks victory.

Victory does not always look like ease. Sometimes it looks like endurance. Sometimes it looks like getting up again. Sometimes it looks like choosing faith when doubt feels reasonable. But victory is not measured by the absence of struggle — it is measured by the presence of life.

Your buried body began to breathe.

There is something sacred about that image. Breath returning. Chest rising. Stillness interrupted. The impossible becoming reality. And that same breath — that same Spirit — breathes into weary hearts today. Into marriages that have been fighting for air. Into minds that have been battling darkness. Into souls that have forgotten what hope feels like.

Out of the silence comes a roar.

Not chaos. Not panic. Authority.

The roar of truth. The roar of identity. The roar that reminds you that you belong to victory, not defeat. That your story is held in hands that conquered death itself. That nothing — not even the darkest valley — can separate you from the One who walked out of a grave.

There are mornings coming in your life that will seal promises you’ve been waiting on.

Mornings when prayers finally make sense. Mornings when clarity replaces confusion. Mornings when peace settles where anxiety once ruled. Mornings when you realize that what you thought was the end was actually preparation.

Because resurrection is not random. It is intentional.

Jesus, Yours is the victory.

Not mine to manufacture. Not mine to earn. Not mine to defend. Yours.

And because it is Yours, I can stand in it.

When fear tries to whisper that I am still trapped, I remember the stone was rolled away. When shame tries to remind me of who I was, I remember that forgiveness walked out of a grave. When doubt tries to convince me that hope is foolish, I remember that silence was shattered by a roar.

Victory is not fragile.

It is eternal.

And here’s what makes that amazing: the same power that raised Christ from the dead now lives in us. Not as a metaphor. Not as a motivational phrase. But as reality. Which means every tomb you’re standing in front of is temporary. Every sealed stone is subject to movement. Every silent night is one sunrise away from transformation.

The grave has no claim on you.

Not your past.
Not your pain.
Not your worst mistakes.

You are marked by resurrection, not ruin.

So if you are in the middle of a silent Saturday season — where nothing seems to be happening — hold on. Morning is faithful. Breath is coming. The Lion still roars.

And when He does, every chain will loosen. Every shadow will retreat. Every accusation will fall silent.

Because Jesus, Yours is the victory.

And that changes everything.


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.


I'm Still Counting

  It feels like it was yesterday. I can still picture the version of me who sat on the edge of the bed, hands folded tightly, whispering pr...