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Posts Tagged ‘Healing’

This poem feels like a very personal declaration of who I am and who I am becoming.

I’m in a season of healing, but also carrying deep grief. I’m learning that strength and weakness, sorrow and growth, endurance and mercy can all exist in the same life at the same time.

The thoughts and lived experience behind this poem are my own, and I am the author of it.

I’m sharing it because it says something I’ve been trying to put into words for a long time

I Am Not Only Made of Endurance

I am not one thing.

Not one clean line,
not one tidy telling,
not one version of a woman
made easy for other people to read.

I have lived too long for that.

I have been soft
and I have been watchful.
I have spoken plain
and felt deeply.
I have wanted beauty
with tired hands.
I have carried longing
through ordinary days
and still noticed the sky.

There are parts of me
that learned in hard places.
Parts that still reach for gentle ones.
Parts that know how to enter a room smiling
while holding a whole private weather inside.

I am not ashamed of that.

I am not less honest
because I am layered.
I am not less whole
because I have changed.
I am not less worthy
because some of my strength
was born in survival
and some of my tenderness
was born in need.

Both belong to me.

I know what it is
to hunger for peace
and still feel the pulse of restlessness.
To love God
and still bring Him my unfinished places.
To want depth,
beauty,
intelligence,
warmth,
and still be drawn
to what is simple and true.

I am made of more than one world.

There is the woman
who knows grit by name.
Who has stood in kitchens and parking lots
and ordinary mornings
and felt whole chapters moving through her.
Who has learned that endurance
is not always loud.
Sometimes it looks like getting dressed.
Sometimes it sounds like laughter
returning after a long silence.
Sometimes it is nothing more glamorous
than staying open
when life has given you reasons to close.

And there is the woman
still becoming.

The one with longing still in her.
The one with tenderness still in her.
The one who has not gone numb,
has not disappeared,
has not surrendered her inner life
just because the years
have asked much of her.

She is here too.

She is the one
who still wants meaning.
Still wants honest conversation.
Still wants beauty that does not lie.
Still wants to walk into a room
not as what she can do,
not as what she has carried,
but as herself.

And that self
is not polished into one easy shape.

She is strength and hesitation.
Wisdom and wanting.
Scar and song.
A steady hand
with a trembling place beneath it.
A woman who has known weakness
without letting it make her small.

And I do not say this
as though I built myself alone.

I know too much now
of mercy for that.

The strength in me
did not come only from striving.
The depth in me
did not come only from sorrow.
The wisdom in me
did not come only from time.

I have been shaped
by the faithful hand of God.
Kept in places
I should have been lost.
Softened in places
I could have turned hard.
Carried in seasons
when my own strength
was not enough to carry me.

If I am still here—
still tender,
still hungry for truth,
still reaching toward light—
it is not my doing alone.

Grace has been at work in me.

So I do not speak now
as apology.
I speak as witness.

I am not one thing.
I am not finished.
I am not fading.

I am a living collection
of what endured,
what softened,
what broke,
what healed,
what waited,
what woke,
and what still rises in me now
asking to be named.

And I am learning
not to reduce that miracle
for anyone.

I am not only made of endurance.

I am made of mercy too.

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If you’ve known me in real life, you may think you already know who I am.

And in some ways, you do.

But like most people, I have had an outer life and an inner one. There is the version of me people met in passing, in difficult seasons, in busy roles, in old patterns, or in years when I was still trying to survive things I did not yet have the words for. And then there is this deeper, quieter, more reflective part of me—the part that has always searched for meaning, wrestled with truth, felt life deeply, and tried to understand where God was in all of it.

This blog is, in many ways, a reintroduction.

I am in a season of healing, but also a season of grief. I am grieving losses on more than one front, and at the same time becoming more honest about who I am, what has shaped me, and what grace has done in my life. I want this space to reflect that honesty. I want to write truthfully—about faith, grief, healing, memory, womanhood, endurance, mercy, and the lifelong work of becoming.

The people who know me best will know whether these words are true. I’m not trying to present a perfected version of myself, only an honest one—a woman who has lived through much, been shaped by grace, and is still becoming.

Some people may know an older version of me. Some may only know the surface. But this space will reflect the deeper voice that has grown in me through sorrow, reflection, spiritual growth, and the faithful hand of God.

If you are here to read, thank you. If you are here to understand me more fully, welcome. This is where I begin again, in my own voice.

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Yesterday afternoon, I was standing out on the back porch, just praying and talking to God. It was quiet, a little breezy, and I was carrying this deep sense of gratitude.

I had just read a poem my late paternal grandmother, Marion Riley Brown, wrote years ago. In it, she mentioned me—alongside my cousin Jimmy and my brother Billy. I was only two years old at the time she wrote it, just a baby really. But in three simple sentences, she saw me. She expressed love for me. And she hoped good things for my life.

I’m sixty now. And reading those words—it hit something in me. Something tender. Something I didn’t even realize was still waiting to be healed

So I stood there on the porch, thanking God for letting that poem come into my life at just the right moment. I was crying, yes—but it wasn’t just sadness. It was release. Gratitude. Wonder.

Then something happened that I’ve never experienced before.

As I prayed, I felt this overwhelming sense of presence. I can’t describe it perfectly, but I’ll try. It was like… a knowing. A warmth. A feeling of being completely accepted and safe. Like being wrapped in a hug you didn’t even know you needed.

And then it clicked.

In that moment, God was letting me feel the love of my grandmother. Not just remember it—feel it.

It was so real. So gentle. So familiar. I wasn’t scared. I wasn’t confused. It felt like home. Like something I had always known but had never quite touched.

And I don’t ever want to forget it. That comfort. That sacred kind of peace. That deep, quiet knowing that I am loved—by her, still.

I believe God gave me that moment not just to remember her love, but to experience it. To heal something in me. To remind me that love doesn’t end. It reaches. It lingers. And sometimes—when we need it the most—it finds its way back to us.

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