Search Results for: hope

Dream Bigger

Dream Bigger

This is God’s Word on the subject: “As soon as Babylon’s seventy years are up and not a day before, I’ll show up and take care of you as I promised and bring you back home. I know what I’m doing. I have it all planned out—plans to take care of you, not abandon you, plans to give you the future you hope for” (Jeremiah 29:11 MSG)

Turning My Page on Dreams

Christmas came early for Turning the Page on Suicide and I am excited to unwrap it with you!

God asked me to dream bigger this year and this website is a part of His vision of hope. To dream bigger took steps of obedience, and with every movement deeper into trusting God’s plan, I saw new possibilities unfold before me. From color pallets to establishing a clearer mission, every aspect I found myself catching my breath with awe and joy. A joy that keeps appearing as a result of finding Christ faithful in hardships. I continue to get to know He is trustworthy, no matter where my journey takes me.

poem of hope

Jesus helps us shed despair

The imperfect family pose on my landing page reflects intense wrestling with life and the joy we experience in the midst. I had a “perfect” family pose loaded, but God asked me to use this one instead. My husband was suffering from severe vertigo and headaches. My son Daniel, who we believe suffers from the same disease that attacked Jonathan’s mind, body, and spirit, had frequent bouts of pain and intense emotional outbursts.

That same summer, my joy-filled daughter began a severe spiral downward in stomach pain to the point she struggled to eat, and I was overwhelmed with fear at losing them. All of us struggled to smile. Yet, at that moment, my son turned his head to blow raspberries at his dad and we broke into laughter. That picture serves as a reminder to me, as well as to you that God does not expect perfection. He expects us to show up as we are and take the next step before us.

And in those moments, in those places, we don’t feel like smiling. Joy appears.

May this website serve as a constant reminder to come as you are, yes there is sorrow here, but there is also joy. God is rewriting what the enemy meant for evil in my family and revealing treasures through pain and suffering. God has the power to rewrite your story. I testify hope still exists in darkness, in places that feel void of dreams. God is dreaming bigger for me, and I am so grateful he is inviting me in to witness his plan come to fruition.

Many thanks to the Blogging Bistro Team for bringing the mental health resource vision to life.

Turning Your Page to Dream Bigger

Is God asking you to dream bigger? Part of our ability to dream bigger is to know the dream giver. Joseph of the Old Testament was given dreams, even the ability to interpret dreams, and yet he did not interpret his own dreams correctly. As he got to know the character of God through his suffering, felt God’s provision even though years passed before the dreams came true, he came to give God glory, come what may. Only when the dream came true could he tell his brothers, who had sold him into slavery,”

And God sent me before you to preserve for you a remnant on earth, and to keep alive for you many survivors. So it was not you who sent me here, but God. He has made me a father to Pharaoh, and lord of all his house and ruler over all the land of Egypt” (Genesis 45:7-8 ESV).

  • What are the current ways you feel that you are suffering?
  • What do you already know about God’s character and purpose for suffering?
    • Philippians 2:5-11
    • 1 Peter 3:14
    • 2 Corinthians 4:17
  • Do you have a person in your life who appears to be suffering well? What characteristics do you see in them? How are they dreaming bigger in their suffering?

Lord, may I get to know your character so well, that I trust where you lead and open my mind, heart, and actions to your bigger dreams for me. Amen

Holiday Depression Survival Kit

No one plans on unwrapping depression during the holidays.

“Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.” (Hebrews 11:1 KJV)

Depression is a gift not easily returned to a store. I say gift because, as I work through despair I also discover my capacity to fight it.

Twenty-two years ago depression became a training ground for my faith. I hoped for what I could not yet see. I stretched weak, underdeveloped spiritual muscles. And survived attacks from the enemy. Beauty emerged from the ashes of my life.


We don’t have to have it all together to survive Christmas. But, we do have to have certain habits in place that are not optional.  I am conditioning to be fearless and embrace discipline, compassion, and determination. Like a drill sergeant encouraging failure, depression stirs instead, my will to live.

Despair

Grief doesn’t take a hiatus, and physical pain may have no relief. The strain is constant, but we also experience joy.  We can hope, remain open to new possibilities, step outside of our own thoughts, and engage the world. Not based upon feeling, but upon the basic way, humans were created. We were built for relationship. Based on that understanding, isolation is not an option.

Below is a Depression Survival Kit that I use on a regular basis. These habits help me to get through and even gain new ground through holidays.

Feel free to comment on anything that helps you to get through the holidays.

  • 1-2 scriptures to read on a regular basis, call to mind when thoughts spiral
  • List of safe people (of the same sex) that I can call in case of an emergency
  • 1-2 old traditions I will do (not based on feeling)
  • 1-2 new traditions I will create with family, friends, strangers
  • Emergency exit
    • Go to Christmas events
    • Shorten stay
    • Signal designated departure friend to aid in a smoother exit
    • I don’t have to do all events
  • Stay engaged with the community (not an option)
    • Volunteer to help others
    • Encourage someone else who is struggling
    • Allow 1 or 2 people to take you out of your comfort zone
    • Laughter is good medicine (welcome humor)
  • Be intentional 
    • Set goals and take steps to be as healthy as you can
    • Extend grace to yourself and others

My prayers are with you as you find joy this Christmas.

You Knit Motherhood

Starving for Christmas

Noses press against storefront windows

and gawk. We watch stars stuff our sorrow

into glib sayings and sitcom outcomes.

But, in truth,

streets still bustle with beggars,

desperate hands outstretched.

Souls starve on golden calves of

overindulgence.

Ears strain to hear the

clink, clink coin of hope.

Unwrap gods, religion or man,

they disappoint our empty expectations.

We are starving for Christmas.

Christmas arrived. God, in plain garments,

pudgy cheeks and dependent

flesh. God, sucked in the

the first stale breath of humanity and loved us.

Contact

Please fill out the form below and I will be in touch.

If you would like to talk, share your story of hope, or schedule me to speak, complete the contact form below.

    Compassion for Old Hands

    Rocking Chair Healer

    I came to mend broken boards on a porch–just being neighborly–
    and found my own clay restored
    within your arthritic hands. “Lemonade, dear.”

    Your voice, a windchime in the quiet
    breeze, drew me away from
    the incessant ding of my fast-paced phone. So
    much unfinished work, on top of Jessica nagging
    John Jr. needed new shoes and my layoff pressed into my soul like a branding iron. I never planned on being the neighborhood
    handyman, I thought bitterly. “Sure.”

    But even as I sipped your cool offering, the tension eased from my shoulders. “What did you put in this?” I asked warily.
    “Nothing the Good Lord didn’t make.
    Sugar and lemons,” you respond,
    slowly working your bones into
    rocking chair shape with your own glass
    on the wrought iron table beside.

    Silence spoke between us.
    The rocking creak of your chair on the boards
    was hypnotic. I snapped out of my trance and
    realized I had long since placed the new boards and
    my glass drained.
    “That looks so nice dear, my sweet Paul
    couldn’t have done it better. Refill dear? Come
    sit in his chair and rest a while.”
    I obeyed.
    “Can I tell you about Paul?” You poured.
    I listened.

    He called me his ‘Rambling Rose’, you
    pointed at the sweet fragrant
    roses climbing the trellis in your garden.
    “Planted those on our wedding day…”
    The crickets resumed
    their chorus as she rocked somewhere else.
    “I miss him.”

    Your voice was heavy with remembering.
    Would I miss Jessica with the same weight in my voice?
    I couldn’t remember the last thing I planted in my wife’s life.
    “Got to tend to them daily.” You said as if listening to my thoughts.
    With that, you got up, went to the basket at the end of the porch, put on gloves, and tended your roses.
    I slowly packed my tools and returned them to my truck. Reluctant to leave.

    But, my job was complete.
    “Goodby MS Daphnie,” I said, tipping my hat in farewell.
    You held up a crooked finger. “Wait, son,
    I have something for you.” You handed
    me a small pot with a freshly planted cutting from your rose. Your cray paper hand squeezed mine with surprising strength.
    “It’s never too late dear.”
    With that, you turned
    and returned to your chair
    rocking rhythm, sipping
    lemonade, and gazing at Paul’s empty chair.

    I climbed into the truck and cradled the
    plant between my lunch pail and toolbox. And as your
    frame shrunk behind me, my
    heart suddenly longed for home.
    John Jr. would be getting off the bus soon,
    it would be nice to greet him for once.
    He was getting so big. Jessica’s lopsided grin,
    came to mind. She playfully splashed dishwater
    as I read the Sunday paper this morning.
    “I was irritated she got the sports section wet.” I cried out. I
    shook my head, shocked at the bitter root I tended. I looked down at the cutting again. Never too late.

    The dust trail kicked up behind me as I took the dirt road to our home. I watched Jessica come onto the porch as she usually did to greet me. She held two glasses of lemonade in her hand. Her auburn hair catching fire
    in the evening sun. So beautiful.


    I came to mend your porch Ms. Daphnie
    but walked away with you mending me.
    As I swept my surprised wife into my arms.
    My heart filled with joy.
    “Can we save up for rocking chairs?”

    Turning Your Page: Become a Healer

    For the Lord disciplines the one He loves, and He chastises every son He receives.

    Hebrews 12:6 BSB

    We need rocking chair healers in our lives. Those men and women who see our brokenness and do not turn away. They are the Ms. Daphnie’s of the world, who in slow and steady quiet, speak truth, and challenge our bitterness. Who do you have in your life that is a rocking chair healer? Write them a note of how their faithfulness has encouraged you. Take the opportunity to cultivate awareness of your neighbors so that you too can speak love, healing hope, and peace into their lives.

    • Describe a person who has encouraged you in simple or big ways. What gifts and talents did they use?
    • What areas in your life need encouragement? Seek out a friendship with a person who is strong in those areas. Ask them to mentor you.
    • Find a person to speak life into. Write a note of encouragement. Take opportunities to sit with, listen to, and be available when they are down.

    Jesus you are my rocking chair healer. You sit with me, listen, encourage, and challenge me. Thank you. Teach me to slow down and be present in the lives of other hurting souls. Amen

    Rocking Chair Healer

    Here are a few of the Rocking Chair Healers in My Life:

    https://beautybeyondbones.com/
    https://jdwininger.com/
    Beth Moore– Breaking Free

    Open the door to truth

    Prophetic Inspiration: Words to Embrace

    And we have the prophetic word more fully confirmed, to which you will do well to pay attention as to a lamp shining in a dark place, until the day dawns and the morning star rises in your hearts, knowing this first of all, that no prophecy of Scripture comes from someone’s own interpretation. For no prophecy was ever produced by the will of man, but men spoke from God as they were carried along by the Holy Spirit.

    2 Peter 1:19-21 ESV

    Turning My Page: Apply Prophetic Inspiration

    In the last two years, I experienced prophetic inspirations spoken over me. Faithful men and women have spoken God’s truth which again and again was reinforced by scripture in various circumstances.”I see an image of a yellow rose, preparing to bloom.” “You are a mother who will lead children to wholeness.” “Mom, read Ephesians 4:8.” “You are Esther.” Some knew me, others were complete strangers. I feel uncomfortable with my futures actions being foretold. It feels like having a bright light shining into my soul after remaining in darkness.

    Prophetic Inspiration are words spoken over our spirit that point to God's love and purpose for our lives
    Speaking Life Through Prophecy
    Image by Gerd Altmann

    What if I fail?

    I have spoken words over myself for 42 (I’ll give my three-year-old self a break) years. You are ugly. You will fail. No one will love you. Stupid. You can’t do anything right. You will always be in pain. Why are you here? God couldn’t possibly use you for good. If a prophecy is simply an inspired utterance when you and I speak depression and darkness over ourselves, where is the inspiration coming from?

    Losing Jonathan took a toll on what I thought about motherhood. The lie I accepted was, to invest in my child, love God, teach him to love God and everything turns out okay. When believers buy into the lie that accepting Christ leads to success and a trouble-free life Satan is setting us up for failure. Nowhere in scripture does it say this. Instead, Jesus says, “Here on earth you will have many trials and sorrows. But take heart, because I have overcome the world” (John 16:33b NLT). Troubles do not negate the task God has given me to do. I am to “share the reason for the hope I have.” Read more on my Suicide Story.

    Here are truths I now acknowledge since meeting Jesus twenty-four years ago:

    While I recognize the above truths, I have struggled to embrace and apply them without wavering. I apologize that I have wasted a single second denying the words spoken over me and into me. God, you have been gently nudging me with these prophecies and revealing how uncomfortable I am with your truth and comfortable I am with my own brand of truth.

    I embrace the inspiration God gives through the many experiences, scripture, and voices that encourage my spirit. Wholeheartedly I repent of the above lies I have consistently repeated. They do not align themselves with who Christ says I am. It is high time I with the full force of faith, hope, and love, accept what God keeps speaking over me.

    Turning Your Page

    This is your starting point. Will you embrace a new prophetic inspiration spoken over you? Depression no longer has the last word in your life. With God’s help, you will conquer the lie that this life is impossible to live and turn the page to find hope, faith, and love in each of your next days.

    Pointing you in the direction you should go
    Sometimes Others See the Path More Clearly

    Choosing to embrace truth is bound to stir up resistance. As thoughts of darkness, hopelessness, and condemnation get loud, recognize that their inspiration is from Satan, the father of all lies (John 8:44). He won’t let up. To change this pattern God divinely removes the oppressive spirit or equips you to bear up under the attack. Don’t expect your feelings to always match the truth God is revealing in your life. If emotions matched truth, none of us would struggle with depression.

    These truths take practice. As you read, understand the scriptures, and walk in obedience to the truth of God’s love for you, recognizing and applying prophetic inspiration will become easier. Be sure to note when God repeats his message of love from multiple sources. Despair will stop dominating your decision making and hope will help you turn the page on your darker days. God’s love will start prophesying over you and you will discern the truth of his purpose for you.

    Action Pages

    • List out some of the things you hear yourself saying about yourself or others.
    • What does God say about the creation of you in scripture? (Genesis 1: 26-31, Matthew 10:29, Matthew 6:26)
    • As a result of what God says about His care for you, write out truths that are consistent with scripture, and begin repeating those daily and whenever the lies surface
    • Know that I am walking this journey with you and praying for you.

    Today, I embrace the truth of scripture and your spirit of encouragement through others. I am who you say I am, and I will do exceedingly, abundantly all you call me to do. Amen

    The Big Picture of Us: Life after my Father’s Suicide-Guest Blog

    That is why waiting does not diminish us, any more than waiting diminishes a pregnant mother. We are enlarged in the waiting. We, of course, don’t see what is enlarging us. But the longer we wait, the larger we become, and the more joyful our expectancy.

    Romans 8:24-25 MSG

    Turning My Page

    I have a suicide story. My loss and pain connect me to others struggling with and hurt by despair. However, it is hope that moves each of our stories beyond the chapters of despair we experience to deeper love, redemption, and joy.

    My guest blogger, Christina Rose is the author of My Appeal to Heaven, and just as she chooses to share her life with you I encourage you to share yours. If you have a story of hope like Christina Rose, I would love to share it on my blog. Email me at [email protected] You are not alone and there are many of us building a mountain of evidence that this life is worth living, come what may.

    Christina’s Story

    When I was 21 years old, my father leaped to his death from the top floor of a government building in Washington, DC.  Immediately news reporters swarmed our home. I stood at the front door, holding my weeping mother, while my 12-year old sister looked on in shock.  After a few months of being on the news each day, they forgot about us, but we never forgot about Dad.

    Dad was a sensitive, introverted man and compassionately took care of others while not expecting anyone to take care of him.  He kept most of his troubles to himself, not wanting to bother others. He was extremely stressed over mounting bills and kids in college and felt there was no way out. In his mind, we left him to pay the bills and did not appreciate him anymore.

    The day after the funeral, Mom left for Greece for three weeks, leaving my sister and me to fend for ourselves. 

    She was a travel agent and started taking any trips that offered an escape.  The trauma of dad’s death and my mother’s frequent absences sent us into constant PTSD and anxiety. Thoughts of suicide started haunting me. We were still in the family home with memories of dad. It felt like an ugly vulture was sitting on my shoulder, continually whispering dark, hopeless thoughts into my ears. I had night terrors with visions of dark, hideous beings running up and down the stairs. Instinctively, I would recite the Lord’s prayer, which was the only way I could get them to leave.

    Dad loved to camp, and we had many remarkable adventures traveling in our Volkswagen bus.  When my daughters were born, I got my own Volkswagen bus to share my father’s love of camping. I would feel his presence strongly on these trips as I pitched the tent, made campfires, and cooked on the camp stove, just as he had taught me to do.  Sitting by the campfire at night, once the girls were asleep, it was so quiet that sometimes I felt that I could hear Dad speaking to me. He seemed to tell me that while he destroyed his body, his soul was still alive, and he had to go to his own funeral. He had to watch us all suffer because of what he did and no longer had arms to comfort us and a voice to tell us he was there. I felt him say, “If only I’d seen the big picture, there was a beautiful life planned for me after that storm I was in, I wished I’d had hung on and gotten through it for all of you.”

    I wish he had hung on.

    At the funeral, we learned that two of his friends were starting their own business and wanted Dad to join him. He could have quit the job he hated.  My brother had recently moved to Colorado to marry his high school sweetheart and join their family.  Our families were very close, so a few years after Dad’s death, the rest of my family joined them. Dad would have loved the adventure of living out west with our big family.  He never got the chance to meet any of his 23 grandkids or the more than 40 (and still counting) great-grandkids. He missed walking each of us three daughters down the aisle at our weddings and wasn’t there to help us when we needed him when we started families of our own.

     My father’s death and my struggle with despair have taught me that change is part of life, and storms always pass.  If we are still comfortable, we will never grow. The most difficult tests are often a catalyst that catapults into an upgrade in our life that we may not have considered if we had not experienced challenges.  If we can hang on and climb the mountains that face us, once we reach the top, we can see the view of how far we have come and trust that we need not fear the future. 

    Never be afraid to ask for help in this process. None of us are equipped to live life alone.

    Consistent, unconditional love and support are a lifeline to someone who feels hopeless. Reaching out with encouraging words, taking walks in nature, going to dinner, to movies, for coffee, a road trip, buying a puppy – engage in simple pleasures. Life is full of joy.  Position yourself to listen; people open up when they feel heard.  I pulled myself and my family out of this dark hole several times.  I sought the support of community and churches; they lift my spirit when I feel weak.

    In the more than 40 years since my father’s suicide, I have learned many valuable lessons.  The way the universe, stars, sun, and moon operate daily testify to a perfect, divine order to all of life, down to the most minute, microscopic detail.  The earth is complicated. Millions of inhabitants and their diversity, the vast number of species and plants, and the millions of years that we have all existed, we must know that there is a perfect design for everything, including each of us.  It is not up to us to figure out the future but to trust that the creator already has a big picture of who we will be on his mantle.

    About the Author

    Christina Rose

    Christina Rose is an author, trainer, and speaker certified by the John Maxwell Team of Leadership. She is a DAR (Daughter of the American Revolution) whose ancestors fought in the Revolutionary War. She is a world traveler, surfer, foodie, cappuccino loving chocoholic and a devoted mom to kids and dogs and auntie to over 40 nieces and nephews.
    Christina’s book, My Appeal to Heaven, is her story. With her young family on the verge of falling apart, Christina finds herself in a desperate situation with no resources other than herself. After appealing to heaven, the Lord takes her on a journey of awakening and miraculous empowerment. That power is available to us all, especially those who are in need of hope and
    freedom. Follow her at: christinarose.org

    Turning Your Page

    Compiling evidence that life is worth living requires placing hope in what you don’t yet see. Every single person who has ever moved beyond despair has taken that first step to hope for something different and then step into another unknown and then another. What step can you take today.

    • Observation is crucial in embracing hope. What are some characteristics you see in nature that reflect trust in the unseen provision of God?
    • Who in your life steps outside their current circumstances to trust in what they can’t yet see? What work or effort do they put in to maintain that hope? Do they experience set backs and disappointments? How do they get back up.
    • Meditate on Hebrews 11:1 “Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.”

    Lord, my life is a mess and I am tired of the constant fight. Help me to see your promises and keep pressing into the fact that you are with me. Amen

    Frozen Teenager

    My walls look different.
    My son’s sad eyes stare back
    emptied of soul. Despair thinly masked
    behind smile. A frozen teenager.
    He doesn’t hand me new photos
    of girlfriend, wife, or family,
    at gatherings.

    He stares.
    Pleads.
    Add photos to your story.

    Hang snapshots of love,
    forgiveness, generosity, and hope on
    the wall of your soul–you are my new photos of him.

    Turning Your Page

    Our stories now overlap. I would love to frame a picture of you on my wall. Keep Jonathan’s story alive by living yours to the fullest, come what may. Email your story at [email protected]

    Lord, bless the reader. Encourage their heart to see the possibility beyond suffering. Embrace them as they journey through this life, and may their walls be filled with the bigger picture of your story. Amen

    Is Motherhood Worth The Climb?

    I could have stopped climbing motherhood,
    after you fell.
    Sat in the crag of grief
    and let death bury my scarred soul. 

    We were supposed to view this summit together.
    Your spirit strengthened and equipped,
    ready for the difficult ascents of adulthood.
    Teaching your siblings life is worth the climb.

    You were my first heartbeat of adventure.
    My own fearful expanse of the impossible
    became a vibrant vista of God because
    you lived.

    The struggles of life became another rock to conquer.
    And we did. I breathed joy more deeply because
    we grappled circumstances. Our pain revealed
    gems of truth—life to the fullest.

    The muscles of motherhood burned 
    when I first stretched out 
    for the next handhold of hope after your death.
    The ache of loss—you lived—crumbled resolve beneath my feet.

    Did I make a mistake in motherhood?

    No, you grew in the rich valley of youth.
    Stumbled, yes, but you scrambled back up, eager to learn.
    I look back at your tiny fingers wrapped
    around mine as I swung you up and wiped your tears.
    Every struggle was worth it.

    The foothills became treacherous mountains.
    Required sturdier equipment, a deeper trust, training, and
    faith without seeing.
    I watched you climb further away, testing
    footholds that would not sustain. 

    Was letting you go a mistake?

    I wipe my dusty tears and jump
    to the next ledge of trust.
    I was never meant to make
    secure your every step.
    God you are faithful.
    Sturdier in grief, because I loved.

    Did I fail motherhood?

    So many missteps.
    I watched in agony as your grip on life loosened. Motherhood
    stretched and strained to breaking. I prayed.
    Pleaded. Don’t give up. God catch him!
    Your life was a sunrise worth experiencing.

    Does motherhood end?

    No, because love always remembers life.
    Your laughter echoes
    in the canyons of my sorrow,  the memories
    of your beautiful, valuable, life
    stirs my warrior cry of joy.

    Was it worth it?

    I climb this mountain of motherhood—gut it out to the fullest
    because my scraped knees of prayer
    and bruised soul of faith
    testify life is sacred, come what may.

    Motherhood is worth the climb,
    even if I see the vistas of heaven
    without you.

    Motherhood is Worth the Pain

    Turning Your Page

    … but standing by the cross of Jesus were his mother and his mother’s sister, Mary the wife of Clopas, and Mary Magdalene.When Jesus saw his mother and the disciple whom he loved standing nearby, he said to his mother, “Woman, behold, your son!” Then he said to the disciple, “Behold, your mother!” And from that hour the disciple took her to his own home.

    John 19:25-27, ESV

    Motherhood tests every spiritual and physical muscle you have. Your children may be grateful. They may hate you. Keep a short account. Be humble to admit when you are wrong. Embrace, love and hold them when their hearts are broken by this life. Celebrate life.

    Do your best to steward your children, but know their life is their own. Motherhood is worth every bump, bruise, and yes, sometimes even loss.

    • What is motherhood like for you right now? Be honest with any bitterness you feel. Record what you love about moments with your children.
    • Pray for your children by name. Stormie Omartian has books that guide scripture prayers over your children. These are an immense help and encouragement in spiritual battles.
    • Your children have an enemy and they need you to fight well. Equip yourselves and gather others to pray and support you.
    • Write a story, poem, or list out scriptures that describe motherhood.

    Father, motherhood is a mixture of pain and joy, love, and sacrifice. Help me to value the good moments and let go of attempting to control the outcome for my children. May your love be enough. Amen

    God Gets Personal in Grief

    So be strong and courageous! Do not be afraid and do not panic before them. For the LORD your God will personally go ahead of you. He will neither fail you nor abandon you.

    Deuteronomy 31:6 NLT

    Turning My Page

    Creating New Memories

    I didn’t look at the calendar–I knew it was May from head to toe. Grief is a seed also planted every year into my spring. It is a heaviness that grows when May begins. This year, as it did the first year after his death, Jonathan’s birthday falls on Mother’s Day. With my foot still misbehaving and quarantine my yearly tradition of hiking at the cemetery with my family may have to change. I felt angry that something that brings me good memories and joy would have to shift. I was tempted to give in to the anger and spiral down into despair.

    I received cards this week from friends who know the difficulties of walking through the next three months. Thank you. I was especially struck by the quote in one card, Deuteronomy 31:6 because the NLT translation used the word “personally”. I love a God who gets personal in my grief because he reveals the truth of his character in my soul and lifts my head to see hope.

    Today, he showed me the gifts he already is giving me in my first days of deeper grief. Saturday night I lay in a field at dusk with my family and watched the stars emerge. I didn’t want to go in! The delight of each star, the brilliant moon, and even catching a glimpse of the comet and Venus had me filled with joy. The symphony of sounds in the field soothed my heartache.

    Sunday morning I let my husband have fun cutting my hair. I promise, he did a shockingly good job, Michelle! Each moment of joy and laughter reminded and testified to God’s deep love, compassion, and provision, for me. There is an undercurrent of movement of the Holy Spirit I never see with my head down. I must press into experience.

    Pay no attention to the evil expression.

    God gently nudged me to look up. See hope in this season of grief, and offer it to those who neither hear the voice of God nor see anything beyond the darkness of their circumstances.

    I am weeping for any of you who only see the darkness and right now are contemplating suicide. Hope! I see you turning this page, and then another, and another. One day you will look back on the story God is writing into your life and say, “Wow! I see the stars. I hear the music through the darkest nights.”

    I know there is a vast world beyond my brokenness and sorrow because God himself, is involved in my life. I promise he is personally involved in your circumstances.

    Turning Your Page

    You will have seasons you wonder where God is in your circumstances. Look up, don’t stop experiencing life, and allow others to speak hope and truth into your life. You may not yet feel the hope in your grief, but as you make yourself available to hope, you will not be disappointed.

    • What is one adventure you would like to take this week? Set up a time, location, and invite someone to experience with you and or hold you accountable to step into the moment.
    • Describe a part of nature that reminds you to hope. Try to use as many senses as you can to describe the experience.
    • Meditate on Matthew 6:25-34 What in nature can you consider as a display of God’s extravagant love, provision, and personal touch in your life.

    Thank you Lord for getting personal in my grief. Lift my head from this pit that I can once again see the stars in their place, hear your presence in my life. Amen

    Come over to my Facebook Page for our Facebook Live Discussion and question and answer time on intense grief.

    Suicide & Prevention Hotline

    National Suicide Hotline

    If you or a loved one are in immediate danger, call the National Suicide Lifeline at 988 or go to the website at https://988lifeline.org/