Last week stretched long— a battlefield of hours, thick with pressure, air heavy with the smoke of striving souls running on what little breath remained. It felt like everything was closing in, like unseen hands were reaching— but I remembered: This fight was never flesh and blood. So I reached inward, past the noise, past the weariness, and found that ancient courage rising— the quiet defiance of David. Not by sword. Not by strength. But in the name of the Lord. Every force that tried to take hold of me, I met it with truth. Every whisper, every weight— answered with His Word, spoken boldly into the unseen. And with each wave of resistance, my prayer deepened, sharpened, simplified: Lord, abide in me. Stay closer than the chaos. Hold me above what seeks to pull me under. Do not let me drown in what was never meant to carry me. And He did. Faithfully. Gently. Powerfully. Where old thoughts once lingered, worship took their place. What once demanded my attention couldn’t even echo long ...
When I loosened my grip… on being everything to everyone, the architecture of my life quietly rearranged itself. Familiar faces became distant constellations— still there, but no longer orbiting me in the same way. I felt it— the ache of pulling back, the hollow echo of spaces once filled by overgiving. It was a kind of unraveling, a sacred collapse. Disappointment came first, soft but heavy— like darkness settling in a room I hadn’t finished furnishing, But then… my vision shifted. What I thought was loss was actually release. What I called absence was divine reordering. Because in this season, I was never meant to carry the world— I was meant to return to myself. To gather the scattered pieces, to sit with what I had silenced, to mend what I had neglected. To restore. To release. To recover. And in that quiet reclamation, I discovered something deeper: When I stopped pouring endlessly into vessels that never refilled me, I finally made space to be poured into. My cup— once drained by...