Everyone loves a beautifully weaved redemption story— the kind wrapped in applause, stitched together with survival, polished enough to make pain look poetic. But this is not a story. This is real life. My life. There’s a narrative we rehearse so often it becomes a ritual— a sedative disguised as safety. A false womb. A padded prison. A dim-lit shelter where we convince ourselves that hidden means healed. So we stay covered. Covered from truth. Covered from exposure. Covered from the God who keeps calling us out of hiding. And we cling to repetition because repetition feels holy when fear is preaching. We tell ourselves the outside world is only destruction, only danger, only teeth waiting to consume us— yet never question whether the real death has been happening within. Because we reach for weapons before we understand the war. We fight shadows without discerning spirits. Swinging at flesh while darkness feeds from our blindness. Truth is— everyone believes in something. ...
I don’t believe anything in this life arrives accidentally at our feet— not the trials, not the testing, not even the tears. Every wound carries revelation. Every delay carries instruction. Every breaking carries the potential for restoration. Nothing is wasted in the hands of God. This morning, the Holy Spirit ushered me into a deeper awakening— one that quietly unfolded somewhere between a dream I couldn’t shake and a prayer God had already answered. Something broke in me. Something lifted off me. Something shifted around me. And I realized: how many times have we prayed the same prayers, begging God for clarity, while ignoring the very answers that disturb our comfort? I’m guilty! Sometimes we aren’t deaf— we’re resistant. Because truly hearing God requires surrender. It requires accountability. It requires us to confront the versions of ourselves that learned how to survive but never learned how to heal. And survival has a way of becoming ...