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...
My mornings no longer belong to urgency— to the restless annoyance of traffic, to the quiet weight of roles, no longer enslaved to deadlines I once wore without question. Time itself feels altered now— as if God gently placed His hand upon the clock and whispered, “ Slow Down! ” I have chosen a slower rhythm, a sacred pacing— to breathe deeply what I once hurried past as if it held no treasure. And in this softened posture, the unseen begins to speak. Details once buried beneath distractions rise like revelations— tiny, holy fragments of truth waiting patiently to be noticed. And let me tell you— this slowing has not been gentle. I have been unpacking— layer by layer— old wounds disguised as strength, emotional debris I learned to carry, mental noise that once called itself truth. Everything I carried God brought into spiritual focus with 20/20 vision. I now discern what is sacred and what was merely survival. What aligns with purpose. What I have outgrow...