Sunday, June 14, 2026

The Greatest Gift

 When I look back at the woman who first walked into recovery thirty years ago, I barely recognize her.


So much has changed.


Some of those changes fill me with gratitude. Others carry a touch of sadness. Parts of me have been lost along the way, and sometimes I miss who I used to be.


The early years of recovery were not easy.


I walked beside my daughter through her illness. I buried her. Later, I lost my brother, my husband, and eventually my mother.


Grief became a familiar companion.


Yet alongside the losses, something else was happening.


I was changing.


With the help of recovery and therapy, I began untangling old patterns. I learned healthier ways of living, loving, and relating. Some people welcomed those changes. Others drifted away.


Recovery gave me  a new life back, but it also cost me some relationships.


Still, there was so much joy.


There was Jack—my soulmate, my companion through so much of life’s journey.


There was creativity, laughter, friendship, and the simple pleasure of making beautiful things with my hands.


And slowly, over time, something I never thought possible happened.


I learned to love myself.


Not perfectly.


Not all at once.


But enough to look in the mirror and say,


“I love you.”


Those years held some of the deepest sorrows of my life and some of the greatest joys.


And when I look back now, I see that recovery gave me many gifts.


But perhaps the greatest gift was this:


I found God and I found myself.


Saturday, June 13, 2026

Trusting My Intuition

 Last night was another difficult night with bladder pain.

The pain kept waking me, and almost immediately my mind began searching for a reason. It wanted to blame something I had eaten. For the past year, I have lived with many restrictions, afraid that food might be the cause of my suffering.

But recently, I made a different choice.

I chose to trust my intuition.

While my mind searches for physical explanations, something deeper in me believes my body is asking for attention, not punishment.

There is grief here.

Old grief.

Some of it belongs to my relationship with my sister. Some of it belongs to choices that still weigh on my heart, including the pain of rehoming a beloved pet many years ago.

My mind wants answers.

My intuition wants honesty.

Today, I am choosing not to fight what is here.

Not to analyze it.

Not to run from it.

Instead, I will make room for the grief.

I will invite it to sit beside me.

And perhaps, in being welcomed, it will finally have a chance to speak.


Friday, June 12, 2026

The Sister Wound

 Some wounds are easy to name.

This one isn’t.

When I think of my sister, I think of confusion.

As children, we did not get along. I didn’t trust her, and she likely didn’t trust me.

As adults, things became more complicated.

We laughed together. Shared holidays, conversations, and pieces of our lives. At times, she felt like a friend.

And yet, beneath the surface, something never felt safe.

I often felt two versions of my sister existed at once—the one who loved me to my face and the one who spoke differently when I wasn’t in the room.

For most of my life, I pushed those feelings aside.

I wanted to believe we were closer than we were.

She was often the first person I called when I was hurting. I shared secrets, fears, and parts of myself that were precious to me.

Again and again, I chose trust.

And again and again, something inside me felt betrayed.

For sixty years, I swallowed that truth.

Not because I didn’t see it.

Because I didn’t want to.

The loss of a sister’s love is a painful thing to face.

Eventually, something inside me could no longer pretend.

The relationship ended.

Not with understanding.

Not with closure.

Just with a quiet recognition that I could no longer abandon myself to preserve the illusion of what I wished our relationship could be.

Today, I don’t know if I am completely over the hurt.

The betrayal.

The disappointment.

Perhaps healing is not about erasing those feelings.

Perhaps it is about allowing them to be true.

And sitting with them long enough to discover what remains after the grief has spoken.


Thursday, June 11, 2026

Coming Home to Myself

 I have walked a long road.


A road marked by fear and love,

loss and awakening,

grief and grace.


There were times I thought the storms would break me.


They didn’t.


Instead, they taught me how to stand.


How to feel.


How to trust.


The little girl who spent her life searching for safety is still with me.


But she is no longer hiding.


She is seen.


She is loved.


And the woman I have become no longer needs to earn her worth, prove her goodness, or search outside herself for belonging.


What was never mine to carry, I am learning to set down.


The shame.


The fear.


The stories that told me I was not enough.


In their place, something quieter has emerged.


Trust.


Compassion.


Freedom.


I have learned that love does not punish.


That grief and joy can share the same heart.


That healing is not becoming someone new—


it is remembering who you were before the world taught you to be afraid.


Today, I carry both my scars and my wisdom.


Both my losses and my blessings.


Both the child I was and the woman I have become.


And for the first time in my life, they belong to each other.


They belong to me.


I am not arriving anywhere.


I am returning.


Returning to the truth beneath the fear.


Returning to the love that never left.


Returning to myself.

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

The Good Little Girl

 I continue to live with pain.

But this morning, something became clear.


For years, I have done everything the doctors asked of me. Tests. Treatments. Procedures. Appointments.


I followed the rules.


I was the good patient.


And yet, here I am.


Still searching.


Still hurting.


As I sat with that truth, I saw something deeper.


A little girl who learned early that safety came from obedience.


A child who feared punishment if she questioned authority.


A child who learned to trust everyone else’s voice before her own.


I have carried her into every doctor’s office.


Into every decision.


Into every attempt to find relief.


But today, something is changing.


Today, I feel invited to listen more closely to my own inner knowing.


To trust myself.


To stop searching for someone else to rescue me.


What needs healing most may not be my ability to follow instructions.


It may be the fear that tells me I am not allowed to choose for myself.


The fear that says I will be punished if I step outside the lines.


So today, I sit with that frightened little girl.


And together, we practice something new.


Not rebellion.


Not defiance.


Freedom.


The freedom to listen.


The freedom to trust.


The freedom to believe that our voice matters too.