Tag: trauma-healing

  • A Letter I Wrote But Never Sent

    Sometimes on the journey things get heavy, and when they did, I would turn on voice to text and just “talk” into my notes section of my phone, not just to document the thoughts so I would remember it later, but because when I said it out loud, not only did I feel like it…

  • From Unhealthy to Healthy: Where Healing, Alignment, and Faith Meet

    When Faith Is Taken in Pieces, It Loses Its Power Not everything that was done in my life was wrong. But a lot of it wasn’t right either. Some of it wasn’t healthy. And some of it wasn’t biblical. When faith is taken in pieces—out of context and without intention—it loses its strength. It stops…

  • Silence & Solitude — Part II

    The Clarity It Brings After healing, silence and solitude stop being something you enter — and start becoming something you live from. The noise doesn’t disappear overnight. What changes is how your body responds to it. I started noticing clarity first in my reactions. Things that once sent me into panic, over-explaining, or shutdown no longer had the…

  • 🌿 HEALING LAYERS – PART 1 

    Where My Healing Truly Began: January 2024 Healing isn’t linear, and this reflection comes from a real moment in my journey. I share it as lived experience—honest, unfiltered, and still unfolding. January 2024 was the moment everything inside me began to overflow. What I thought was a mental spiral was actually my nervous system reaching…

  • Welcome Here: This Is a Healing Space

    Welcome. If you found your way here, I want you to know this space was created with intention, honesty, and care. This blog isn’t about having it all figured out. It isn’t about quick fixes, advice, or pretending healing is linear. It exists because healing—real healing—comes in layers, and sometimes you don’t recognize those layers…

  • Healing from trauma is much more complex than I ever imagined.

    It’s like connecting dots to memories and moments you tucked away so long ago, you forgot they were even there. At first, healing feels slow and steady—just enough to notice that something is changing, but not enough to see where it’s leading. And then, almost all at once, things begin to unravel. Moments that once…