This too Shall Pass

I might have adult ADD. What began as one simple task quickly unraveled into several others, none of them finished. Pantry items covered the counter. Donation boxes sat open on the floor. And yet, there was no frustration—only grace. I don’t have to answer to anyone or adjust myself for someone else’s expectations. This is my space, and this moment is mine.

My intention was simple: take inventory of the pantry so I could better steward what I already have. I went to the closet where I keep notebooks and reached for one. I almost grabbed a plain legal pad, but a shiny blue notebook caught my eye. I’ve always been drawn to shiny things. Something told me to pick that one. I opened the book.

Oh my!

The first page held plans for the property I once owned—dreams of a beautiful home and flourishing gardens. Those plans never came to life, and for the first time, that realization didn’t bring sorrow. The woman who now owns Spooky Hollow loves the land deeply. She told me it gives her peace. She finished my she shed just as I had imagined and welcomed another woman into that space—someone content with a small home and a quiet life. God moved me away so the land could breathe again, restored through someone else’s hands and heart.

I turned the page.

Oh my!

What I found next was my grief journal from six and a half years ago. Page after page revealed the depth of pain I carried then. At the time, I believed I was handling my grief well. Maybe I was on the outside—but inside, I was shattered. Reading those words reminded me how raw and consuming that season truly was.

And then the realization came, clear and unmistakable: God led me to this notebook at this precise moment.

That shiny blue notebook had a purpose—two of them, actually.

First, a dear friend of mine has recently become a widow. As I reread my therapy notes, I found words and truths I could share with her—small lights to help her place one foot in front of the other as she begins her own journey through grief.

Second, God showed me how far I have come. I still carry wounds, but they are no longer open. They have healed into scars—strong, protective, and holy reminders of survival. The pain did not defeat me. God carried me through it, and I am stronger because of it. That realization filled me with joy.

So much joy that I returned to my pantry task with a lighter heart. I turned on some music and Play That Funky Music began to play. Before I knew it, I was dancing in my beautiful kitchen—alone, yet not alone at all. One song turned into six. When YMCA came on, I carried my joyful noise out onto my new deck—the deck I worked hard for, the one God provided.

As I danced, a memory surfaced. Years ago, at a company Christmas party, no one wanted to be the first to dance. Then YMCA played, and my husband—bold, joyful, and completely unselfconscious—walked onto the dance floor alone. Someone asked me, “Is that your husband?” “Yes,” I said, smiling. “And he’s stone-cold sober.”

His courage broke the tension, and joy followed. Remembering that moment felt like a gift—a reminder that love leaves behind joy, not just grief.

I finished the evening at my daughter’s eating jambalaya with her husband and their four wonderfully loud blessings. I returned home to my sanctuary.

Living alone is not a punishment. It is a season. A sacred one. I had a moment of struggle with it recently, but I recognize now that it was likely stirred by the holidays. Today, I embrace the quiet. I trust God with my future. While I may still imagine a fairy-tale romance, I know that my life is full and complete exactly as it is.

God has blessed me with a home, with peace, with healing, and with joy.

I am deeply blessed.

Alone, But not Always Lonely

Alone, But Not Always Lonely

I am alone. But am I lonely?

I have been widowed for six and a half years. For four and a half of those years, my son and my oldest grandson lived with me, so I was never truly alone. Now, I am—and once again I ask myself the question: am I lonely?

Sometimes.

Missing the Noise

My mom used to tell me that one day I would miss the noise—the very noise I constantly complained about, the noise that never gave me a moment of peace. For years, I was sure that day would never come.

But it has come, and it arrived with a vengeance.

I get it now, Mom. I truly do.

Why Now?

I’ve spent time reflecting on why these feelings have surfaced now, after all these years, and I think I understand why.

Since COVID, I worked remotely. Even from home, I stayed connected to my coworkers throughout the day—through Teams, phone calls, and texts. Many of us had worked together for seventeen years, so it still felt like being “in the office.”

Recently, I changed jobs, and everything shifted. Communication is minimal now—rarely phone calls or texts, and only occasional Teams messages. Whether it’s because they don’t know me yet or simply the culture of the workplace, the silence is impossible to ignore.

Change Upon Change

In all my years of widowhood, I have never felt this alone. I believe it’s the combination of a new job, quiet holidays, and yet another major change—moving to a new city last year. I left behind neighbors and friends I knew and loved.

So much has changed in 2024 and now into 2025.

Some nights, the quiet feels too loud. Sometimes the aloneness is overwhelming. When it snowed in south Mississippi in January 2025, I rushed to the window, amazed by the rare winter wonderland outside. And then I cried – big, sobbing, noisy, ugly cries. There was no one to go outside with, no one to share the beauty of that moment with. At that moment I have never felt more alone in my life. But I pulled myself together. I didn’t rush to fill that void with a relationship just to have companionship.

Finding Community Again

I am filling my days with meaningful things—a new church, a wonderful group of church ladies who welcomed me as if they’ve known me forever, book clubs, and small adventures throughout my new city. I know it will take time to feel completely at home, but I am confident that day will come.

Until then, I thank God daily for these incredible blessings—blessings I know I do not deserve.

Comfortable With the Silence

I share all of this to say that while I am alone—and sometimes lonely—I am comfortable where I am. I am at peace with the silence. I thank God that I do not feel pressured to fill it with a relationship, especially one that is not part of His plan.

In this season of my life, I truly believe God is nudging me to be alone. I went straight from my parents’ house to my husband’s house. I was married for thirty-seven years, yet I never learned to see marriage as the beautiful covenant described in the Bible—because I didn’t know the Bible.

God is working on me now. He is teaching me to be comfortable in my own skin, to turn to His Word instead of a dating app. In the past two years, I have spent more time in the Bible than in my entire life combined, and He has richly blessed me for it.

A Message to Other Women

Ladies, I hope you can learn to be comfortable alone and not rush into another relationship simply to have a man by your side. Wasting time on the wrong person can lead to pain, heartache, and—these days—even disease. Worst of all, it can lead to loneliness while not being alone.

I have been tempted to click on that Facebook dating app, but I never follow through. I want to wait and see what God has planned for me, because His plan is always better than anything I could choose for myself.

That plan may mean I remain alone for the rest of my life—and that is okay. When the ache in my heart returns, I know exactly where to turn. I turn to Him, and to no other.

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“For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the Lord, “plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.” – Jeremiah 29:11