From Past to Present: Experiencing God in the Midst of Healing
Trauma can make the past feel alive in our bodies, even years later. But what if healing isn’t about rushing or analysing, but about being met in the present? This reflection explores how God who is past, present, and future meets us where we are, offering safety, presence, and restoration in the here and now.
From Past to Present: Experiencing God in the Midst of Healing
That He is the great I AM, not bound by time as we experience it. Past, present, and future are held within Him. And yet, our bodies don’t always live in neat timelines.
An Addict Without Their Addiction
This is what loving someone with addiction feels like. A constant loop.
Living in fight or flight. Waiting for the next surprise. A nervous system that never fully softens because, on some level, you know the person hasn’t truly begun healing.
It’s why so many of us are now realising that talk therapy alone is often not enough.
Not by Chance, but by Breath and Design
There was a quiet stirring within, almost like a whisper:
Look at this through the lens of “He breathed into his nostrils the breath of life.”
That moment left me in awe. Not because I suddenly understood the science in a technical sense, but because once again I was reminded: this is not by chance , this is by design, and with purpose.
Making Space to See What Has Been There All Along
When people talk about trauma, we often imagine a plate breaking loud, unmistakable, dramatic. A few large pieces. Visible to all. These are the traumas that show themselves clearly in behaviours, reactions, and symptoms that can’t be ignored.
But that has never felt like my story.
Let It Be: When Relaxation Becomes a Living Scripture
When we try to control, fix, or manage everything ourselves, the cup fills quickly. The space around us shrinks. Our nervous system contracts. The problem becomes larger, closer, louder. We need to let it be.
When Rules Replace Compassion
Trauma-informed practices teach us that healing begins with safety, not fear. Yet within religion and modern Christianity, rules are often upheld without compassion, causing harm rather than restoration.
After the Feast: Reorient, Not Restrict
Over time, these phrases stop being just sayings and quietly become beliefs, beliefs that are often passed down from generation to generation. Especially after celebrations like Christmas, many people wake up the very next day feeling remorse, shame, or the urge to restrict, punish, or control their bodies.
I Don’t Feel Safe: How Childhood Beliefs Impact Insulin and Whole-Body Health
Research increasingly supports diets like Mediterranean and ketogenic approaches for mental health conditions, epilepsy, and bipolar disorder. These diets improve insulin sensitivity, which plays a critical role in both mental and physical health. Yet, for me, it goes deeper than diet, it’s about root causes.
Insulin is not just about sugar, it’s about safety.
Wired for Care: Scripture, Safety, and the Healing Power of Presence
humans cannot remain regulated, grounded, or whole without ongoing relational support. Self-sufficiency was never the goal.
Remembering What the Body Always Knew
A personal reflection on trauma, abandonment, and somatic healing, when the body remembers what the mind couldn’t hold.
Suffering: A Biological Gift
And somewhere along the way, we reinvented the meaning of suffering and joy in ways that have deeply shaped not only our spiritual lives, but our emotional, mental, and even physical ones.
Giving Myself Compassion for Feeling Nothing
I’ve known for a long time that the relationship wasn’t built on love, not in the fairytale sense and not in the warm, connected, nurturing sense either. There wasn’t hatred, but there also wasn’t emotional safety, affection, or genuine care. We said we loved one another because that’s what families are supposed to do.
When Christianity Becomes Just Doing: Returning to a Fully Alive Faith
And we tell ourselves, “I am doing the right things. I am being diligent.” But are we present, embodied, and in relationship with God in the ordinary rhythms of our nervous system?
We can fill our minds to capacity but remain disconnected from our hearts, from our sensations, from the very God who dwells within us.
Before We Pray, We Listen
how often do we as Christians jump straight to prayer?
“I’ll pray for you.”
“Let’s pray!”
“We’ll keep you in our prayers.”
Beautiful intentions… but sometimes those words become a bypass. Not just bypassing their discomfort , but bypassing our own.
Prayer can unintentionally become a way to skip the messy, painful, uncomfortable parts of someone’s humanity.
When Faith Feels Authoritarian: Finding Jesus’ Way in Parenting
But here’s the truth I had to face:
Even after healing much of what lived inside me… I still didn’t know how to parent differently. Because when you’ve spent years or a lifetime parenting from a reactive trauma state…
Belief… It’s More Than What We Think
I’ve felt the pull to lean in even more, to explore the power of belief work. To truly see how identifying and understanding our limiting beliefs can become a doorway to discernment, freedom, and deeper intimacy with Christ.
When God Brings the Unconscious to Light
A quote often used in our work by Carl Jung beautifully mirrors what Scripture has proclaimed all along:
“Until you make the unconscious conscious, it will direct your life and you will call it fate.”
In biblical terms, this is repentance and revelation, a divine awakening where what is hidden in darkness is brought into the light of truth, allowing wholeness and transformation through Christ.
From Shadows to Light: Christian Inner Healing
I believe this is the missing piece for so many of us. We often try to will ourselves into change looking outward for answers or relying solely on our thoughts. Yet true transformation begins by turning inward, into the soma, the body where Christ Himself dwells. Scripture invites us to embody Christ, to let His presence live through us.
Healing in Real Time: My Story of Vulnerability and Growth
It’s about learning, healing, and growing in the here and now. It’s finally having the tools to work through moments as they happen, instead of revisiting them later and letting them shape or define us unnecessarily.