You Don’t Change Your Life by Reading About It

There comes a point where you can read all the books, listen to all the podcasts, save all the inspirational quotes, and still feel like your life is not actually changing.

You Don’t Need an Extraordinary Life to Live With Purpose

What parts of my life make me feel peaceful? When do I feel most like myself? Where do people naturally seek my help or wisdom? What breaks my heart enough that I wish I could help?

When Life Feels Boring: How to Discover What Actually Feeds Your Soul

You notice you don’t have many hobbies that excite you. You may not have a large circle of friends. And if someone asked you what you truly love to do in your free time, you might struggle to answer.

Lakehouse Motivation

What do I want my days to feel like? What kind of woman do I want to become? What have I been tolerating that no longer fits me? What would bring more peace into my life

We Were Poor, But We Didn't Know It

When I was growing up in Appalachia, we were poor. But we didn’t know it. We didn’t have vacations out of town. We didn’t have indoor plumbing until I was in second grade. We didn’t have store-bought wardrobes hanging in our closets. But we had love. And we had music. And somehow, we always had enough.

Things My Sons Will Say At My Funeral

They are not going to begin with, “She was wise.” “She was eloquent.” “She was composed.” No. They are going to look at each other. Smile. And say, “Well… Mom had her own language.”

Things I Swore I'd Never Say As a Mother (But Here We Are)

Before I had children, I had standards. Strong ones. I would be calm. Reasonable. Consistent. Emotionally regulated. I would never contradict myself. Never say, “Because I said so.” Never discipline unfairly. Never become my mother. And yet. Here we are.

The Magic of Ordinary Days

As a nurse, I’ve sat beside hospital beds where life was very quiet. And when people talk about what they miss most, it’s almost never the big things. It’s not the anniversary trips. Not the promotions. Not the fancy dinners. It’s this: “He used to stand in front of the refrigerator in his boxer briefs and drink milk straight from the jug.” The ordinary things that used to drive her crazy.

To The Woman Who Stayed Until She Could Leave

She stayed because leaving wasn’t simple. Because survival is more than courage. Because finances, logistics, and fear collide in a way that makes the heart ache and the mind spin. She stayed because she had to. She stayed through the rage. Through slammed doors, thrown objects, fists against walls. Through the long nights wondering if leaving would make things worse. Through the quiet terror that she might fail her children by making the wrong choice. She stayed while she calculated every risk.

To the Woman Carrying Guilt

Guilt for not being the mother they wish they had been. Guilt for seasons when they were lost themselves. Guilt for choices made while surviving something no one else could see. And sometimes layered on top of that guilt… Shame.

Take the Band-Aid Off

Light shines brightest through broken places. A perfectly sealed vessel doesn’t glow. A cracked one does. When a vessel has been broken and light is placed inside, it escapes through every fracture. The very places we try to hide are often the places that make us radiant. Your scar from rejection? That’s why you notice when someone else feels unseen. Your scar from abandonment? That’s why you stay when others walk away. Your scar from conditional love? That’s why you long to love deeply and freely.

Why Calm Can Feel Boring When You're Used to Chaos

You finally meet someone stable. Kind. Consistent. There are no dramatic highs. No emotional rollercoasters. No guessing games. And instead of relief, something inside you feels restless. You start wondering: “Is there chemistry?” “Is something missing?” “Why doesn’t this feel as intense?” But what if nothing is missing? What if your nervous system is simply used to chaos?