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My Best Decision
That morning messed me up, for the better. I began questioning many things afterward. I started wondering why I was telling people that I was a Christian and what it meant to claim Jesus.
A Message From Your Black Trophy Girlfriend and Your Black Token Friend
Since the horrific, brutal, and disgusting murders of Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, and George Floyd, I have been taking some time to check in with myself. Crying whenever my memory reminds me of the second gunshot that shot through Ahmaud and the raspy voice of George calling for his mother as life was being drained from him with the knee of a power-hungry murderer.
Friend, He’s Got You
Today I want to personally speak with you.
Yes, you. Don’t look around like, “wait is she really talking about me,” because you know that I am indeed talking to you.
(Oh, sorry in advance. I’m going to expose something about you to the world. It’s okay though because I’m here with you. I know I may not physically be right next to you but I’ve got to respect the CDC and keep my distance. So believe me when I say that I’m spiritually right here with you.)
So, let me say this…
Dear Younger Me,
[…]looking at where I am now, I am genuinely grateful for taking that step.
Acknowledging and embracing your struggles is a crucial and often difficult step. It requires authenticity and vulnerability, exposing scars and wounds created by both your actions and the influences of others. Here are three lessons I've learned through this journey…
Dear Justin, I am Sorry
it wasn't until I had said my goodbyes, driven 5 minutes away from camp, and played the beautiful song one camper dedicated to the experience, that I was able to let myself cry. […]
it is when you stop fighting the storm that you can sit in the eye of the hurricane and make it to the end so that you may witness the beautiful rainbow God has designed.
Overcoming My Thorn
I spent five months trying to write this post. Five months of opening a blank page, typing a sentence, and closing the tab. Because this secret — my biggest one — wasn't something I ever imagined saying out loud, let alone publishing on the internet for the world to read.
My fight-or-flight sin, the one I had to lay bare before God, was pornography. And it started when I was in fourth grade.
For years I carried this quietly — through elementary school, through high school, through accepting Christ as my Savior — still fighting something I didn't have words for and was too ashamed to confess. The enemy had me convinced I was alone in it. That good girls, church girls, didn't deal with this. That if anyone ever found out, they would see me differently.
But God had other plans. He used a torn piece of cardboard, a stranger on a stage, and four words — truly loved and free — to show me that the thing I was most ashamed of was the very thing He wanted to redeem.
This post is my testimony. It's about what confession does that silence never can. It's about the freedom that only comes when you stop carrying something alone. And it's about the conversation I believe the church needs to start having — openly, honestly, and without shame.
If you've ever felt like you were the only one fighting something in the dark, this one is for you.

