With the Holiday Season upon us, I’d like to revisit a blog I posted several years ago. As I read through these life-changing moments, I thought about the new readers to my site and wondered if they were experiencing any of these challenging moments today…2018…and decided to repost “Memories…Sweet or Bitter…WHAT WILL IT TAKE?” I pray you’ll find and experience the presence of God this day.
Hugs…DiAne

The sky was blue—I didn’t care. The summer morning was cool, a slight breeze jiggled the leaves—So what? The sun peeked through the needles of the pine tree just off our patio—I squinted. Shrugged. And sat huddled in the darkness of my soul on the cushion of my chair, sipping a steaming cup of coffee, oblivious and untouched by this one-of-a-kind splendid morning.

Gloom saturated my spirit. A tear slid down my cheek. I released a heavy sigh and closed my eyes and whispered, “Lord, if You’re here, I need to feel Your presence, and know You haven’t deserted me.”
It had been well over a year since our daughter’s death. No warning. No time for goodbyes. No I love you. Just gone—
Emptiness.
Loneliness.
And fear consumed me.
Emotionally. Physically. Spiritually.
Over the years I’ve replayed the foolishness of the words I spoke in those moments of grief…Lord, if You’re here…and …I need to know you haven’t deserted me. Of course, God was there, but I was wounded and bleeding so bad I couldn’t feel His presence. No, He hadn’t deserted me, but it sure felt like He had.
In the throes of spiritual cardiac arrest, my heart and my spirit hemorrhaged despair.
God’s word says, “The Lord giveth and the Lord taketh away…” but this was new ground for me. In my troubled state of mind, her death was unfair—a loss from which I would never recover.
Grief does that, you know—causes us to think irrational thoughts and demand absurd must- haves from God if we are to survive. Had the doctors taken an x-ray of my heart, mind, and soul in that moment, they would have admitted me to ICU-Critical Care.
If you had asked, DiAne, what would it take for you to be alive, happy, and well again? I would have shot back… my daughter alive and well. Back with her family and us again.
But without my realizing and because the Spirit lives within me, even when I’m a stupid, sobbing child, He led me to do exactly what the Word of God tells us to do.
“Submit yourselves therefore to God…Draw nigh to God, and He will draw nigh to you…be afflicted, and mourn, and weep…humble yourselves in the sight of the Lord, and He shall lift you up” (James 4:7-9 KJV).
Immediately a very different kind of breeze, the breeze of the comfort of God, physically swirled and wrapped around me in a warmth and secure love I cannot explain, kinda like that warm micro-waved blanket they wrap you in when you’re lying on a gurney in a hospital emergency room. But I understood, without a doubt, God had done exactly what I asked—let me feel His presence. And on that patio some thirteen years ago, I build an altar and worshiped Him. A holy moment in time that stands as a testimony in other times of trial and heartache I don’t understand—He is there!
I’d love to tell you, all these years later, the sorrow is gone. No, not gone. Just different. But I rejoice in the new normal that always follows those first times of utter desperation. If you trust Him to comfort, heal, and give you new hope—even when you believe you can’t move forward—He will carry you!

The question for you today is—what will it take in your time of tragedy? What is enough to move you toward help, hope and healing? Is Jesus enough? Only you can answer that question, sweet friend. Is He?
“And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things are passed away…I will give unto him that is athirst of the fountain of the water of life freely. He that overcometh shall inherit all things; and I will be his God, and he shall be my son” (Revelation 21:4,6-7, KJV).
I have been there when I lost my husband. And through it all, I felt God’s love and peace in a way you just explain. He is faithful
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Yes, He is faithful, even when we aren’t. Thanks for reading and commenting, Ann. You are such a blessing in my life.
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Been there a time or two. His children are never abandoned or begging. ❤ K
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Oh Katharine, isn’t He so good to let us give testimony to that fact…He will never leave us or forsake us!
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Yes. How do people manage in this old veil of tears without Him?
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That’s the problem, they don’t and can’t manage, Katharine. And wonder what in the world is going on…that would be God attempting to get their attention and draw them into His marvelous embrace and grace.
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How I wish everyone couldn’t read this and understand that the pain never goes away. My husband and I lost a son. He was 35. What a beautiful beautiful blog😔
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So many folks think pain must be gone for the healing to occur. And they’re astonished when the pain doesn’t go away, but they learn pain and joy co-exists in your heart. I love to tell my GriefShare folks that grief is God’s roto-rooter that expands our heart’s capacity for His joy! It’s been so humbling to be in a GriefShare group, open my mouth and hear words come out that were not my words. Words that God spoke and allowed me to deliver to hurting hearts. He is good…all the time!
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God is so faithful, and you, DiAne, are so eloquent. I love Him and you! 🙂 Thank you for sharing your heart! 🙂
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Thank you Caryl. I would never have chosen this path, but God has carried me every step of the way and taught me about His comfort, His patience, and His love for each one of us.
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I am so sorry for your loss, DiAne. I can’t begin to imagine your journey of sorrow. But with the Lord at our side, we can still abide in His love, peace, and joy. Just knowing that you will be reunited with your precious daughter again is comforting.God bless you!
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Thank you Karen. Fifteen years later I can say there are still moments of abject grief. But they are just moments that quickly pass. When I said yes to His call for GriefShare I asked God not to ever let my heart heal to the point where I couldn’t cry with those who were new in grief…I asked Him to keep my scars of grief soft and tender, and He has been faithful to answer that prayer. The Word tells us we are to comfort one another with the comfort He has given to us. What a privilege…what a responsibility. I’ve learned you don’t have to have the right words to say…there are no right words when death destroys. Grieving folks don’t need words, they need love, hugs, and acknowledgment that their grief is real, necessary, and valid. Did you know there is a scripture in Psalms that references God keeping our tears in His bottle? Isn’t that precious? Another one of those “secret things that belong to God.” Deuteronomy 29:29
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What a wonderful witness and glorious testimony you have. God’s gift to you to bring comfort to others. Out of our grief come beautiful testaments to the glory of God. His ways are not our ways, nor His thoughts our thoughts. Beauty rises out of our ashes. A flower has to be crushed in order to free its fragrance. And I can smell your beautiful scent in the Spirit, dear Sister. You are a sweet blessing. ❤️🌺
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