Showing posts with label Faith. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Faith. Show all posts

Saturday, February 28, 2026

Reading The Prophet After Everything

My mom gave me an old, worn-out copy of The Prophet in December 2023 while I was here in New Jersey. It had been sitting in her stash for years -- yellowed pages, softened spine, the kind of book that looks like it has survived more than one lifetime.

I only started reading it yesterday.

And I was not prepared.

Love.
Marriage.
Children.
Prayer.
Farewell.

Those were the sections that hit me really, really hard -- not as beautiful poetry, but as uncomfortable truth.
 
On Love

Almustafa says love will crown you and crucify you.

I used to think that was dramatic language. Now I understand it is not dramatic at all. It is honest.

I loved deeply. I did not love halfway. I did not enter marriage casually. I endured. I stayed. I sacrificed. I mothered. I carried emotional weight that was not always equally shared.

Love did not just give me joy. It broke me open. It exposed my fears. It tested my pride. It revealed how much I could tolerate before collapsing. It showed me how far I was willing to stretch to keep something alive.

And here is the truth I am finally admitting to myself:

The fact that my marriage failed does not mean I failed at love.

It means I loved fully.

If anything, I loved beyond comfort. And sometimes, that kind of love reshapes you through pain.

I was not foolish. I was faithful to love.
 
On Marriage

“Let there be spaces in your togetherness.”

That line unsettled me.

Marriage is not supposed to suffocate. It is not supposed to erase identity. Two pillars must stand apart yet upright.

In my marriage, I stood. I tried to keep standing. I tried to preserve the structure.

But one pillar cannot hold a temple alone.

When one grows and the other resists growth…
When one carries emotional responsibility and the other withdraws…
When animosity replaces partnership…

That is not sacred space. That is imbalance.

I see now that I was trying to sustain something that required two steady pillars. I was exhausting myself trying to compensate for what was missing.

That realization hurts.

But it also frees me from the quiet accusation that I simply “wasn’t enough.”

Marriage requires two whole people. Not one person over-functioning for two.
 
On Children

“Your children are not your children.”

That one pierced me.

I did not try to own my children. I poured into them. I protected them. I sacrificed for them. I built foundations so they could stand strong.

And now there is distance.

It feels like abandonment. It feels like rejection. It feels like something I must have done wrong.

But Gibran’s words forced me to confront something uncomfortable:

They are separate souls.

They have their own journeys -- including their own blind spots, pride, confusion, and emotional immaturity. I cannot force them to see me correctly. I cannot force them to defend me. I cannot force their father to help bridge the emotional gap. I cannot script their emotional development.

I carried them in my body.

But I cannot carry their adulthood.

That is the part no one prepares a mother for.

Their distance is not necessarily a verdict on my motherhood. It may simply be a chapter in their growth -- one that wounds me deeply, but does not erase who I was to them.

I can love them. I cannot control their path.

That is the most painful release.
 
On Prayer

When I reached the section on prayer, I expected comfort.

Instead, I felt exposed.

He says not to pray only in sorrow. Not only in need. Not only in desperation.

And I realized how often I have prayed in survival mode.

I have prayed through a failing marriage.
I have prayed through emotional abandonment.
I have prayed through health scares and silent nights.
I have prayed when I felt alone.
I have prayed when I felt misunderstood.

Those prayers were real.

But what struck me was this:

Prayer is not begging.
Prayer is not bargaining.
Prayer is not panic.

Prayer is connection.

It is not about informing God of my needs. It is about opening myself.

Prayer does not always fix marriages.
It does not force children back.
It does not instantly heal illness.

But it stabilizes the soul.

It softens bitterness.
It loosens resentment.
It quiets panic.

Maybe prayer is less “Fix this for me” and more “Strengthen me within this.”

That thought humbles me.

I do not have to grip everything so tightly.

I can pray without performing.
Without explaining.
Without solving.

Prayer changes me more than it changes circumstances.

And maybe that is the deeper miracle.
 
On Farewell

“A little while, a moment of rest upon the wind, and another woman shall bear me.”

When I read that, I did not think of reincarnation first.

I thought of reinvention.

I have lived multiple lifetimes inside this one body.

The young wife who believed endurance was strength.
The mother who carried everything quietly.
The woman who stayed from 1996 to 2018 in a marriage that did not make her happy.
The woman who walked away.
The mother who now feels the ache of distance.
The woman managing her health, her vulnerabilities, her aging body.
The woman rebuilding identity piece by piece.

I am not the same woman I was ten years ago. I am not the same woman I was even five years ago.

Parts of me have died.

Parts of me have been born.

The line about being borne again feels less mystical and more personal.

I am already that “other woman.”

Not another person -- but another version of myself.

Stripped.
More aware.
Less naïve.
Still capable of love.
Still wounded.
Still standing.

Reading this old, worn-out book now -- not when it was handed to me, but now -- feels intentional.

I was not ready before.

Now I am reading it not as literature, but as a mirror.

Love refined me.
Marriage revealed imbalance.
Motherhood taught me release.
Prayer is teaching me surrender.
Farewell is teaching me rebirth.

My ex-husband’s indifference does not erase my worth.
My children’s distance does not erase my motherhood.
My health challenges do not erase my resilience.

If anything, they prove I have lived deeply.

I am still here.

Still becoming.

And maybe this book found its way back into my hands at exactly the right time.
___________________________
 
I did not read The Prophet as a detached observer. I read it as a woman who has loved deeply, stayed too long, endured silently, mothered fiercely, prayed desperately, and survived quietly. Every page felt like it was peeling something open in me. I see now that my love did not fail — it refined me. My marriage did not collapse because I was weak — it revealed imbalance I tried to carry alone. My children’s distance does not erase my motherhood — it forces me to release what I cannot control. My prayers are no longer just cries for rescue — they are lessons in surrender. And every goodbye I have lived through is not the end of me, but the making of another version of me. I am not destroyed. I am becoming.

Sunday, February 15, 2026

A Letter To God From A Tired Heart

Dear God,

I am coming to You because I have nowhere else to put this pain.

I am placing all of it at Your feet --
every heartbreak,
every unanswered question,
every tear I wipe away when no one is looking.

You see what I carry.

You see the physical pain in my body that will not leave.
The exhaustion in my bones.
The heaviness in my chest that feels like it is pressing inward from all sides.

You see the emotional wounds that reopen daily --
the rejection,
the silence,
the feeling of being erased from the lives I once centered my own around.

And You see the psychological weight --
the doubt,
the second-guessing,
the torment of asking myself what I did wrong.

God, I do not know what else to say to You.

I talk to You every day.
I tell You everything.
And sometimes it feels like You are silent.

Please do not turn Your face from me.


If I have sinned, show me gently.
If I have erred, correct me with mercy.
But do not leave me alone in this valley of confusion.

I need the miracle of healing.

Heal my body -- where pain has made its home.
Heal my heart -- where rejection has settled.
Heal my mind -- where thoughts spiral and accuse me.

I cannot keep bleeding like this.

Father, You know I did not abandon or abuse my children.
You know my intentions.
You know the years I stayed,
the sacrifices I made,
the nights I prayed over them.

If I was wrong, reveal it to me with clarity.
But if I am being punished by misunderstanding,
then defend me in ways I cannot defend myself.

Touch my children’s hearts.

Not to make them feel guilty.
Not to force them.
But to let them see the truth.

Let them understand that what they are doing to me
cuts deeper than any worldly punishment.

Let them see that I still love them.
Let them remember who I have always been to them.

And if reconciliation is not immediate,
then give me the strength to survive the waiting.

God, I am tired of pretending I am strong.

I am not strong right now.


My heart feels like it is screaming inside my chest.
Some days I feel stabbed by memories.
Other days by silence.

Please do not let this pain destroy what is left of me.

Sit with me in this.
Hold me when I feel abandoned.
Speak to me when Your silence feels unbearable.

I do not want to lose my faith.
I do not want bitterness to replace tenderness.
I do not want despair to define me.

I want healing.
I want peace.
I want restoration -- in whatever form You know is right.

Until then, carry what I cannot carry anymore.

I am placing it all at Your feet.

And I am staying here -- not because I understand,
but because I have nowhere else to go.

Amen.

Saturday, February 7, 2026

Faith That Stays When Nothing Is Fixed

Faith during suffering is different from faith during peace.

This is not the kind of faith that celebrates answers.
It is the kind that survives silence.

I pray.
I believe.
And still, the pain remains.

There are days when faith feels less like certainty
and more like choosing not to walk away.

I have learned that suffering does not mean God has left.
But it can feel that way -- deeply, painfully so.

There are prayers I have repeated until the words feel worn.
There are questions I carry without resolution.
There are moments when trust is not confident -- only faithful.

This kind of faith does not fix relationships.
It does not soften hearts on demand.
It does not erase grief.

What it does is quieter.

It keeps me grounded when despair wants to take over.
It reminds me that I am seen -- even when I am not answered.
It allows me to stay tender in a world that has hardened me.

Faith during suffering is not loud.
It does not explain itself well.
It simply remains.

I am learning that God does not always rescue us from pain.
Sometimes He stays with us inside it.

And on the days when belief feels thin,
I hold on anyway --
not because I understand,
but because letting go would cost me more.

For now, this is my faith.
Not triumphant.
Not resolved.
But present.

And that, today, is enough.

Monday, December 24, 2018

At the Church of the Gesu

Christmas Eve Mass at our beloved Church of the Gesu...








Thursday, November 22, 2018

DD's ASHS Reading of Honors, 1st Sem

Thankful for this -- this Thanksgiving Day :)
Congratulations to our daughter, Gina, 
for all the hard work she has given. <3








Friday, July 13, 2018

DS's First-Ever Medical Equipment for LU3 iMED

SUPER EXCITED! DS has already bought the first-ever medical equipment he is required to have and use for Learning Unit 3 (or LU3 1st Year Med Proper) in his INTARMED course at the UP Manila College of Medicine by August.

The entire required medical equipment cost a lot, but this is the first of many needs our son will have to become a doctor. 

So his exciting and challenging journey continues on until 2023 -- as INTARMED is the 7-year accelerated medicine program of the UP Manila College of Medicine. :):)










Thursday, May 24, 2018

Congratulations, DS!

BIG CONGRATULATIONS to and very very PROUD of our future doctor -- DS -- for finishing his 2-year PRE-MED studies in his INTARMED course at the UP Manila College of Medicine! :)

In August, he will be an INTARMED Medicine Proper student and wearing all white already. Thank you, Lord, for all the final exams he was exempted from. 5 YEARS NA LANG! <3






Thursday, April 12, 2018

Our Ateneo Senior High School Family Conference

From our interviewer, Mr. Vincent Galileo L. Loiz: 
"CONGRATULATIONS, YOU ARE NOW A BLUE EAGLE. 
WELCOME TO THE ATENEO." 
<3 :)









Monday, April 2, 2018

DD's Junior High School Moving Up Ceremony Invitation

Excited for DD to finish Junior High School 
and move up to her Senior Year in the Ateneo.
Thank you to my Alma Mater, St. Paul College Pasig, 
for the great years my daughter has spent with you. <3








Sunday, February 25, 2018

With DH & Kids at Lili to Celebrate DD in Ateneo

A long-delayed family date to celebrate (again) DD making it
in the ASHAPE last Jan. 31, 2018 :)











Tuesday, February 20, 2018

DD's Gr. 10 Graduation Shots

Just a glimpse of our DD's 10th-grade 
St. Paul College Pasig graduation photo shots...

In a few months, she will be a Senior High School student 
under the STEM strand at the Ateneo...








Wednesday, February 14, 2018

With DH on V-Day & Ash Wednesday, Plus Date with Teena

It's all in a day's work...
Happy Valentine's and a 
Blessed Ash Wednesday, friends! <3

Lunch at SARSA with DH

Ash Wednesday Mass at the CHAPEL OF THE EUCHARISTIC LORD with DH

Iced tea and dessert after work in STARBUCKS with one of my high school bffs, Teena










Friday, February 9, 2018

With DH & Kids at Sambokojin for ASHAPE

To celebrate DD's successful passing of the ASHAPE or 
Ateneo Senior High Admission and Placement Exam last Jan. 31, 2018 :)









Monday, February 5, 2018

DD's Ateneo Senior High School Acceptance Letter

Thank you, for this answered prayer... <3









Wednesday, January 31, 2018

DD's ASHAPE Results

THANK YOU SO MUCH for granting our prayers, LORD... 
WE are going BACK UP the HILL! <3 <3 <3
Out of over 4,000 applicants who took the ASHAPE 
(Ateneo Senior High Admission and Placement Exam), 
only 320 slots were open to new students --- 
100 from which are reserved for academically 
gifted students coming from the public schools. 
So that leaves 220 available slots and our daughter IS IN! <3 :)
Congratulations, DD! We are soooo proud of you! (y) (y)

We are IN!








Sunday, January 28, 2018

WIth DH & Kids at Gesu, Blessing of My St. Michael Image, & At Pancake House

Heard Mass at the Gesu, and afterwards had Fr. Eric Escandor, SJ bless my St. Michael image 
which I received from DH and the kids on my birthday last year... 

Praying for G's successful application in the Ateneo Senior High School 
which will be released this Wednesday...

Dinner at Pancake House after... Thank you Lord, for this day. <3










Sunday, January 21, 2018

With DH & Kids at the Feast of Sto. Nino in Gesu & At Rustic Mornings

Today is the Feast of the Santo Nino,
and we brought our little Santo Nino de Cebu image along with us.
After the 10:30 a.m. Mass presided by Fr. Nono Bautista, SJ, 
he called all the children for a special blessing in front.

 Lots of little and not so little kids walked to the front,
including our DS and DD! :) 

 Had a yummy brunch at our favorite, Rustic Mornings afterwards. :)








Monday, January 15, 2018

With DH & Kids After DD's ASHAPE Interview & At Rustic Mornings

DD's Ateneo Senior High School interview went very well, and she was interviewed by Mr. Franz Santos. He later informed DD that the results will be posted online at the end of the month.
Please grant our prayers, Lord...







Sunday, January 14, 2018

With DH & Kids Visiting ASHS & At Pancake House

Checking out Room 112 for DD's 
Ateneo Senior High School interview tomorrow at 9 a.m...

Please help and be with her always, Lord...