Tag: prayer

  • Mothers of All Kind


    Let’s Talk About It

    A mother is fundamentally defined as a female parent — but anyone who has lived life knows it’s deeper than that.

    A mother is a nurturer.
    A giver.
    A protector.
    A teacher.
    A safe place.
    A woman who pours out pieces of herself so someone else can grow.

    Beyond biology, a mother is defined by her actions — the sacrifices nobody sees, the love that doesn’t run out, the guidance that shapes a child’s life long before they understand it.

    Happy Mother’s Day.

    My mom is no longer here with me. And this weekend always brings a mix of love, memory, and longing. I miss her every single day. Her love shaped me. Her strength raised me. Her absence still teaches me.

    So today, I’m dedicating this post to all kinds of mothers — the ones we had, the ones we needed, the ones we lost, the ones we’re still becoming.

    Motherhood is not one story. It’s many. And every story deserves to be honored.


    The Beginning:

    When Motherhood First Happens

    Motherhood doesn’t start with perfection. It starts with a moment — a shift — a quiet realization that life will never be the same again.

    It begins long before a child understands anything about love, sacrifice, or responsibility. It begins in the heart of a woman who suddenly carries more than her own life.

    Motherhood starts with the shock, the joy, the fear, the responsibility, and the weight of knowing someone now depends on you.

    No one prepares you for the emotional cost. No one explains how your identity stretches, shifts, and reshapes itself. No one tells you that you will lose parts of yourself and find new ones at the same time.

    Love becomes duty.
    Strength becomes required.
    Sacrifice becomes a rhythm.

    Motherhood begins in the quiet, unseen moments — the ones that shape a woman long before her child ever realizes it.


    The Middle: The Sacrifice Years

    If the beginning of motherhood is a shift, the middle is a sacrifice.

    These are the years where a mother gives and gives and gives — often without a thank you, often without a break, often without anyone noticing how much she’s carrying.

    These are the years of sleepless nights, early mornings, long days, and endless responsibilities.

    She works.
    She cooks.
    She cleans.
    She comforts.
    She teaches.
    She protects.
    She holds the house together.
    She holds the family together.
    She holds herself together — even when she’s falling apart inside.

    Dreams get paused.
    Identity gets blurry.
    Her own needs get buried under everyone else’s.

    Most of this work is invisible.
    Most of this work is unspoken.
    Most of this work is taken for granted.

    But these sacrifice years are where a mother’s love is proven — not by perfection, but by presence.


    The Hard Truth: When They Grow Up

    There comes a moment no one prepares a mother for — when the child she raised becomes an adult, and the relationship shifts.

    You can raise them, love them, protect them, sacrifice for them, pour your whole soul into them… and still watch them grow up and forget what it took to get them there.

    This is the quiet heartbreak many mothers carry:

    The unappreciated.
    The overlooked.
    The ones who gave everything and got silence.
    The ones whose children remember the mistakes but not the sacrifices.
    The ones healing from the very people they raised.

    Love doesn’t always return the way it was given.
    Sacrifice doesn’t always get acknowledged.
    Presence doesn’t always get remembered.

    But even in that truth, a mother’s heart keeps loving, hoping, praying, and showing up in the ways she can.

    Real love leaves fingerprints — even when the world forgets who made the mark.


    The Mothers of All Kinds

    Motherhood has never been one story. It has always been many.

    This layer is for every kind of mother, including the ones often forgotten:

    The good mothers — who loved deeply and showed up consistently.
    The complicated mothers — whose love was real but tangled in their own struggles.
    The healing mothers — who decided the pain stops with them.
    The imperfect mothers — who made mistakes but kept trying.
    The overlooked mothers — who carried the weight quietly.
    The mothers who did their best with what they had — even when it wasn’t much.
    The mothers who didn’t know how to love because nobody taught them — but still tried.
    The mothers who carried the weight alone — emotionally, financially, spiritually.
    The mothers whose children grew up and forgot the cost — but still love them anyway.

    Motherhood is layered.
    Human.
    Sacred.
    Flawed.
    Beautiful.
    Painful.
    Powerful.

    Every mother deserves to be seen.


    The Legacy :

    Every mother leaves something behind — a lesson, a pattern, a wound, a strength, a story.

    Legacy is not just what a mother gives her child. It’s what a child carries forward.

    Some of us became the mother we needed.
    Some became the mother we never had.
    Some are still becoming the mother we wish we’d known.

    Legacy is found in the habits we break, the cycles we refuse to repeat, the love we give differently, the boundaries we learn to set, the healing we choose, the forgiveness we grow into, the strength we pass down, and the softness we reclaim.

    Legacy is not perfection — it’s intention.

    “This ends with me.”
    “This begins with me.”

    Their story becomes our starting point.
    Their strength becomes our foundation.
    Their mistakes become our lessons.
    Their love — in whatever form it came — becomes our reminder that we are here because someone tried.

    Legacy is not just what they left us.
    It’s what we choose to carry forward.


    The Grief :

    : For the Ones Who Are Hurting

    Mother’s Day is beautiful for some… but for others, it aches.

    This is for the ones who lost their mother, their grandmother, the woman who raised them, the mother they were healing with, or the mother they were just beginning to understand.

    Grief rises in memories, in silence, in the moments you wish you could hear her voice again.

    Mother’s Day can feel like a reminder of what’s missing, what you didn’t get to say, and the love you still carry with nowhere to place it.

    But even in the weight of it all, grief does not get to win.

    You will still celebrate.
    You will still smile.
    You will still honor the woman who shaped you.

    Grief may visit… but joy still has a home here too.

    If you’re hurting this weekend — you are not alone.
    Your love is valid.
    Your sadness is real.
    Your memories matter.


    The Blessing + Prayer

    May this Mother’s Day meet every woman exactly where she is.

    To the joyful — may your joy multiply.
    To the tired — may strength rise again.
    To the unseen — may heaven remind you your sacrifices were witnessed.
    To the grieving — may comfort wrap around you gently.
    To the ones who did their best — may grace find you.
    To the ones who raised children alone — may God restore what you poured out.
    To the healing — may this be the year your heart breathes easier.
    To the imperfect — may forgiveness flow both ways.
    To the mothers who lost children — may God hold your heart tenderly.

    To every woman who has ever carried, nurtured, protected, guided, or loved — you are a mother in the truest sense.

    May God strengthen your hands.
    May He restore your joy.
    May He heal your heart.
    May He honor your sacrifices.
    May He surround you with love that lifts and sustains you.
    May this Mother’s Day remind you that you matter — deeply.

    Amen.

  • Footprints: The Steps We Take, The Legacy We Leave

    Let’s Talk About It

    The Meaning of a Footprint

    Our feet are not simply the pedestals on which we stand or the motors by which we move. They are the foundations of our presence in the world. Every footprint we leave behind carries a message — a blend of our humanity and the divine imprint of the One who guides our steps. Some prints show where we’ve struggled, some show where we’ve grown, and some reveal the quiet places where God carried us when we couldn’t carry ourselves.

    For years, I never paid attention to how powerful a footprint really is. But the more I studied, the more I realized: our feet tell the truth about our journey. They tell the truth about our ancestors’ journey too. Some of them walked far. Some of them stood firm. Some of them never made it to the places they dreamed of — but their standing became the ground we now walk on.

    A footprint is never just a mark in the dirt. It is evidence of existence. Evidence of endurance. Evidence of purpose.

    What a Footprint Really Is

    A footprint is the impression left by a foot or shoe on a surface. But spiritually and symbolically, it is so much more. It is the path we choose. It is the weight we carry. It is the impact we leave behind. It is the story our life is telling.

    Some people believe their feet took them far. Others are still standing in the same place — but even standing is a form of strength. Even standing leaves a mark.

    When you think about it, our feet are powerful. They carry our purpose, our pain, our progress, and our prayers. They carry the parts of us we show the world and the parts we hide. They carry the dreams we’re chasing and the burdens we’re trying to release.

    Our footprint is the proof.

    The Footprints of Our Ancestors

    Our ancestors left their footprint long before we took our first step. Their footprints weren’t just physical — they were emotional, cultural, spiritual.

    Footprints of survival.
    Footprints of sacrifice.
    Footprints of faith.
    Footprints of prayers whispered over generations.

    We are walking in paths they carved, carrying dreams they never got to finish, and living in answers to prayers they prayed.

    Their footprints didn’t end.
    They extended into us.

    The Footsteps of Those Who Came Before Us

    When I think about the power of a footprint, I can’t help but think about our ancestors — especially those who survived slavery. Many of them had nothing but their feet. No transportation. No protection. No freedom. No guarantee of tomorrow.

    All they had was the strength to run, the courage to walk, and the will to keep moving.

    Their feet carried:
    chains
    hope
    fear
    prayers
    survival
    determination

    Some ran toward freedom.
    Some walked through pain.
    Some stood their ground when standing was all they could do.

    And every one of them left a footprint behind — a mark that says, “I was here. I endured. I survived. I mattered.”

    Those footprints didn’t disappear.
    They became the path we walk today.

    The Legacy of a Footprint

    Tyler Perry once said he is living his footprint — and he has created so many millionaires that his steps will be remembered long after he’s gone. That’s the power of a footprint. It’s not about fame. It’s about impact. It’s about who rises because you walked.

    Some people leave footprints that build bridges.
    Some leave footprints that break generational curses.
    Some leave footprints that open doors for others.

    Footprints are not always loud.
    Sometimes they are quiet, steady, faithful steps that change everything.

    The Footprints Our Children Leave

    Just as our ancestors left their mark, our children are leaving theirs too.

    Some footprints are made over a lifetime, and some are made early — long before the world expects them. My oldest daughter is one of those souls whose steps have always carried purpose. At a young age, she began leaving footprints that stretched farther than her age, her size, or her circumstances.

    She was the first Black girl to win School of Rock All Star in Sugar Land, and that alone carved a path no one had walked before her. She didn’t just perform — she shifted the room. She is actively leaving her mark on the theater community — every role she steps into becomes a footprint they still talk about.

    And she didn’t stop there — she’s still going.

    She continues to leave her footprint in theater with every role she steps into. She has taken on so many impressive characters, including playing Ariel in The Little Mermaid — a role that lit up the stage and showed everyone exactly who she is. And she is still being cast, still performing, still growing, and still building a path that is uniquely hers.

    She became President of the Student Alliance, a leader whose voice carried weight, compassion, and courage. She will graduate college with a legacy already established — not because she tried to be impressive, but because she walked with intention. Every stage she stepped on, every room she entered, every challenge she faced… she left a footprint.

    A footprint of excellence.
    A footprint of resilience.
    A footprint of representation.
    A footprint of faith.

    She became a top winner at the NAACP, adding yet another mark to a path she is still building. And the beauty of it all is this: she is still young, still growing, still becoming — yet her footprints already speak loudly.

    Some people spend a lifetime trying to leave a legacy.
    Some children are born with one in their feet.

    The Footprints Still Forming

    Not every footprint is loud. Not every footprint is fully shaped yet. Some are still forming.

    My youngest daughter is discovering her own steps — learning who she is, what she carries, and what path she wants to walk. Her footprint is gentle right now, but it’s growing stronger every day.

    And my son… he slipped off his path for a moment. Life will do that. But I believe in the power of a returning step. I believe in the strength of a footprint regained. He is fighting his way back, and when he does, his story will leave a footprint worth remembering.

    Some footprints are early.
    Some are steady.
    Some are lost and found again.
    But all of them matter.

    Why One Step at a Time Matters

    And now I understand why people say, “Just keep putting one foot in front of the other.” It’s not just a motivational quote — it’s a survival strategy.

    It’s a reminder that progress doesn’t always come in leaps. Sometimes it comes in slow, steady, intentional steps. Sometimes it comes in the days when you don’t feel strong, but you move anyway. And sometimes it comes in the seasons where standing still is the bravest step you can take.

    We don’t always realize how important our feet are — not just physically, but spiritually and historically. Our feet carry our entire story. They carry our weight, our wounds, our victories, our faith, and our future.

    Every step mattered.

    The Footprint I’m Learning to Leave

    And here’s where my truth comes in.

    I’m guilty. For years, my objective was to push my oldest daughter to become everything I wasn’t. To be better. To go farther. To win where I had lost. I wasn’t trying to control her — I was trying to redeem the parts of myself I thought were too broken, too late, or too far gone.

    But life has a way of humbling you.

    I made bad decisions. I got stuck in my own way. I lost time I can’t get back. But I never gave up. And somewhere in the middle of all that stumbling, I realized something important:

    Growth doesn’t come from perfection.
    Growth comes from refusing to stay stuck.

    I can’t rewrite my past, but I can shape my footprint. I can leave a mark that my youngest daughter can stand on. I can walk in a way that shows her what strength looks like, what healing looks like, what accountability looks like, what faith looks like.

    I’m standing on my footprint now — not the one I wish I had, but the one I’m choosing to create.

    How Will You Leave Your Footprint?

    Every one of us is leaving a trail — through our choices, our healing, our faith, our mistakes, our growth, and our courage.

    Some footprints are loud.
    Some are quiet.
    Some are messy.
    Some are holy.
    Some are still forming.

    But all of them matter.

    Your ancestors left theirs.
    Your children are leaving theirs.
    You are shaping yours right now — with every step you take.

    Every step tells a story.

    What footprint will you leave behind?

    👣 👣 👣