Hands folded on the kitchen table, I sat bleary eyed staring at the scratches on its wooden surface. I was coming down from one of those gut-wrenching sobs with my eyes swollen and wet, spasms in my chest, and a numbness in my fingertips.
It was all too much. I was trying to plan how to manage my work schedule, my husband’s work schedule, the kids’ daycare and school schedules all on top of bills, cooking, cleaning, and a world-wide pandemic. And I just couldn’t take it anymore. I broke down. It all felt like too much and too hard and too impossible.
And I was angry.
That night, I was in bed, tossing and turning, head aching from my earlier crying and completely unable to relax. I looked up at the ceiling and exasperated, I said to God:
Ugh, on top of EVERYTHING, You’re going to deny me sleep too!
And in His gentleness and mercy, in His fatherly love and affection, He told me, "I know your works, your labor, and your endurance" (Revelations 2:2).
He sees me—in all my suffering and stress. Sometimes, I need to be reminded that the Father sees me as His beloved daughter. He knows everything that is on my heart. He knows the joys and sorrows, the triumphs and failures. He sees it all, and He loves me in all my mess and anger.
That gives me hope. He may not remove every cross, but He makes the load lighter.
[bctt tweet="He knows the joys and sorrows. // @substance_soul" username="blessedisshe__"]
Join us in praying the Act of Hope together today.
Dr. Samantha Aguinaldo-Wetterholm is a wife and mom to four little ones and practices dentistry at a public health community center for low income families in the Bay Area, California. She (unashamedly) thinks ice cream is its own food group and does not leave the house without wearing sparkly earrings. She was a contributing author to All She Had. and our children’s devotional prayer book called Rise Up. Find out more about her here.
