Monday, June 8, 2026

A Prayer for the Month of June

A Prayer for the Month of June




Heavenly Father, I thank You for bringing me into this new month. As I step into June, I place my life, my family, and my work into Your hands. When my path feels unclear, I choose to lean on You rather than my own understanding.Lord, grant me the wisdom to make decisions that align with Your will. Strengthen me with power through Your Spirit, and let Your perfect peace guard my heart and mind. Where there has been delay or exhaustion, I ask for divine renewal, supernatural provision, and doors of opportunity that no one can shut. Go before me, fight my battles, and let Your favor surround me like a shield. In Jesus’ mighty name, Amen.


Trust in the LORD with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways submit to him, and he will make your paths straight." – Proverbs 3:5-6


For Courage and Strength: "Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid; do not be discouraged, for the LORD your God will be with you wherever you go." – Joshua 1:9 


Provision: "And my God will meet all your needs according to the riches of his glory in Christ Jesus." – Philippians 4:19


For Peace: "Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God." – Philippians 4:6

I made my bed today (short story )grief has no expiration date


The sunlight hit the floorboards of my bedroom, a sharp, golden rectangle that felt more like an invitation than an intrusion. It is 2026, and the world has kept spinning through the gears of time, but grief—my grief—has no calendar. It doesn’t recognize the passage of eight years. It doesn’t know that it has been since 2018 since Joseph Parence, my husband, left this world.

My grief has been a heavy, woolen blanket I’ve worn since the day he passed. It muffled the sounds of the world and made the simple act of existing feel like wading through deep water.

But today, something shifted.

I looked at the unmade bed, that familiar landscape of shadows and stagnant rest. Slowly, I pushed the covers back. I put one foot on the floor, then the other. I stood up. I didn’t just wake up; I arose.

I began to smooth the sheets. I fluffed the pillows, placing them exactly where they belonged. I cleaned, organizing the small things that had been left in disarray for too long. With every movement, a little bit of the person I used to be—the woman Joseph loved—seemed to flicker back into existence.

"I made it out of the bed," I whispered into the quiet room.

It sounds so small to anyone else. To the world, making a bed is a chore. To me, today, it was a victory. It was a trophy I had won in a quiet, lonely stadium. I felt a swell of gratitude so profound it brought me to my knees.

God, Jesus, I made it out of the bed.

I opened my Bible. The ink on the pages stayed the same, but the power behind the words felt new. I thanked Him for the breath in my lungs and the stillness of this Sunday morning.

I walked to the window and looked out. I thought of Joseph. I always think of Joseph. I miss you so much, I said silently, a message sent across the great divide. Thank you for being so good to me. Thank you for being the father you were to our kids.

There is no expiration date on the love I hold for him, just as there is no expiration on the sorrow. But today, the sorrow didn't win. Today, the scale tipped just a fraction toward the light.

I am getting myself back, piece by piece, day by day. It is a fight—the good fight—and I am showing up for it. I am leaning into the grace of God, keeping Him at the center, and finding that there is more to my story than just the ending of his.

I smoothed the bedspread one last time, satisfied. Today is a good day. And for the first time in a long time, I am ready to see where it leads.

Saturday, June 6, 2026

Even in the Turbulence stand still trust GOD (short story )



The office was a glass-walled cage, and tonight, it felt like the walls were closing in. He sat at his desk, the blue light of the monitor reflecting in his tired eyes. Outside, the city roared with a frantic, uncaring energy—a turbulence that seemed to mirror the storm raging inside his own chest.

He felt the tremors in his hands, the heaviness in his heart. For months, he had poured his soul into his work, building systems and cultivating relationships that he thought were solid ground. Now, those same grounds were shifting. Jealousy had taken root among his colleagues; he felt their sharp, sidelong glances, the way they whispered when he turned his back, looking for a way to use his exhaustion to propel their own ambitions.

"It’s coming to an end, isn't it?" he whispered to the empty room.

The fear was a cold companion. He looked at his hands—the work he had done, the stability he had fought for—and saw it all dissolving like mist. He had prayed for a change, for a door to open, for the environment to shift, but the air remained stagnant, thick with pressure.

He closed his eyes, pressing his palms against his temples. Oh, Jesus, he thought, the silent cry echoing louder than the city traffic below. The turbulence is rocking my very foundation. I am afraid. I feel alone in this sea.

He reached into his bag and pulled out his worn Bible. His thumb brushed over the familiar gold-leafed edges until he found the place he had been clinging to for weeks. Psalm 37:25. His eyes traced the ink: "I have been young, and now am old, yet I have not seen the righteous forsaken or his children begging for bread."

A deep, shuddering breath escaped him. The world whispered that he was losing everything, but the Word whispered something else: Provision.

He remembered the story of Lot’s wife—the woman who looked back at the burning city and was turned into a pillar of salt, a monument to the fear of letting go. He felt the pull of the past, the urge to retreat into his old ways, his old defenses, his old bitterness. But he stopped. He steeled his spirit.

"I will not go back," he murmured, his voice gaining a sudden, quiet strength. "I cannot go back. My life isn't defined by this job, these titles, or these people. It is defined by You."

The realization settled over him like a warm mantle. He understood then that the "turbulence" was not a sign of abandonment, but a pruning. If he had never felt the ground shake, he never would have looked up toward the heavens.

He didn't need the environment to change to find his peace; he needed to be still in the midst of it.

He stood up, collected his things, and looked out the window at the sprawling, chaotic city. He no longer saw a threat; he saw a field. He was a disciple, and his mission wasn't to build an empire of glass and steel, but to carry the light into the very places where it was darkest.

"Lord," he prayed, closing his eyes once more, "the storm is still here, but I am choosing to be still within it. Keep my heart from turning back. Keep my eyes on You. I trust You with the end, and I trust You with the beginning. Help me to be Your hands and feet, even when the ground moves beneath me. In Jesus' mighty name, Amen."

He turned off his light. He walked out of the office, his step firm. The turbulence remained, but he was no longer tossed by it. He was anchored.

Psalm 37:25 reads: "I have been young, and now am old, yet I have not seen the righteous forsaken or his children begging for bread

A Prayer for the Month of June

A Prayer for the Month of June Heavenly Father, I thank You for bringing me into this new month. As I step into June, I place my life, my fa...