A Journal for the Mom Who Has Forgotten Her Own Voice
A long letter and slow practice for the mother who has forgotten the sound of her own voice — no rush, no performance, with scripture, body, and a daily place.
A long letter and slow practice for the mother who has forgotten the sound of her own voice — no rush, no performance, with scripture, body, and a daily place.
A letter to the man who has never finished a Christian marriage book — and a quiet account of the kind of book that holds the husband who quietly stopped.
A slow Bible study for married women — worked through the book of Ruth — for the wife whose faith was first someone else’s, and is slowly becoming her own.
A husband’s devotional for the man who reads slowly — a 30-day diagnostic and arc, written for the husband who has tried other devotionals and quietly stopped.
A letter on couples devotionals that don’t embarrass one of you — the slow, plain version for the marriage where one of you finds the bright Christian voice.
Five honest recommendations for the best devotionals for teen girls — picked by an editor who reads them, not by Amazon’s algorithm. Thoughtful picks, no AI-listicle filler.
A teen youth bible guide that doesn’t pretend the problem is motivation — a worked Tuesday example, twelve minutes, one verse, and the small honest practice.
Seven honest faith gifts for teen girls that don’t end up at the back of a drawer — slower than wall decor, sturdier than a verse-mug, written for the girl.
A letter and a slow guide to a journal book for the young woman figuring out her faith — no glitter, no formula, no pressure to have arrived.
Five scriptures on the Christian wife’s role — read carefully, with the cultural baggage acknowledged and the original meaning slowly re-opened.