Religion

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

As Above, So Below: What Remains After the False Structures Collapse

 

When the soul returns carrying truth differently

Some descents end so quietly you do not realize you have emerged until long afterward.

One day you notice your body is no longer bracing in the same way. The constant inner noise has softened. Illusions that once required endless maintenance begin quietly falling away.

You are standing in ordinary life again, yet something fundamental has changed in how the soul inhabits it.

By the end of As Above, So Below, a psychological horror film set beneath the catacombs of Paris where descent becomes confrontation with buried truth, the survivors do not emerge into a perfect world. The city above them remains the same. Grief still exists. Fear does too. Nothing about life has suddenly become safer.

But something false has collapsed inside them.

And that changes how they move through the world afterward.

That may be one of the deepest truths about grief, healing, faith, and transformation. Not that suffering disappears, but that eventually the soul becomes too exhausted to keep dividing itself against what it already knows.

The deepest freedom is not controlling life.

It is no longer needing illusion in order to survive it.

After the Descent

One of the strangest things about truth is how quiet it becomes once it fully settles.

At first, clarity often arrives through disruption. Through exposure. Through loss. Through the slow accumulation of realities that can no longer be emotionally rearranged into something easier to carry.

The deepest exhaustion was never grief alone. It was the endless negotiation with realities the soul already knew were true.

Eventually, though, the noise fades.

What remains afterward is often surprisingly quiet.

It is stillness.

The exhaustion of preserving illusions begins disappearing first. The endless reinterpretation softens. The nervous system slowly stops arguing with what it already knows.

The body unclenches in places it stayed tight for years. A person notices they are no longer rehearsing conversations constantly in advance. They sit in quiet rooms without immediately reaching for distraction.

For many people, that peace initially feels unfamiliar.

Survival trains the body to expect vigilance. It teaches the soul to remain emotionally braced.

So when stillness finally arrives, it can almost feel disorienting at first.

In the story of Elijah alone in the wilderness after emotional collapse, God does not appear through the earthquake, wind, or fire, but through a still small voice afterward.

After enough collapse, the soul often no longer needs spectacle. It only needs truth gentle enough to survive hearing.

In time, even quiet itself can begin feeling holy.

Earlier in the descent, the mirrors felt merciless. Every reflection revealed another fracture, another accommodation, another thing the soul could no longer unknow.

But eventually something shifts.

Reflection becomes less frightening once the soul stops needing illusion to survive what it sees.

The World Looks Different

One of the hardest realities about clarity is that some things become impossible to unknow.

Not because the external world changes completely, but because distortion no longer filters perception in the same way.

Patterns once normalized suddenly feel visible everywhere. Certain emotional environments become impossible to re-enter unconsciously. Certain forms of self-abandonment stop feeling sustainable once the soul fully recognizes their cost.

This does not necessarily make a person harsher.

If anything, clarity often makes people gentler. More compassionate toward the suffering of others. At the same time, it makes them less willing to disappear inside structures that require them to betray what they now clearly see.

Arrival, a film about language, perception, and consciousness transforming how someone experiences time, grief, and reality itself, understands this beautifully.

Louise, the film’s central protagonist, is not spared from sorrow by her deeper awareness. If anything, it deepens her awareness of it. But the deeper awareness also changes how she carries it.

That distinction matters enormously.

Truth does not always remove pain.

Sometimes it teaches the soul how to stop resisting reality long enough to inhabit it honestly.

The patterns do not disappear because they were conquered.

They lose authority because they were finally seen completely.

What Falls Away

One of the quietest forms of transformation is recognizing how much energy survival once required.

Over-explaining. Performing strength. Preserving collapsing structures. Translating unbearable realities into softer stories.

Many of these adaptations were not weakness.

At one point they may even have been necessary.

Human beings often survive by softening reality enough to remain functional inside it.

Then, almost imperceptibly, something begins changing.

The cost of illusion becomes heavier than the cost of truth.

And certain things begin falling away naturally.

Not through force. Not through superiority. Through recognition.

Some things do not leave because we become stronger.

They leave because we finally stop needing them to make reality emotionally survivable.

Often, the deepest changes happen almost invisibly at first.

A person simply stops abandoning themselves in the same ways.

Some grief quiets too.

Not because it healed completely, but because the soul finally stopped needing permission to carry it.

There comes a stage of healing where pain no longer requires constant witnesses in order to remain real.

Truth settles internally.

What Remains

The deepest healing is not becoming untouched.

It is becoming less divided against yourself.

That distinction matters because many modern narratives about healing still secretly promise emotional erasure. They imply that enough growth, faith, therapy, or clarity will eventually remove grief completely.

But grief rarely disappears that way.

Loss remains. Memory remains. Tenderness remains. Certain absences remain permanent.

The goal is not to stop feeling them.

The goal is no longer needing illusion in order to carry them.

In the story of Jacob wrestling with God through the night and emerging at daybreak forever altered, the wound itself becomes part of the transformation.

That image feels deeply honest.

Truth changes the body, not just the mind.

Some experiences permanently alter how a person moves through the world. Certain griefs reorganize the nervous system itself.

Yet fragmentation can still loosen.

A soul can become more whole while still carrying sorrow.

Some forms of peace arrive not when life becomes lighter, but when the soul stops dividing itself against reality.

That may be the deepest form of healing available on this side of eternity.

Not perfection.

Integration.

The Difference Between Survival and Life

One of the strangest moments in healing comes when survival stops feeling like identity.

Many people survive so long that vigilance begins feeling normal and endurance becomes mistaken for peace.

Until one day a person realizes they have not merely been living.

They have been surviving.

The Road, a post-apocalyptic novel about survival, tenderness, and the fragile persistence of humanity after collapse, captures this emotional landscape with extraordinary precision.

The world in the novel remains devastated. Nothing becomes easy. Nothing becomes fully safe. Yet beneath the ruin, the father and son continue speaking about “carrying the fire.”

Not optimism. Not denial.

Something quieter than that.

The decision to remain human after devastation.

That may be one of the most sacred forms of emergence. Life slowly begins reappearing underneath endurance.

Not dramatically.

In smaller ways.

The realization that you noticed sunlight through a window. That music reached you again unexpectedly. That your body relaxed in a room without immediately preparing for disappointment. That you found yourself noticing the weather again.

Tiny things.

Ordinary things.

Evidence that survival is no longer consuming every room inside the soul.

There is also a loneliness in emergence. The world often expects people to return unchanged from places that permanently altered them.

But some descents reorganize a person too deeply for that.

Resurrection Without Erasure

Perhaps the deepest misunderstanding about resurrection is the assumption that it means the disappearance of wounds.

The resurrection narratives never erase the wounds. The risen Christ still carries visible scars.

That image matters profoundly because it reframes healing itself.

Resurrection is not always the removal of suffering. Sometimes it is the restoration of life without denying what has been endured.

The wounds no longer separate the person from love, truth, God, or reality itself.

But they remain part of the story.

The Chronicles of Narnia, C. S. Lewis’s fantasy series about children passing between an ordinary world and a deeper spiritual reality that changes them permanently, carries a similar emotional truth.

The children repeatedly return from Narnia changed in ways ordinary life cannot fully explain. The external world appears familiar, yet internally they no longer inhabit it the same way.

That is often how emergence feels after long descent.

The world may not completely change.

But the soul returns carrying truth differently.

Emergence is not a return to innocence. It is learning how to live truthfully after innocence collapses.

And perhaps that is the real ending of many descents.

Not certainty. Not invulnerability. Not perfect closure.

Integration.

The world above ground may still contain grief, ambiguity, unfinished love, loss, and irreversible things.

But something false no longer stands between the soul and reality itself.

The mirrors no longer need to lie.

And after enough time underground, even light can feel unfamiliar at first.

*****



This reflection is the final part of the As Above, So Below series, which explores patterns, perception, illusion, descent, and the quiet transformations that occur when truth can no longer be avoided.

If you are beginning here, you may want to start with the earlier reflections:


If something in this reflection resonated, these related essays continue exploring grief, perception, survival, integration, and the slow return of life after emotional collapse:

Saturday, May 16, 2026

When the Dew Falls, Part 4: When Life Returns Quietly

 

The slow restoration that does not announce itself

The “When the Dew Falls” series explores the quiet ways God sustains, restores, and carries life forward, often long before we recognize what is happening.

Before sunrise, dew gathers quietly over the landscape.

No storm announces it.
No one watches it arrive.

By morning, the ground simply holds evidence that something sustained it through the night.

Some seasons change suddenly.

A prayer is answered in a way you can clearly name. A burden lifts. A door opens. Something shifts visibly enough that you can point to the moment and say: that was when things changed.

Scripture makes room for those moments.

But it also makes room for another kind of restoration.

The kind that forms gradually, almost beneath awareness, until over time you begin realizing something inside you has started living again.

Again and again, Scripture returns to the imagery of dew.

Not only as provision,
but as renewal.

Not dramatic intervention,
but steady restoration.

Dew does not remake the landscape overnight. It settles slowly over what has endured long periods of dryness, resting gently on whatever still remains alive beneath the surface.

And because it arrives so quietly, it is often mistaken for nothing at all.

By morning, something has been sustained again.

What We Expect Healing to Feel Like

Most people imagine healing arriving like rain: visible, immediate, unmistakable. We expect restoration to feel obvious while it is happening. We assume that if God is moving, something dramatic will shift quickly enough for us to recognize it immediately.

But much of real healing unfolds differently than that.

Sometimes life returns so gradually that you do not recognize it at first, not because nothing is changing, but because the change is quiet enough to be mistaken for ordinary life continuing.

In the movie Shawshank Redemption, a prison drama about hope surviving through years of confinement and quiet endurance, Andy Dufresne remains internally alive long before freedom ever becomes visible externally. What preserves him is not one dramatic breakthrough, but small acts repeated consistently enough to keep hope from disappearing completely.

Long before Andy’s circumstances ever change, something inside him refuses to fully die.

That is often how restoration works too.

Something remains alive before anything outwardly appears different.

Long before the landscape changes visibly, something deeper has already begun holding again.

And if you are still waiting for rain, still waiting for the kind of healing that feels dramatic enough to recognize immediately, it does not necessarily mean nothing is happening beneath the surface.

Some forms of restoration are simply quieter than we expected them to be.

The Forms of Healing We Often Miss

There are seasons where restoration does not feel triumphant.

Nothing suddenly resolves. Grief does not disappear. The past does not become easier to explain.

And yet something begins changing anyway.

You laugh unexpectedly and realize the sound no longer feels unfamiliar. A conversation that once would have undone you lands differently, though you cannot even identify when that shift began. Beauty begins catching your attention again without effort. Slowly, you stop bracing for impact every moment of the day.

One morning you drink your coffee without rehearsing every fear about the future first.

You make plans for next month without immediately assuming something will collapse before then.

You notice yourself entering a room without immediately preparing for disappointment.

You hear yourself singing along to something in the car before realizing you have done it.

Not constantly.
Not perfectly.

But enough to recognize that something inside you is no longer entirely organized around survival.

In A Grief Observed, C.S. Lewis’s reflection on grief after the death of his wife, Lewis slowly discovers that sorrow does not disappear so much as change shape over time. The sharpness softens. His relationship to pain becomes different than it once was.

This too is a form of renewal.

Not the erasure of grief,
but the gradual return of life beside it.

Sometimes the first sign of healing is not happiness.

It is simply realizing sorrow is no longer the only thing alive inside you.

What Scripture Says About Dew

This may be why the image of dew appears so often throughout Scripture.

In Book of Isaiah Isaiah 26:19, dew becomes connected to resurrection itself:

“Your dew is like the dew of herbs, and the earth shall cast out the dead.”

It is astonishing imagery because dew appears too fragile to carry the weight of resurrection. It vanishes by midmorning. It forms silently. Yet Scripture chooses it as a picture of life returning from what appeared gone.

Scripture chooses one of the gentlest things in nature to describe the return of life itself.

Not all resurrection arrives dramatically.

Some forms of restoration begin quietly underground, long before anything visible breaks through the surface.

Life can return before it fully reveals itself.

Perhaps this is why certain seasons feel confusing while we are inside them. We keep waiting for rain while something quieter has already begun restoring us from within.

Blessings That Settle Gently

Book of Psalms Psalm 133 describes the dew of Hermon as a picture of blessing.

Not forceful.
Not overwhelming.
Not performative.

It simply settles gently over the landscape.

And perhaps some of the deepest forms of healing arrive this way too.

Not as emotional intensity, but as steadiness.

The return of peace.
The return of clarity.
The return of rest.
The return of the ability to imagine a future again.

Sometimes blessing looks less like exhilaration and more like finally being able to rest inside your own life again.

Life itself has quietly begun moving again, even where things remain unresolved.

Later, looking back, you realize those quiet moments were carrying far more life than you understood at the time.

The Difference Between Rain and Dew

Rain changes the landscape in ways people immediately recognize. Dew works differently. It settles quietly and steadily, sustaining what would otherwise dry out long before anyone notices it has arrived.

Rain feels dramatic because it is visible.

Dew often goes unnamed entirely.

And yet entire landscapes survive because of it.

So do people.

There are seasons where God restores through visible change. But there are also seasons where restoration happens gradually through endurance, quiet provision, and strength that returns one day at a time instead of all at once.

Those forms of renewal are no less real simply because they unfold more slowly.

In many ways, they are harder to trust precisely because they ask us to believe something may still be growing even when we cannot yet fully see it.

When Life Begins Returning

Sometimes healing does not announce itself when it arrives.

You simply realize one day that you are no longer surviving every moment in the same way.

Something feels lighter.

Not easy.
Not untouched by grief.

But lighter.

You begin caring about things again. You begin creating again. You begin feeling present inside your own life instead of only enduring it.

You realize there are moments now where survival is no longer the only thing happening inside you.

In Better Broken, Sarah McLachlan’s recent album exploring fracture, healing, and emotional survival, brokenness is treated not as the opposite of transformation, but as part of the place where new life begins emerging.

That is often how renewal works too.

Some healing does not restore us to who we were before.

It teaches life how to grow in places that once only held fracture.

Sometimes God does not remove the fracture first.

He simply begins growing life through it.

What Is Quietly Returning

Dew forms while the world is still asleep.

No applause.
No spectacle.
No announcement.

And yet by morning, life has been sustained again.

Perhaps this is why some of the deepest forms of healing are hardest to recognize while they are happening.

They do not arrive loudly enough to divide life neatly into before and after.

They arrive quietly through steadiness returning, through fear loosening its grip, through the gradual realization that life is no longer only surviving inside you.

Some forms of restoration are so quiet they can almost be mistaken for ordinary life returning.

The ability to breathe without constant fear.
The return of steadiness.
The slow reawakening of hope.

What is coming back to you may not arrive all at once, but it will still be life.

Some forms of resurrection do not arrive like thunder.

Some arrive like dew.

*****



This reflection is Part 4 of the When the Dew Falls series, which explores the quieter ways provision, endurance, grief, renewal, and restoration often unfold gradually and without spectacle.

If you are beginning here, you may want to start with the earlier reflections:

When the Dew Falls, Part 1: The Provision You Didn’t Notice (recognizing the quiet ways God sustains)

When the Dew Falls, Part 2: When Strength Comes One Day at a Time (when strength arrives one day at a time instead of all at once)

When the Dew Falls, Part 3: When the Dew Disappears (the grief of things that could not stay)


If these reflections resonated, you may also find echoes of these themes in:

The End of Scanning (what happens when vigilance no longer runs your life)

The Place In Between Where Life Still Meets You (finding nourishment in seasons that are not fully resolved)

The Life You’re Living Still Counts (when quiet survival is still a form of being held)

The Day After Survival (what begins to emerge once survival is no longer the only task)

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

As Above, So Below: When God Breaks the Pattern with You

 

Where repetition becomes revelation

At some point, life stops feeling random.

Not because suffering disappears, but because a person begins recognizing something beneath the surface of things. Different seasons. Different environments. Different forms of struggle. Yet somehow the same atmosphere keeps emerging underneath them all.

A quiet depletion.
A life lived beyond its natural limits.
The strange normalization of exhaustion.

In the movie As Above, So Below, a group descends into the Paris catacombs believing they are searching for something external, only to discover the deeper they travel, the more the tunnels begin revealing what has been buried within them all along.

The descent becomes less about discovery and more about confrontation.

Scripture speaks to this mystery with unsettling simplicity:

“As water reflects the face, so one’s life reflects the heart.”
— Proverbs 27:19

Over time, what lives beneath the surface begins revealing itself outwardly. Not dramatically, but gradually enough that distortion can still feel normal.

At first, most people explain things away.

Stress. Fatigue. Responsibility. Temporary circumstances. A difficult season that will eventually pass.

But repetition has a way of eroding illusion.

Eventually the mirror begins appearing in places that once felt safely underground.

The Descent Beneath the Surface

In As Above, So Below, the deeper the travelers descend, the more unstable reality becomes. Direction collapses. Familiar logic stops working. Buried fears and hidden truths begin surfacing inside the tunnels themselves.

That is often how truth emerges in human life too.

Not through sudden enlightenment, but through descent.

A person slowly begins recognizing how much of life has been organized around endurance rather than aliveness. How easily human beings adapt to depletion. How quickly survival can become mistaken for purpose.

Sometimes the pattern appears through work that consumes identity. Sometimes through grief that reshapes perception. Sometimes through fear, responsibility, performance, or inherited ways of moving through the world.

Different forms.

The same buried architecture.

For a long time, people continue moving through these structures because they appear necessary. Responsible. Even meaningful.

The pattern may appear as endless striving. A life where rest always feels undeserved. A relationship to work, responsibility, or achievement that quietly consumes joy while still appearing functional from the outside.

But some truths only become visible across enough time.

Why Human Beings Adapt to Distortion

Part of what makes distortion difficult to recognize is that human beings adapt to almost anything if they remain inside it long enough.

The unfamiliar eventually becomes familiar.
The heavy begins feeling ordinary.
The unsustainable starts appearing permanent.

Over time, people begin organizing entire lives around surviving what should never have become normal.

Some lose themselves inside responsibility. Others inside achievement, exhaustion, fear, avoidance, or endless striving.

And the longer a person lives inside distortion, the more frightening truth becomes.

Sometimes illusion survives not because people are weak, but because truth threatens the structure their entire life has been built upon.

Because eventually the question is no longer:
“What needs to change?”

The deeper question becomes:
“Who would I be without the structure I built my life around?”

That is where descent truly begins.

When the Illusion Starts Breaking

The Truman Show follows a man who slowly discovers that his entire life has been constructed as a controlled reality television set without his knowledge. As small inconsistencies begin accumulating around him, he becomes increasingly unable to ignore the feeling that something beneath his everyday world is fundamentally wrong.

That is often how awakening begins.

Not suddenly, but through accumulation.

Small fractures in the familiar.
Moments that refuse to settle back into explanation.
The growing sense that reality itself is asking to be faced differently.

People often imagine transformation as dramatic. A single breakthrough. One moment where everything changes overnight.

But most deep change happens much slower than that.

Repetition stretches truth across time until it can no longer hide inside isolated moments.

Eventually something inside the person begins shifting.

Not because the external world changes immediately.

But because the ability to remain on the surface weakens.

Deep grief often becomes the force that finally drives a person beneath the surface of their own life.

The body frequently recognizes truth before the mind is willing to name it.

Exhaustion. Numbness. Disorientation. The realization that something fundamental no longer fits, even if a person cannot yet explain why.

Much like the descent in As Above, So Below, repetition slowly removes every remaining place to hide.

Revelation Takes Time

Many people misunderstand what God may be doing during seasons like this.

Repetition is often interpreted as abandonment. If God truly cared, surely He would remove the suffering immediately.

But what if some truths can only become undeniable through descent?

What if God sometimes allows a person to continue walking through distortion not because He is absent, but because buried truths cannot surface any other way?

That is not punishment.

It is revelation.

And revelation often arrives slowly enough for the soul to survive it.

Looking back, many people eventually realize God did not abandon them inside the repetition. He remained present long enough for illusion to lose its authority. Long enough for truth to emerge beneath explanation, beneath performance, beneath endurance itself.

Not as a distant observer, but as a patient presence guiding a person downward into honesty.

Sometimes God leads a person gently past every remaining illusion until only truth remains standing.

The Stories People Continue Living Inside

Often the hardest thing to release is not suffering itself, but the structure built around surviving it.

The Great Gatsby explores longing, illusion, and the human tendency to remain emotionally attached to an imagined version of reality long after it has begun collapsing. At its center is a man trying to recreate a past relationship that exists more fully in hope and memory than in truth.

Human beings often do the same thing internally.

They remain loyal to versions of themselves, versions of life, versions of meaning that no longer align with reality.

Because distortion rarely announces itself clearly.

It slowly becomes familiar.

Truth rarely arrives loudly.

It emerges gradually, like someone waking up underground.

When the Pattern Loses Authority

Eventually the pattern loses something it once held:

authority.

Authority over perception.
Authority over identity.
Authority over what reality is believed to require.

Not because the person becomes fearless or invulnerable, but because confusion no longer controls their understanding of what they are seeing.

Because once truth becomes undeniable, the soul cannot comfortably return to unconsciousness.

And clarity carries a cost.

Sometimes it dismantles identities. Sometimes it disrupts relationships, beliefs, ambitions, or ways of living that once appeared necessary.

But even painful truth eventually becomes lighter than continued distortion.

Because clarity, though painful at first, eventually creates peace. The soul no longer has to exhaust itself preserving structures built around illusion.

When the Question Changes

Perhaps this is one of the hardest spiritual realities to accept:

God does not always remove distortion immediately.

Sometimes He reveals it progressively, layer by layer, until one day the question is no longer:

“Why does this keep happening?”

Instead, the question becomes:

“How long have I been living disconnected from what is true?”

That is a very different kind of awakening.

Not triumph.
Not superiority.
Not bitterness.

Just truth.

Scripture describes transformation this way:

“Be transformed by the renewing of your mind.”
— Romans 12:2

Sometimes the deeper transformation happens before external life changes at all.

Perception changes first.
Truth surfaces first.

Eventually a person can no longer remain inside realities they once mistook for life itself.

When God Breaks the Pattern

Perhaps God is not always trying to pull a person immediately out of distortion. Perhaps He is leading them beneath it.

Teaching them to see what has been buried. Teaching them to recognize what has become normalized. Teaching them to distinguish between true life and mere endurance.

Most of all, perhaps He is remaining present inside the descent itself.

Because eventually there comes a moment when the old explanations stop working.

The surface collapses.

The explanations that once protected the mind stop holding reality together.

The mirror stops feeling confusing.

The descent has gone too deep for denial to survive intact.

A person realizes they are no longer looking at isolated struggles.

They are looking at the same buried truth reflected repeatedly across different seasons, identities, environments, and years.

Like the travelers in As Above, So Below, they eventually discover the way forward is no longer through avoidance, but through truth.

That realization changes something permanently.

Many people call that transformation.

But often it is something quieter.

Recognition.

The moment the soul finally reaches the truth buried underneath the pattern.

Eventually the soul realizes the purpose of descent was never to remain underground forever.

Because sometimes God does not break the pattern by removing it immediately.

Sometimes He allows the descent to continue until the soul reaches the place where illusion can no longer survive the light.

*****



This reflection is Part 4 of the As Above, So Below series, reflections on patterns, perception, and what surfaces within.

If you are beginning here, you may want to start with the earlier pieces:

As Above, So Below: The World That Mirrors You (when life begins reflecting what is happening beneath the surface)
As Above, So Below: When the Pattern Returns (when what repeats begins asking to be faced)
As Above, So Below: When the Pattern Breaks (when clarity no longer changes what continues)



If something here met you, these may too:

The End of Scanning (when vigilance begins to soften)
The Day After Survival (when clarity arrives after crisis)
God Meets You in the Pain (when suffering becomes revelation)
The Life You’re Living Still Counts (when meaning survives disappointment)

Sunday, May 10, 2026

A Mother’s Day Reflection: Mary at the Cross

 

The holy endurance of love that remains

One of the deepest sorrows in motherhood begins the moment love can no longer protect what it cannot bear to lose.

Before that realization, motherhood often carries a quiet illusion: that vigilance can hold disaster back, that tenderness can shield, that enough love can keep suffering from crossing the threshold.

A mother watches fevers through the night, fastens seatbelts, listens for coughing through bedroom walls, and feels fear rise in her chest when a phone rings too late.

Love begins, at first, as protection.

Eventually, it becomes endurance.

Life slowly introduces every mother to the terrible truth that love cannot stop every wound from arriving. Children grow, hearts break, grief enters homes uninvited, and loss comes anyway.

Somewhere along the way, motherhood becomes less about preventing suffering and more about learning how to remain present inside things that cannot be fixed.

That is part of what makes Mary standing at the cross so haunting.

She cannot stop the nails.

Cannot pull Him down.

Cannot carry this for Him.

She can only remain there while the person she loves suffers in front of her, listening to pain she cannot silence.

The Christian story often focuses on Christ Himself in those final hours. But there is something devastating about looking toward the edge of the scene and seeing His mother still standing there beneath the unbearable weight of what she cannot stop.

Not absent.

Not fleeing.

Remaining.

Simeon once told Mary that a sword would pierce her own soul also.

Standing beneath the cross, maybe she finally understood.

Perhaps that is one of the deepest truths ever revealed about love: sometimes the greatest expression of love is not the power to save someone from suffering, but the refusal to abandon them inside it.

Modern life does not value this kind of presence very much. We celebrate solutions, efficiency, and control. We want pain resolved quickly and grief to become meaningful fast enough to justify its existence.

But there are seasons of life where no wisdom fixes the wound.

There are hospital rooms where love cannot heal the body. Funerals where language suddenly feels too small to carry what has happened. Conversations where relationships quietly fracture despite everyone once believing they never would.

And still mothers rise in the morning.

Still they make breakfast, answer texts, fold laundry, drive to rehearsals, and sit in folding chairs at concerts while carrying entire private worlds of exhaustion inside themselves.

Many mothers know what it means to cry quietly after everyone falls asleep, then wake up the next morning and continue ordinary routines because someone still needs comfort.

So much of motherhood is carrying fear privately so others can keep feeling safe.

So much motherhood exists inside invisible crucifixions.

Not dramatic ones.

Ordinary ones.

The slow ache of watching children hurt.

The fear of not being able to protect them forever.

The exhaustion of remaining emotionally available while privately unraveling yourself.

Perhaps that is why Mary at the cross continues to resonate across centuries.

She embodies a form of love many people eventually recognize in their own lives: loving someone deeply while no longer possessing the power to shield them from suffering.

There is profound loneliness in this kind of love.

Not because love disappears, but because it matures beyond illusion.

Early love often believes:
“If I care enough, I can keep this from happening.”

Mature love eventually learns:
“I cannot stop all suffering. I can only decide whether I will remain present inside it.”

Mothers often become witnesses to entire lifetimes. They remember the child before the heartbreak, the softness before disappointment, the laugh before the world became heavy. They carry versions of people that time itself no longer preserves.

There is something sacred about that.

And something extraordinarily costly.

One of the deepest griefs in motherhood is realizing there are sufferings you cannot carry for your children. You can stand beside them, love them, pray for them, and remain with them, but there are roads every soul must eventually walk themselves.

The world often notices motherhood most during beginnings: births, baby showers, tiny clothes, first steps.

But some of the deepest acts of motherhood happen much later, in quieter rooms, without applause.

Remaining after disappointment, remaining through grief and silence, remaining even when staying emotionally open begins to hurt.

In Arrival, a science fiction drama about language, time and love, a woman comes to understand that loving someone deeply does not guarantee she will be spared from grief.

And yet she chooses love anyway.

That is the mystery at the center of so much motherhood.

Not denial.

But love that continues despite understanding what it may one day cost.

Mary standing at the cross is not simply a portrait of sorrow. It is a portrait of endurance, the quieter kind. The kind that continues loving while powerless. The kind that stays when leaving would hurt less. The kind that understands presence itself can become holy.

Perhaps holiness has always looked less like power than presence.

Less like control than remaining.

Less like preventing suffering than refusing abandonment.

Perhaps this is one of the hardest spiritual truths to accept: resurrection does not erase the reality of the cross.

The wounds still existed afterward.

Love does not heal suffering by pretending it never happened. The Christian story does not deny pain. It transforms its meaning.

Many mothers carry scars from loving people they could not save from grief, heartbreak, distance, or life itself.

And those scars are not evidence of failure.

They are evidence of attachment.

Evidence that someone remained emotionally present long enough to be wounded by love.

Perhaps that is why Mary remains standing in the imagination of humanity all these centuries later.

Not because she possessed power in that moment.

But because she stayed.

Because love stayed.

Because sometimes the holiest thing a person can do

is remain present in the middle of what cannot be repaired.

Perhaps one of the holiest things ever shown to the world

was not power at the cross,

but presence beneath it.

*****



If something here met you, these reflections may too:

Saturday, May 9, 2026

When the Dew Falls, Part 3: When the Dew Disappears

 

The Grief of Things That Could Not Stay

The “When the Dew Falls” series has reflected on the quieter forms of provision that often go unnoticed.

The first reflection considered the quieter ways care can remain present even when it is difficult to recognize. The second stayed within that same rhythm, turning toward the way strength sometimes arrives only in the portion needed for the day itself.

But Scripture does not only speak of dew as provision.

Sometimes it becomes a symbol of what cannot remain.

Not provision.

Fragility.



Dew appears gently. It settles quietly enough that much of it goes unnoticed until light reaches it.

By morning, what covers the ground can seem almost luminous. Yet the same thing that makes dew visible also reveals how briefly it remains. As the day advances, it disappears.

Part of what makes dew beautiful is also what makes it difficult to hold onto.

In Hosea, dew becomes a symbol of something sincere that still does not endure.

In Hosea 6:4, the comparison is direct:

“Your love is like the morning mist, like the early dew that disappears.”

Hosea is not describing falsehood.

He is describing impermanence.

Something can exist honestly within a moment and still be unable to remain beyond it.

A Different Kind of Fragility

There are forms of love, devotion, and connection that feel deeply real while they are present.

They comfort. They reassure. They create the sense of continuity.

Yet some forms of closeness are unable to sustain themselves once conditions change.

Pressure exposes this slowly. So does grief. So does time.

Not everything fragile disappears immediately. Some things fade through gradual retreat, inconsistency, or the quiet inability to continue carrying what once seemed natural.

What makes this difficult is that sincerity and endurance are not always the same thing.

A relationship may contain genuine affection and still be unable to endure.

This tension appears repeatedly in stories centered on grief and loss. In Manchester by the Sea, a film about irreversible loss and the inability to return to a former life, the devastation comes from realizing that something deeply real was still unable to survive unchanged after tragedy.

What once felt permanent slowly becomes something impossible to return to.

The love remains. But the life built around it cannot.

That is part of the sorrow Hosea describes.

Not falsehood.

The grief of something real that could not stay.

What Dew Reveals

Dew and rain both leave moisture behind, but they do not function in the same way.

Rain alters the ground visibly. It saturates deeply enough to change the condition of what receives it.

Dew rests more lightly. It refreshes the surface. It sustains delicately. Yet it disappears quickly once conditions shift.

A porch railing wet with dew at sunrise can appear almost silver in the early light. Yet by late morning, the surface is dry again, as though the moisture was never there at all.

This does not make the dew meaningless.

It simply reveals its limits.

Some things can refresh a life without being able to sustain one.

The comfort was real.

The permanence was not.

Some forms of care arrive this way. They nourish briefly. They help something living continue for a time. But they cannot carry the full weight of a life indefinitely.

A similar recognition unfolds in Demolition, a story centered on emotional dismantling and the slow collapse of structures once assumed to be stable. Grief slowly reveals that parts of the main character’s life had already begun fracturing long before anyone named it.

Some things can be sincere and still unsustainable.

The Difference Between Presence and Rootedness

Part of maturity is learning that presence and permanence are not identical.

Neither are affection and endurance.

We often mistake continuity for certainty because we want what comforts us to remain unchanged.

Some things remain close only while conditions are manageable. Others continue through inconvenience, suffering, uncertainty, and change.

The distinction is not always visible at first. Often it only becomes clear later, after the season itself has already shifted.

This is part of what makes certain losses difficult to interpret. The disappearance of something meaningful can create the temptation to conclude it was never real at all.

But Hosea does not describe dew as imaginary.

Only temporary.

What Cannot Sustain Itself

Later, in Hosea 13:3, the imagery returns:

“They will be like the morning mist, like the early dew that disappears.”

Again, the emphasis is not sudden destruction.

It is instability.

Things without rootedness eventually disperse because they cannot sustain themselves over time.

There are forms of devotion that weaken under pressure. Promises that quietly recede. Ways of living built more on immediacy than endurance.

Eventually, what cannot remain begins to reveal itself through absence.

Like dew lifting from the ground once the heat of the day arrives, some things disappear slowly enough that you do not notice they are gone until the surface has already dried.

What disappears often reveals what we were depending on more than we realized.

That same emotional atmosphere runs through The Leftovers, a series about unexplained disappearance and the emotional aftermath left behind. Rather than focusing on why people vanished, the story becomes an exploration of how absence reshapes the meaning of what once felt stable.

The disappearance itself becomes a form of revelation.

In many ways, that is the emotional landscape Hosea enters.

Not simply loss itself, but the painful realization that what once seemed steady was more fragile than it first appeared.

What Disappearance Reveals

Disappearance has a way of clarifying things that presence can conceal.

As long as something remains near us, it is easy to assume it will continue indefinitely. Familiarity slowly begins to feel permanent.

But absence exposes structure.

It reveals what was deeply rooted and what was only resting lightly on the surface.

Some things disappear suddenly. Others fade slowly enough that the realization comes long after the change began.

Either way, disappearance eventually reveals the strength—or fragility—of what once seemed permanent.

What God Contrasts With Himself

The movement within Hosea does not end with fragility.

It moves toward contrast.

Human consistency changes. Human attachment shifts. Human devotion often struggles to endure beyond circumstance.

God does not present Himself that way.

What remains constant throughout Scripture is not the stability of human love, but the steadiness of His presence within human instability.

Morning removes dew from the ground.

But there are forms of presence that do not disappear with the light.

What evaporates in human hands does not evaporate in His.

What fades in human constancy does not fade in His presence.

Not every form of care can survive every season.

His does.

What Was Still Real

There is a tendency, after loss, to reinterpret everything through the ending. To assume that if something disappeared, it must never have mattered.

But dew still nourishes what receives it.

Some things sustain us for a season without being meant to remain permanently. Some relationships, places, or forms of belonging carry real tenderness while they are present, even if they cannot continue indefinitely.

Grief becomes complicated when what disappeared was both meaningful and unable to remain.

The grief is not always that they were false.

Sometimes the grief is simply that they could not stay.

The Kindness of Seeing Clearly

Dew still matters.

It still appears quietly. It still sustains living things through difficult nights.

But Hosea reminds us that not everything touched by dew becomes rooted deeply enough to endure beyond the morning.

Some things refresh us for a season without remaining for a lifetime.

Some forms of love are only able to carry us part of the way.

And part of maturity is learning not to confuse what was temporary with what was meaningless.

Some things disappear as gently as they arrived, not because they meant nothing, but because they could not stay.

*****



This reflection is Part 3 of the When the Dew Falls series, which explores the quieter ways provision, endurance, loss, and clarity often unfold gradually and without spectacle.

If you are beginning here, you may want to start with the first two reflections:

When the Dew Falls, Part 1: The Provision You Didn’t Notice

When the Dew Falls, Part 2: When Strength Comes One Day at a Time


If these reflections resonated, you may also find echoes of these themes in:

The End of Scanning (what happens when vigilance no longer runs your life)

The Life That Didn’t Take Shape (learning to live with what never fully formed)

The Life You’re Living Still Counts (when quiet survival is still a form of being held)

The Day After Survival (what begins to emerge once survival is no longer the only task)