Living Without Bracing for Loss
A Contemplation on Psalm 16:11 and Matthew 6:34
There is a moment in healing
when joy appears
and the body does not immediately flinch.
Not because suffering has been erased.
Not because loss has been rewritten.
But because the soul is no longer bracing.
After long-term grief, joy often feels provisional.
Something on loan.
Something to enjoy carefully, quietly,
with one eye already turned toward its ending.
So when joy arrives, it is often accompanied by restraint.
Enjoy, but do not settle.
Receive, but do not relax.
Be grateful, but stay alert.
The soul stays half-standing.
This posture is understandable.
It is how the soul protected itself
when loss came without warning.
But there comes a time
when what once protected life
begins to limit it.
Why Joy Feels Dangerous After Loss
Grief teaches the nervous system to anticipate reversal.
What rises will fall.
What is given will be taken.
What is loved will be lost.
So joy is handled cautiously.
Measured.
Internally negotiated.
Not because joy is unwanted,
but because it feels unsafe to inhabit fully.
The soul learns to enjoy
while staying ready to move.
This is not ingratitude.
It is vigilance carried forward.
Scripture Does Not Speak of Joy as Something on Loan
It speaks of joy as something rooted.
“In Your presence there is fullness of joy.”
(Psalm 16:11)
Fullness does not mean permanence of circumstance.
It means sufficiency of presence.
Joy here is not dependent on outcome.
It is anchored in nearness.
Jesus names the same movement when He says,
“Do not worry about tomorrow.”
(Matthew 6:34)
This is not denial of loss.
It is release from anticipatory grief.
Joy is not borrowed from the future.
It is received in the present.
When the Body Stops Counting the Cost
There is a subtle shift
when joy no longer feels borrowed.
The body stops scanning for threat.
The moment is allowed to remain.
Laughter is not followed by apology.
Contentment is not explained away.
Peace is not interrogated.
Joy becomes something the soul inhabits
rather than something it manages.
This does not mean
the memory of loss disappears.
It means loss
no longer governs the present moment.
Living Without Bracing
To live without bracing
is not to forget grief.
It is to trust
that grief does not get
the first word over every experience.
Bracing says,
This will hurt later.
Presence says,
This is here now.
Scripture consistently invites this posture.
“This is the day that the Lord has made.”
Not the safe day.
Not the predictable day.
This day.
Joy that is no longer borrowed
is joy that no longer lives under threat.
Theological Integration
Rest ended striving.
Expansion restored desire.
Receiving allowed nourishment.
Joy now asks for something quieter.
Permission to stay.
This, too, is permission.
Joy that is not borrowed
does not promise permanence.
It trusts presence.
It does not deny loss.
It does not let loss speak first.
To live without bracing
is to believe that God is present
not only in survival,
but in delight.
And when joy no longer feels borrowed,
it is because the soul has learned
that goodness does not require a defense.
It may simply be received.
A Closing Reflection
Where do you notice yourself enjoying
while quietly preparing for loss?
What would it feel like
to let joy remain
without bracing?