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Monday, February 9, 2026

Table 10

The folded airplane sat on my desk, my name in black calligraphy on one wing, the table I sat at on the other. Out of all the things I chose to lug across continents and oceans, this was one I planned to keep. A little reminder of a beautiful day with perfectly clear skies, a pair of broken shoes, and an unplugged wedding with guests from around the world. I smiled as I remembered my little brother's wedding. Except he wasn't so little anymore; now he was a captain flying for a regional airline, with his MBA, and married to my elegant sister-in-law.

To my right sat a pile of books that I was planning to flip through for a PowerPoint training on boundaries in ministry that I was developing. On top lay the book It's OK That You're Not OK by Megan Devine. The subtitle grabbed me, Meeting Grief and Loss in a Culture That Doesn't Understand. Maybe Megan could understand the sadness that never fully went away. Or expressed itself in odd ways, like eating whole bars of chocolate while working my remote job, or feeling some sort of perverse release when the glass lid slid off the countertop and shattered in a thousand pieces on the kitchen floor. 

Very few people understood grief that could not be neatly defined.  Even fewer felt comfortable to sit in the silence with someone who felt overwhelmed by the sadness. I had walked through the city of Istanbul, tears rolling down my cheeks, passing hundreds of strangers who didn't even give me a sideways glance, let alone ask what was wrong. When we were first married and my tears would well up without warning, my husband would ask why I was crying in the typical fix-it-logical-engineer mind that he had. I don't know was most often my answer. I understood the feeling but I could not explain it to someone who had not experienced the loss with me. 

My brother understood, even though he was just a little boy when our parents split up and we fled from the Middle East. When I simply couldn't hide my emotions anymore, he gave me a hug, handed me a tissue, and sat with me in the dark. My sister understood, as we tried to wade through rules, expectations, and yet another culture with its subculture's heavy religious undertones. She sat with me in the messy liminality without expectations of ever fully processing it all or finding the joy we once knew. When I felt overwhelmed by the heavy atmosphere, my mother understood and sat with me, giving me freedom to breathe, freedom to eat real cheesecake and wear tank tops in 100-degree summer. It was in our loss of the life we had known that we became close as a family—each of us grieving in our own way but drawing close to comfort the other.  

But there was something missing. I struggled to feel that God also understood me. All too often, He was my father's voice, condemning, why wasn't I better, why did I choose to do things He didn't approve of, why didn't I witness more/pray more/fast more? Sometimes I caught a glimpse of a compassionate God, but He was often obscured by the rules and regulations imposed on me by a high-control society. 

I glanced at the time and realized I had just a few minutes left before a scheduled Zoom call. A lady I had briefly met a couple of weeks prior had asked if we could pray together. Fix your face, you don't need to be crying in the call, I told myself. I blew my nose, wiped my eyes, and gave a half-hearted swipe at the wisps of hair just above my ear that refused to lie flat. Moments later, I was introducing myself to R and we began to talk.

How are you doing, really? R asked. The kind compassion in her voice opened the floodgates I had tried so hard to latch shut. I swallowed hard, looked away, and tried to answer without getting emotional, but I couldn't simply say a few platitudes and wrap it up with a neat, I'm blessed, thank you. I had never been good at lying, or even skirting a question, and somehow my heart sensed that here was someone who was safe and could be trusted with the lump of sadness that refused to dissolve. 

What I thought would be a 20, 30-minute max, call turned into over an hour. R asked me meaningful questions, listened patiently and interestedly, and gently reminded me that I was not only loved by God and precious in His sight but that I also had a whole family of brothers and sisters in Christ who were there to support and lift me up. As we prayed for each other, the tears returned, falling unchecked, as she entreated God with words I could not speak but felt deep in my heart. The call ended and I sat at my desk, alone once more, still crying, but this time the room was holy ground, the emptiness filled with God's presence, and the tears from a grateful heart. 

God, if You are anything like R, compassionate, kind, gentle and gracious, then I want to know You more. To be in heaven with You one day. 

When I was a teenager, I heard a speaker say that "God never leads His children otherwise than they would choose to be led, if they could see the end from the beginning." I really struggled with that concept. I had gone through a lot of difficult things that I would never have chosen, let alone repeat if I could choose to live my life over. The hard, the wrong, the unjust, all came because of the impact of sin on the world we lived in. 

I couldn't pretend I understood why the tears fell, why the hard sometimes felt harder than usual, or why God sometimes hid behind a thick cloud of silence. But that morning, as a sister in Christ sat with me and empathized with my heart, I felt God's hand touch me in reassurance that I was not alone. My family, whether by blood or by the blood of Christ, was lifting me up, supporting me, praying for me, loving me, and in doing so, they pushed me up just that little bit higher so my hand could touch the outstretched Hands reaching down to me. Or maybe He had been holding my hand all along.  

I have learned to kiss the wave that throws me against the Rock of Ages. ~Charles Spurgeon