• 🌅 New Mercy for Moms Who Lost It Yesterday

    By Lizzie @ What Makes My Kid Cry Today

    Real Life. Real Laughs. Real Jesus.

    Lamentations 3:22–23 Devotional

    📖 “It is of the Lord’s mercies that we are not consumed, because his compassions fail not. They are new every morning: great is thy faithfulness.” — Lamentations 3:22–23 (KJV)

    💭 Reflection

    Yesterday, maybe you yelled.

    Maybe you cried.

    Maybe you didn’t handle the meltdown, the mess, or the moment with as much grace as you meant to.

    Maybe you went to bed thinking, I should’ve done better.

    But here’s the truth straight from Lamentations:

    “Because of the Lord’s great love we are not consumed… his compassions never fail. They are new every morning.”

    New mercy. Every single morning.

    Not when you’ve earned it.

    Not after a perfect day.

    Right now. Before the coffee. Before the apologies. Before the list of things to “do better.”

    God isn’t looking at you with a checklist.

    He’s offering you compassion that never fails.

    Take a deep breath.

    Today is a new mercy day.

    🙏 Prayer

    Thank You, Lord,

    For fresh mercy in the middle of my mess.

    For not giving up on me when I gave up on myself.

    For compassion that covers my yesterday and gives me hope for today.

    Let me live like I’m loved—even on the hard mornings.

    Amen.

    💛 Grace Note for Today

    Your worst moment yesterday didn’t disqualify you from God’s love today.

    He already knew.

    And He already made a way for you to try again—with mercy in both hands.

    #Lamentations322 #NewMercyEveryMorning #GraceInMotherhood #WhatMakesMyKidCryToday #FaithAfterFailure

  • 🚨 Bonus Post Alert!

    I usually save my funny stories for every other Thursday… but there’s a meteor shower tonight, and I couldn’t resist sharing this one today. If you’re reading this before bedtime, you can actually go outside, look up, and maybe think of my kids… and soap. You’ll see what I mean.

    When You Say “Meteor Shower” and Your Kid Thinks “Bath Time”

    This morning, I told my second son there would be a meteor shower tonight.

    Before I could even describe how magical it would be, my youngest cut me off with:

    “I need a shower?!”

    In his little mind, “shower” only means one thing — the dreaded evening scrub-down. Forget shooting stars streaking across the night sky… this boy thought I was coming for him with shampoo and a washcloth.

    Kids Hear Through Their Own World Lens

    This is the thing about kids — they interpret everything through the filter of their own tiny universe.

    If their world is currently about snack time, bedtime, and avoiding soap at all costs, that’s exactly how they’ll hear you.

    And if I’m honest, we adults aren’t all that different.

    When We Miss the Bigger Picture

    God might be inviting us to watch something spectacular — a “meteor shower” moment in life — and we immediately shrink it down to something mundane, or even unpleasant, because that’s what we’re used to.

    We filter His promises and opportunities through our own fears, past experiences, or expectations.

    Instead of looking up, we stay stuck looking down at the “bath” we think He’s calling us to take.

    Parenting and Faith Require Looking Up

    Part of parenting is gently nudging our kids to see the bigger picture — that the world is more than chores, broccoli, and bedtime.

    And part of walking in faith is letting God lift our chin so we can see the sky He’s been trying to show us all along.

    Your Invitation Today

    Maybe tonight is your chance to literally look up.

    Step outside. Breathe. Watch for streaks of light and remember that God’s beauty is all around us, even when we’re not expecting it.

    Because yes — sometimes you do need a shower. But sometimes, there’s a whole meteor shower waiting for you if you’ll just lift your eyes.

    For the record: we’ll be doing both tonight. Watching the meteor shower and taking showers. Because life is best with a mix of wonder and soap.

  • 💔 To Truly Love Somebody Is to Forgive Them

    Reflections on Love, Betrayal, and Grace

    Forgiveness is easy to talk about… and painfully hard to live out.

    Especially when the one who hurt you was supposed to love and protect you.

    Parental betrayal cuts deep. It shakes the foundation you thought was unshakable. It’s not just an event — it’s a wound that tries to follow you for years.

    What Forgiveness Really Means

    Forgiving someone doesn’t mean pretending the hurt never happened.

    It doesn’t mean trusting them the same way again.

    It doesn’t even mean reconciliation is always possible.

    Forgiveness means you are choosing to release the debt — refusing to let bitterness poison your future.

    Why Forgiveness Is Love

    Jesus didn’t tell us to forgive because it’s easy. He told us to forgive because it’s freedom.

    In Ephesians 4:32, we read:

    “Be kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, as God in Christ forgave you.”

    Forgiveness isn’t about excusing the wrong.

    It’s about letting God be the Judge and the Healer, so you don’t have to carry the burden anymore.

    The Ongoing Process

    Forgiveness is rarely one moment.

    It’s a choice we make — and sometimes remake — every single day.

    You may still feel the sting.

    You may still set boundaries.

    But when you forgive, you’re telling your soul: I will not be chained to this hurt forever.

    🎧 Listen to “To Truly Love Somebody Is to Forgive Them” for a raw conversation about betrayal, love, and how God empowers us to forgive what feels unforgivable.

    🗓 Full episodes every Monday at 6 AM

    ✨ Mini devotionals every Thursday at 5 PM

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