Letter Twenty: Carrying What Still Matters

Dear Friends,

As life unfolds, not everything is meant to be carried forward. Some beliefs fall away. Other relationships fade. Some dreams quietly dissolve into bigger ones, the same way a stream eventually gives itself to the river, becoming part of something larger than it first imagined. But there are things worth keeping—truths that anchor you, values that steady you, and love that remains long after circumstances shift.

Part of growth is learning what to release. Another part is learning what to preserve. Yet this kind of discernment is rarely easy, because letting go often asks us to walk through uncertainty. We wonder what waits on the other side of fear and whether we will still recognize ourselves once we lay certain burdens down. Not everyone will understand our journey, and that is perfectly all right. We were born unique. Just as two stars do not shine the same way, two lives are not meant to follow the same course. Each of us has been entrusted with a unique path, unfolding according to its own timing and purpose.

As we learn what to carry forward, we often discover that some of our heaviest burdens were never ours to begin with. The expectations of others, the pressure to fit a path that does not belong to us, and the fear of being misunderstood can quietly weigh down our steps. Like stones tucked into a traveler’s pack, these burdens often grow heavier the farther we carry them.

The people who love us walk beside us, but they cannot walk our path for us. They may offer wisdom, encouragement, and sometimes necessary questions, but the deepest calling of your life belongs to you alone. Perhaps this is a good moment to pause and ask yourself what still matters. What continues to bring peace when you return to it? What still feels aligned with the person you are becoming? Let those things travel with you. You do not have to carry every expectation, disappointment, or old definition of success. Instead, you may choose to carry wisdom, compassion, gratitude, faith, and hope.

This week, lighten your load thoughtfully. Keep what nourishes your spirit. Lay down what exhausts your heart. Carry forward what helps you become more fully yourself.

May what you release free you, and may you walk forward with clarity and grace.

With warmth,
Comfort and Joy

Letter Ten: Receiving Goodness Without Fear

Dear Friends,

For many of us, receiving goodness can feel harder than enduring hardship. We brace ourselves, shoulders hunched toward our ears, breath held in our lungs, waiting for the other shoe to drop with the hollow thud that signals the end of happiness. Our eyes dart to shadows in corners, scanning for threats, wondering when this crystalline joy will shatter into jagged fragments. Somewhere along the way—perhaps in childhood bedrooms where promises evaporated, or in adult relationships that withered without warning— we learned to mistrust ease as a glittering mirage in life’s unforgiving desert.

But goodness does not always come with conditions attached, like price tags to expensive clothing. Sometimes it simply arrives on your doorstep like morning sunlight—undeserved as rain in a drought, unexpected as a letter from a forgotten friend, and sincere as a child’s laughter echoing through an empty hallway.

This week, when something good finds you—a stranger’s unexpected smile that crinkles the corners of their eyes, the honeyed silence of dawn light filtering through your curtains, or that rare weightless feeling when your shoulders finally drop away from your ears—try not to rush past it. Let it linger like the last note of a cello, vibrating in the air long after the bow has lifted. Let yourself receive it fully, without the usual armor of self-doubt or the reflexive urge to diminish what you’ve been given.

Receiving joy requires the kind of vulnerability that makes your palms sweat. It asks us to unclench our white-knuckled fingers from the steering wheel of control, to silence the anxious voice that whispers of impending loss just long enough to feel sunshine warming our skin. It invites us to believe, even in the fleeting space between heartbeats, that something luminous and tender might bloom in the garden of our lives without demanding blood or tears as payment.

You are allowed to enjoy what is given—the steam rising from a cup of tea or the unexpected text from an old friend. You are allowed to rest inside goodness, like slipping beneath warm blankets on a winter night. You are allowed to trust joy when it arrives suddenly as a cardinal at the window.

May your heart open just enough to receive the gentle rain of kindness. May fear loosen its hold like frost melting under morning sun. And may goodness feel safe in your presence, a wild creature that finally stops looking over its shoulder.

With tenderness,
Comfort and Joy

Walking with Jesus

Life is a journey filled with twists, turns, and unexpected obstacles. At times, the path is clear and full of joy, while at other moments, it feels uncertain and overwhelming. But for those who walk with Jesus, every step—whether on solid ground or through stormy waters—is guided by His love, wisdom, and grace.

Walking with Jesus is more than just believing in Him; it’s about cultivating a daily relationship with Him. It means surrendering our plans to His will, trusting His timing, and allowing Him to shape our hearts. It’s a continuous journey of faith where we learn to lean on Him, seek His guidance, and follow His example.

Walking with Jesus isn’t about perfection but about progress. It’s about letting His love transform us and reflect through our actions, words, and choices. Just as a traveler follows a map, walking with Jesus requires trusting Him as our guide. Even when we don’t see the full picture, He knows the way. Proverbs 3:5-6 reminds us: “Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways submit to Him, and He will make your paths straight.”

Trust means stepping forward in faith, even when the road is unclear. It means believing that He is working all things for our good, even in the waiting. The Bible is our compass on this journey. It reveals God’s heart, His promises and wisdom for our lives. When we meditate on His Word, we equip ourselves to walk in His truth. Psalm 119:105 says, “Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path.”

Jesus walked in love, showing compassion to the broken, the lost, and the hurting. To walk with Him means to reflect His love in our interactions with others. Ephesians 5:2 encourages us: “Walk in love, as Christ also has loved us and given Himself for us.”

This means showing kindness even when it’s difficult, forgiving others as we have been forgiven, and being a light in a world that desperately needs hope. Walking with Jesus doesn’t mean life will be free of struggles, but it does mean we will never walk alone. When the road gets tough, He carries us. Isaiah 41:10 reminds us of His presence: “Do not fear, for I am with you; do not be dismayed, for I am your God. I will strengthen you and help you; I will uphold you with my righteous right hand.”

Jesus extends an open invitation to walk with Him: “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest.” (Matthew 11:28) The road may not always be easy, but with Jesus, it is never walked alone. Take His hand, follow His lead, and walk forward in faith, knowing that He is with you every step of the way.

Wishing everyone comfort and joy,

Carmen