Episode 37 - Learning to Trust the Woman You are Becoming
Podcast 37 - Learning to Trust the Woman You Are Becoming
Real Positive Change Podcast
Event is July 13-17, 2026 - ONLINE - Live Calls @ 4:00 pm Central - Replays
Hello friends, and welcome back to Real Positive Change.
Today I want to talk about something that has been on my heart for quite a while.
Over the past several months, I've become aware of the struggles many women around me are facing. Some have lost their spouse through death. Some are walking through divorce. Others are still married, but life has changed. Their spouse may be dealing with illness, work demands, caregiving responsibilities, or simply unable to carry the added burdens that life has recently presented.
Whatever the reason, these women find themselves carrying more than they ever expected.
And with that comes a flood of thoughts:
"I can't do this."
"This is too much."
"I don't know what to do."
"I have no one to help me."
"How am I going to handle all of this?"
Maybe you've had some of those thoughts yourself.
What strikes me is that the challenge isn't always the situation itself. It's that life has changed, and the woman who used to navigate life in one season is now being asked to navigate a completely different season.
What worked before may not work now.
The routines are different.
The responsibilities are different.
The support systems may be different.
And often this change is unexpected and unwelcome.
Most women naturally ask:
"How do I survive being alone?"
But I don't think that's the question underneath the question.
I think the deeper question is:
How do I trust the woman I am becoming?
Because change, whether we want it or not, creates a new season.
And every new season asks something new of us.
Today's main thought is this:
Keep the strengths that have shaped you. Release the fears that limit you. Trust God as you become the woman this season requires.
I want you to hold onto that thought as we talk today.
Because I believe many women spend so much time mourning who they used to be that they never stop to notice who they are becoming.
Now don't misunderstand me.
Grief is real.
Loneliness is real.
Disappointment is real.
I'm not suggesting we ignore those feelings.
In fact, I think part of healing is allowing ourselves to sit with them.
To acknowledge them.
To honor them.
But not to build a permanent home there.
You can feel grief without becoming grief.
You can feel loneliness without becoming defined by loneliness.
You can miss what was while still moving toward what is next.
That's a difficult balance.
But it is possible.
One of the things I've learned over the years is that there is a difference between being alone and feeling alone.
Being alone is a circumstance.
Feeling alone is an emotional experience.
Many women are surrounded by people and still feel completely alone.
Others spend large amounts of time by themselves and feel deeply connected to God, friends, family, and purpose.
The difference is often found in the stories our mind tells us.
When something difficult happens, our brain immediately begins trying to make sense of it.
And often those thoughts sound like:
"I wasn't prepared for this."
"I can't handle this."
"I don't know enough."
"Everything depends on me."
The problem is that those thoughts create fear.
Not necessarily because they are true.
But because they feel true.
And when we feel afraid, our mind wants to solve everything all at once.
Have you noticed that?
The mind starts racing through next week, next month, next year.
It wants guarantees.
It wants certainty.
It wants a map.
But confidence isn't built by solving your entire future.
Confidence is built by handling today.
One phone call.
One bill.
One doctor's appointment.
One difficult conversation.
One decision.
One next step.
That's it.
And honestly, that's good news.
Because most of us can manage one step.
The problem comes when we try to carry tomorrow, next month, and next year all at the same time.
I often think about a flashlight.
A flashlight doesn't illuminate the entire road.
It illuminates enough for the next few steps.
And that's often how God works.
He gives us enough light for today.
Not because He's withholding something from us.
But because He wants us to walk with Him.
Not ahead of Him.
One of the biggest struggles I see in women during these seasons is trying to figure out what to keep and what to let go of.
They know life has changed.
They know they can't go back.
But they aren't sure what parts of themselves belong in this new season.
Here's what I would say.
Keep your faith.
Keep your compassion.
Keep your kindness.
Keep your creativity.
Keep your resilience.
Keep your wisdom.
Keep your love for others.
Keep your ability to persevere.
Those qualities are part of who you are.
But maybe it's time to release some things too.
Maybe it's time to release the belief that you have to do everything alone.
Maybe it's time to release the idea that asking for help is weakness.
Maybe it's time to release the belief that your worth comes from how much you do for everyone else.
Maybe it's time to release the need to have all the answers before taking action.
You see, many of the strategies that protected us in one season become burdens in another.
And that's okay.
We don't have to criticize the woman we've been.
She got us here.
She carried us through hard things.
She did the best she could with what she knew.
We can thank her.
And then gently release what is no longer needed.
Another thing I want to mention is that healthy thoughts are not the same as positive thinking.
Healthy thoughts are realistic thoughts. They are faith driven thinking.
For example:
Instead of saying,
"I can't do this,"
you might say,
"I haven't done this before, but I can learn."
Instead of,
"I'm all alone,"
you might say,
"I feel alone right now, but I am not without support."
Instead of,
"I have to figure out the rest of my life,"
you might say,
"I only need enough light for today."
Do you feel the difference?
These thoughts don't deny reality.
They simply create room for courage.
And courage is often what we need most.
The truth is, trust isn't built through certainty.
Trust is built through evidence.
Every difficult conversation you handle.
Every challenge you survive.
Every new skill you learn.
Every obstacle you overcome.
You are collecting evidence.
Evidence that says:
"I can trust myself to figure things out."
And more importantly:
"I can trust God to meet me here."
One of the deepest fears women carry is the question:
"What if I don't have what it takes?"
But God never asked us to be self-sufficient.
He asks us to walk with Him.
His promise was never that the road would be easy.
His promise was that we would not walk it alone.
And that changes everything.
Before we finish today, I want to share something exciting.
For those of you listening close to the release of this episode, I'm going to be hosting a special online creative retreat called Tiny Book of Becoming: One Small Step at a Time.
It's a five-day creative retreat where we'll create a beautiful tiny book together.
Each section of the book helps us notice the ways we are growing, learning, trusting, and becoming.
It's really going to be an artful journwey
A chance to slow down, reflect, create, and collect evidence of God's faithfulness in our lives.
If today's message resonates with you, I think you'll absolutely love it.
I'll share the details in the show notes.
As we close, I want to leave you with this thought:
You may not be where you want to be yet.
But don't overlook how far you've come.
The woman you are becoming may feel unfamiliar.
But unfamiliar does not mean incapable.
You are not starting from nothing.
You are building on a lifetime of faith, wisdom, resilience, creativity, and experience.
Keep the strengths that have shaped you.
Release the fears that limit you.
Trust God as you become the woman this season requires.
One day.
One decision.
One faithful step at a time.
Until next time, take good care of yourself, and remember, real positive change happens one thought, one choice, and one small step at a time.