Grace & Grit Letters - Where grace meets grief by Angie Hanson Podcast
Grief doesn’t just break your heart. It quietly changes your address. Not the one your mail gets delivered to. The one your soul lives at. One day you wake up and realize you’re no longer living in the life you once knew. Your house may be the same. Your job hasn’t changed. Your friends are still in your phone. Your favorite coffee shop still knows your order. From the outside, everything looks familiar. But inside? You’ve moved. You now live in a place where dates carry more weight than days. Where birthdays aren’t just birthdays. Where ordinary Tuesdays can suddenly become unbearable because twenty years ago on an ordinary Tuesday, your entire world changed. You live where a song can reroute your entire afternoon. Where the smell of sunscreen reminds you of summers that never got to happen. Where a tiny pair of shoes in a store can steal your breath before you’ve even realized why. You live in a neighborhood where joy and sorrow aren’t enemies. They’re neighbors. They wave to each other from across the street every single day. One moment you’re laughing so hard your stomach hurts. The next, you’re sitting in your car wiping away tears because you heard that song. People who haven’t lived here often don’t understand. Not because they don’t care. But because they don’t know this address exists. They assume you’ve moved on because they’ve moved forward. They wonder why anniversaries still matter. Why birthdays still sting. Why certain months seem heavier than others. They don’t realize that in the world of grief, time isn’t measured the same way anymore. It’s measured in “before.” And “after.” Sometimes they’ll tell you they miss the old you. The truth is... So do you. You miss the version of yourself who believed life made sense. Who assumed tomorrow was promised. Who never imagined memorizing the date your world fell apart. Grief doesn’t just ask you to miss someone. It asks you to become someone new. A person who carries both unbearable loss and unbelievable love. A person who can celebrate and mourn in the very same breath. A person who learns that healing doesn’t mean leaving someone behind. It means learning how to carry them differently. The hardest part of this new address isn’t living here. It’s wondering if anyone else knows how to find you. If you've found yourself living at this address too, I'd love to walk alongside you. Some days it feels like you’re standing on the front porch of a house no one visits. People wave from a distance. They send the occasional text. They mean well. But they don’t quite know how to walk up the path and sit beside you. I don’t blame them. I wouldn’t have known this place existed either. Not before Garret. Not before Jack. Not before grief handed me a new set of keys and quietly whispered, “This is where you’ll live now.” It’s not where I wanted to be. But over the years, I’ve discovered something beautiful. There are neighbors here. Not the kind who borrow sugar or mow your lawn. The kind who recognize the look in your eyes before you’ve said a single word. The grieving mother who quietly reaches for your hand. The widow who nods because she understands. The friend who’s walked through loss and doesn’t rush your healing. The stranger who says, “Me too.” We find each other. We don’t need directions. We already know the way. And maybe that’s what hope looks like after loss. Not moving back to the life we once had. Not pretending this address doesn’t exist. But slowly making a home here. Planting flowers in the places we thought nothing could ever grow again. Leaving the porch light on for the next grieving heart who wanders down this road, wondering if they’re the only one living here. They’re not. Neither are you. Grief changed my address. Love is what keeps making it feel like home. Get full access to Grace & Grit Letters - Where grace meets grief by Angie Hanson at angiehanson.substack.com/subscribe [https://angiehanson.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
33 episodios
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