Girls Gone Bible - Grief | Girls Gone Bible
Episode Date: June 1, 2024hi ggb :)))) today we're talking about grief. Definition of grief— Grief is the anguish experienced after significant loss, often times the death of a beloved person. Deep distress, an unfortunate... outcome, a cause for suffering. Examples of grief— losing a loved one due to illness, death, or divorce; the ending of a meaningful relationship such as a friendship; being laid off from work or having a dream fall apart, getting injured when you were meant to play sports professionally, planning on having a family and realizing that’s not a possibility for you based on things happening within your own body, etc grief can be a killer. but Jesus is Lord. even over your grief. “He was despised and rejected by men; a man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief, and as one from whom men hide their faces he was despised, and we esteemed him not. Surely, he has borne our griefs and carried our sorrows… he was wounded for our transgressions; he was crushed for our iniquities; upon him was the chastisement that brought us peace, and with his stripes, we are healed” Isaiah 53: 3-5 we care deeply about the state of your hearts. we're in this together. we love you so much. Jesus loves you more. -Ang & Ari GUYS WE'RE GOING ON TOUR!!! Austin, Texas 06/27 https://tickets.austintheatre.org/114... Houston, Texas 06/29 https://cph.evenue.net/cgi-bin/ncomme... please join us. we can't wait to see you. if you’d like to support Girls Gone Bible 🙏🏻🕊️🤍 Paypal- https://www.paypal.me/girlsgonebibleinfo Venmo- https://www.venmo.com/u/girlsgonebible HEY WHILE WE'RE HERE. WOULD YOU BE ABLE TO RATE & LEAVE COMMENTS ON SPOTIFY & APPLE PODS. IT HELPS US. OK BYE NOW LOVE YOU
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Hi, everybody.
I'm Ari.
And I'm Ange.
Maybe we should appoint whoever's going to say it before we do it.
How about you say it today?
Okay.
Hi, everybody.
We've done this for a year.
I still don't know how to do a benjy darshan.
Come as you are, just don't.
Just don't.
Okay.
Hi, everybody.
I'm Ari.
And I'm Ange.
And this is Girls Gone Bible. We talk about
everything from Jesus to spirituality to mental health to relationships. We want you guys to feel
safe with us. We just ask, come as you are, just don't stay that way. She crushed it.
We were just saying how we've been doing this podcast for a year and we still don't know how
to do the introduction.
Are we ever going to get it right?
The funniest thing that has ever happened to us was at the live show when we obviously have like a little bit of an outline for the beginning at least.
We're supposed to do this little skit thing and then go into another part.
And I literally immediately went into this other part and Ari on stage goes, No, and we forgot about Mary and Martha. Oh, I'm so sorry, everybody. But what
would it be without us messing up a little bit? When I'm nervous, like when I'm like, really
nervous. I my Boston accent comes out so bad. Some of you guys have been like, Whoa, your accent was
full fledged. Yeah, because I was so nervous. So anytime you hear me not pronouncing my R's, accent comes out so bad some of you guys have been like whoa your accent was full-fledged today
yeah because I was so nervous so anytime you hear me not pronouncing my r's it's simply because
I'm nervous so I kept saying Martha literally the week leading up to it you went full bossed
and every time you said are we gonna read Mary and Martha and I'd be like, is everything okay, Annie? I literally sound like the guy from Family Guy.
Mary and Martha.
It's not okay.
It's anything but the Boston accent.
I love the Boston accent.
I love it.
I don't want you to lose it.
If you could have one accent, like any accent, which accent would it be?
Probably, like, from the Bronx.
Really? I love it. I'm sure I would hate it if it was my, like, from the Bronx. Really?
I love it.
I'm sure I would hate it if it was my, like, everyone who has a New York accent doesn't like it,
but I love a New York accent.
It makes me feel home.
I could, like, Wolf of Wall Street type deal. Oh, yeah.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, something like that.
Maybe without the drugs.
Before we get into today's episode, what are we doing next month?
That's really, really exciting.
Okay, guys.
We are going on tour.
We are coming to Austin June 27th.
And then we are going to Houston June 29th.
And we are so excited.
We're going to have our cowboy hats on.
We're going to be at our cowboy boots on. We're going to be trucking to Texas. Texas, we love you so excited. We're going to have our cowboy hats on. We're going to be at our cowboy boots on.
We're going to be trucking to Texas.
We're in Texas.
We love you so much.
You know, some of my favorite people live in Texas.
The Bible Belt.
I thought I was your favorite person.
You are my favorite person.
You are my absolute, you know that.
You know that, annoying little sister.
She thinks that I think she's my annoying little sister.
No, Ari goes, because sometimes if we get into like a little like whatever,
and I'm like, I'll like, she can tell that I'm kind of like refraining from asking to come over.
And she's like, Ange, you make it seem like I think you're my annoying little sister.
She has said it so many times.
And I finally went, by the way, I don't think that.
But since you say it all the time, clearly you think I'm your annoying little sister.
Anyway.
I'm sorry.
I want to hang out with you all the time.
Sue me.
Sue me.
Sue me.
She thinks she's from Brooklyn.
Anyways.
No, we are so excited to be in Texas, you guys.
Cry with you.
Hug you.
Talk to you.
Laugh with you.
Like your sister.
It's going to be like a life podcast.
We're going to go deep.
We're going to go deeper than ever.
If you can even imagine me getting even more vulnerable than I already am, I don't know,
but I'm going to try.
But yeah, we're excited.
We love you guys and we're really excited.
So please, we're going to put the ticket link in the description.
We want to see you there.
Please come.
Please come hang out with us.
Anyways.
Anyways.
So everybody, we love you so much.
Happy to be here with you today.
Happy Friday or whatever day you're watching.
Today we're talking about something that's such a highly requested topic because, as we all know,
suffering is the most universal thing that we will all deal with at some point.
And it might not look the same for everyone, but we'll all deal with it.
And so we're going to talk about grief today. And grief comes in so many different forms and at different times
in your life. And I have here the definition of grief. Grief is the anguish experienced after
significant loss, oftentimes the death of a beloved person, deep distress, an unfortunate
outcome, a cause for suffering. Do you want to, do you have like, I know you had a really good
psalm. Do you want to read it? Yeah, I'd love to hear it. Because I haven't, you were telling me
the other night you found a good one and I would love to hear it. Grief is mentioned so much throughout the Bible.
So this was a great topic to go over
because there's just so much to pull from.
It's just the most beautiful prayers you can take.
I like to take Psalms and I like to do them
and I like to read them out loud in first person.
So I'm praying them and it's just so powerful.
We're going to read from Psalm 31. I will be glad and
rejoice in your unfailing love for you have seen my troubles and you care about the anguish of my
soul. You have not handed me over to my enemies, but you have set me in a safe place. Have mercy
on me, Lord, for I am in distress. Tears blur my eyes. My body and my soul are withering away. I am dying from grief.
My years are shortened by sadness. Sin has drained my strength. I'm wasting away from within.
Love the Lord, all you godly ones, for the Lord protects those who are loyal to him,
but he harshly punishes the arrogant. So be strong and courageous, all you who put your hope
in the Lord. This right here, I am dying from grief. My years are shortened by sadness. My body
and my soul are withering away. Have mercy on me for I'm in distress. That's the part that struck
me like a chord. Yeah. Yeah. So I think we can talk about how there are a few examples of grief.
And I'll just read them off of here. It's losing a loved one due to illness, death or divorce,
the ending of a meaningful relationship, such as a friendship, being laid off from work or having
a dream fall apart. Perhaps you get injured when you were meant to play sports
professionally and your dream of being a professional athlete goes to nothing. If you're
planning on having a family and you realize that that's not going to be a possibility for you
based on things that are happening within your own body, these are all things that you grieve.
It's not just when somebody dies, although that is a incredibly
painful thing to go through. Are you have had a lot of grief throughout your life? And there are
a few really significant points. I haven't really experienced grief from losing a loved one. My grandparents on my mom's side
passed away about six years ago and that was incredibly painful. And they were also in their
old age and lived until like 93 and 95. So they were, there was so much peace about it. And
especially, you know, that they're going to heaven and you know, they're in a better place.
So it's different in your situation.
I think there are two massive, three massive times in your life where grief has marked you, marked you.
And so do you want to get into some of those?
Yeah, I call it like my blowout years.
It happened.
My grief happened back to back to back.
My stepdad, who I've never actually talked about, but he was not only the greatest dad, but he was my hero.
He was my best friend.
And it's funny.
My family would always say, God forbid, God forbid something happened to him.
What would Ariel do?
Because he just, he was my world, my lifeline, my everything.
And then it was the first time I ever really experienced anything like this.
He so suddenly got diagnosed with stage four cancer.
And we found out, and that was a shock.
And so then we had hope because they said that, you know, there was, we could go through the chemo. And so we went through the chemo for about six months. And anyone who, you know,
has a family member or has suffered through cancer, you know that's a whole other thing.
It's agonizing to watch the person you love even go through that because you get really sick and you have to watch them go through a lot with chemo.
I'll never forget it.
I was at this job and I had gotten three missed calls from him.
So I called him back. I said,
hey, what's going on? He could barely even speak. He said, you need to get home right now.
I have about 48 hours to live. The cancer had spread. And that was a different type of shock. I don't even exactly remember what happened after that,
but I just remember I didn't even tell anyone I left the job. I got in a cab. I went to the
airport. The six-hour flight back to Boston felt like five minutes because I was in such a blackout.
And then I got, everyone was at the hospital. And I had gotten to the hospital and he, it, I don't even
know who I was looking at. He was just, at that point he had completely deteriorate, deteriorated.
He, I mean, he was yellow. He was withering away. He could barely speak. And, and I just,
away he could barely speak and and I just I remember just just taking his hand and I was like I I I don't even know what am what am I going to do without you like what how how how is this real
right now please what I can't live without you and um he was like just, his last words to me were just, I love you so much and you're
stronger than you think.
And that was the last thing that came out of his mouth.
And that next 48 hours were just grueling.
It was watching him suffer so severely in pain.
And just me and my younger sister just in that room in the hospital just
watching him just deteriorate in the next 48 hours. And so that was really tough. And
when you lose someone like that, it's different when like you lost your grandparents because you
had a peace. they grew up they they
were older and they went in peace but when you watch someone suffer like that and he was young
he was in his 50s and he was really healthy and so it just was like really quick um and so
that was really hard on me and I think we all deal with grief in such a different, we all deal with it so differently. For me, I couldn't, I had to be really strong for my little sister. I had never experienced this. So I had to be tough. And to be honest, I didn't want to deal with it because of what I had to watch. I didn't want to face it.
to watch. I didn't want to face it. And the only way to describe the way I felt was it was almost like I was frozen, but the world just kept going. And it was, my body was just, it was almost shut
down. And then I had to go back to LA and I just remember just suppressing it, not, not, not
believing it. I could, I was in denial. I didn't deal with it my grief turned into anger
and it comes out so randomly I would have days where I could finally get out of bed and then
I'd be like at the red light and I would just get flashes of him in that hospital just in so much
pain and um and I couldn't deal with it I just, I was in denial and I suppressed
it for years. And then what got me through his death was, and I, some people, you know, they,
some who don't have animals can't understand, but my, my dog was like really such a big part
of my life. He was, he was my boy. He, at the time I didn't have God. So I was,
that's when I was, had really bad anxiety and panic attacks. And my dog was my safe place.
He gave me the courage to get out of my house and, and do things. And, and he just, he gave me a love
that made me feel so safe and good. And, and he got me through my dark days. He really did. And so then
he got, he was diagnosed with cancer. It was about a year and a half, a year and a half after
my stepdad died. And so it started bringing up all those feelings again. And I had to go through the chemo again. And, you know,
the doctor then said he only has four months to live. And so then I had to deal with that again
and deal with that loss. How was it, though, to have had Mike have cancer and then Riley gets
cancer? I mean, is there any part of you that's like, this is so weird that this is happening
like this? Yeah, it was. It was the thing with me, the way that I used to deal with things was I was like, I cannot deal with this.
I have to be tough.
Like, I have to, like, this is my baby.
I have to be tough.
I have to fight for him.
I always was very tough.
I was not like the way I am right now.
And so, yeah, so then I lost Rye and I just, again, it was like a blow
and I was like, oh, how, here we go again. What am I going to do? I just, but I had my partner, which
I thought to myself, Riley was ready to let me go because he was ready to give me off because now
I'm going to enter into this new phase of my life,
of starting my life with my partner and having a marriage and later on then having my family.
And so as heartbreaking as that was, I didn't really deal with Rye's death either.
I did for a couple of days, but I felt safe because I was with my partner,
and I knew I was entering into this new phase of my life.
And then shortly after that, I mean, actually right after Rye's death, probably I would say
six to seven months later, it ended with my partner. And then it ended at the same time,
ended with my career. And that's when I snapped that's
when I I I was like Job like I was I was done I I couldn't all of the pain that I had suppressed
from the from my my uh from my stepdad and Riley it just I couldn't, I, I, I, I, something broke.
I could not deal with it anymore. And I just was like, how, how, like, how can this be?
How can I, how can I keep experiencing such deep suffering?
First, you take away my person, then you take away, then Riley's gone.
Now, my future that made me feel
so safe is now gone. And that's, and when you lose the person that you love, when you lose someone
that is still alive, it's grieving, grieving someone that's still alive. That's a whole other
grieving, grieving thing. It's yeah. My, my God, my God. And you're doing all that and you are not even
as strong as you are now. I mean, with Mike and with Riley, I don't think you're really in the
faith at all yet. And then I think when losing your, your partner, you are a little bit,
but still not like you are now. So you didn't have God to rely on. So you were in true survival mode.
Yeah. Like you were not even like you say it all the time. You were you were dead but alive.
You were alive, but you weren't living. Like, I can't imagine what it was like for you to just
try to get through your days when every single cushion that you had in your life, your stepdad,
who you could call, you can't go to him. Your dog, who is your little safety, you can't go to him.
Your partner, who is the one that you would go to for everything else,
now you can't go to him.
So who do you go to?
Well, that was the gift in it all, right?
Yeah.
If I'm certain, if God is ever with you in anything, it's through deep suffering.
Oh, absolutely.
And that was the gift.
That was my gift.
My gosh.
And people don't, people, you can either go one way, you can either sit there and drown in the suffering, or you can say, okay, now what?
And that's what I did.
Yeah.
And I believe that's what God did for me.
My suffering ended up being so profound, and he brought me to my glory. I mean,
that's when I found him through deep grief and suffering. And it was the most painful thing I
had ever been through, but I, it's, it was the most beautiful and that's what he does
through suffering. He brings you to victory. That's what he did.
what he does through suffering, he brings you to victory. That's what he did. And how do you,
can I ask, I'm genuinely curious, how do you reconcile with God the fact that you've had to go through all this suffering? I guess it's because you know that he works all
things together for good. But do you ever have moments that you're like, God, you couldn't have
given me a little bit of a break, Lord.
Like it just all does seem.
And I think a lot of people go through this thing where it's just like they're bombarded with tragedy after tragedy.
And it's just like, can you let me up for air just for a second?
Yeah, it's tough.
It's tough to reconcile with because I it's really hard for me even now.
Like sometimes when I hear stories, just how you have to watch your children.
You know, you go to the sixth floor of the cancer room and you see little kids suffering.
And then you have to, you know, you lose your children when they're first born.
Like there's just, there's such horrific stories that we can't even make sense of. And it's really hard and it's still really hard for me to understand if I'm being
honest. Like I wish I had the answers to it all. I really do on why God can't save certain people
and why certain things have to happen. It's where we truly do live in a fallen, broken world,
but there is redemption in it all.
For sure.
And what's so beautiful in all this pain and suffering is even my best friend,
whose sister who is so close to her who committed suicide,
you see the change in my best friend, Courtney,
and you see how you just, it's, he does something
in the suffering.
And it's, I believe that suffering is connected to so many things.
How didn't I went through the suffering I did and the experience, the losses I did?
I wouldn't know what, I don't think I would have the empathy and compassion.
I wouldn't be able to understand people the way I do. I wouldn't be able to love as deeply as I do.
Um, so as much as I wish I could take them back, have my, my stepdad back and have Riley back,
I'm able to really understand people and the way that some, most people can understand.
And that's a gift and it's beautiful and I'm thankful for it. Um, yeah. Beautiful. So beautiful.
I want to talk a little bit about people deal with the most horrific cancer stories,
whether it's within themselves or somebody that they love. And we're talking about,
like, how do you reconcile that with God? And it is so hard. And there's a mystery about God. If
you actually try to figure God out, you would lose your mind because you can't. He's mysterious,
and there's things we will never understand about Him. But the one thing that we do know is that we
live in a fallen world. God never wanted us to suffer. He never wanted us
to experience the evil, the supernatural evil that is cancer and sickness and disease.
And because we live in a fallen world and because these are things that we unfortunately have to
deal with, there are evils in the world that don't make sense and that don't
seem fair, but God is fair and he does have authority over sickness and disease and illness
and all these things. I thank you for telling all of that. You, I love the way that you share
your heart are and it is, I'm so sorry what you went through, but it's the reason why you're able
to come on here
and just bleed. It's the most beautiful thing. It's why people feel so connected to you. I feel
so connected to you because of the way that your heart is open. Oh, thank you. I love you so much.
I love you too. I know that, you know, grief comes in all different forms. And sometimes like, even though you didn't
lose, you know, someone close to you, you lost your grandparents, but do you have any stories of grief and a different way? Yeah. Yeah, I do. Oh, there's nothing like grieving a relationship.
Yeah, truly. And I say it with a smile because I it's I have I've never really
talked about any sort of relationship on here. But there's one significant heartbreak in my life
that I experienced a level of grief that literally upsets me that I went, that I gave, that I went through something so deeply painful and intense
as this. I was in a relationship with somebody and this person ended up, imagine, I've always had,
I've always wanted to be married, obviously. I think I have some fears around marriage,
some fears around marriage, maybe not working. Um, I've seen obviously so many, just like
everybody else has so many marriages and not in a happy tale ending, happy fairytale ending.
Um, and so I just have a lot of fears around it. And then I remember I met
someone and for the first time in my life, I was like, I would get married tomorrow. I literally
was like, this person is everything that I've ever wanted, everything that I ever wanted. And I'd
never met somebody that I was like, I would give it all up for this right now. It was such a beautiful love. It really was.
And this person ended up being nothing like what I thought he was.
I was completely fooled.
I went, it was only a few months of this relationship, but it took me three times as long to get over this relationship than I was even in it.
times as long to get over this relationship than I was even in it. I was grieving not only missing somebody that I had never loved anybody like this person ever. Granted, there was also ungodly soul
ties involved and that makes things a million times worse because when your soul connects with
somebody else, it's not natural and it's not supposed to happen. I was in this situation where I had lost somebody.
I had to walk away from somebody that I loved so much. I had to do something because I know that
God was calling me to it. I knew deep in my bones that this person was not who he said he was and
not who God wanted me to be with. And while I had so much peace about it from God,
knowing that that's what he wanted, I was also suffering so deeply. And for me,
the grief showed up in major anxiety, major acting out, major. I mean, that's why you have to be so
careful in grief, because grief can cause you to do some things
you would otherwise never do.
Sometimes people act out in ways that are just not like them.
I was, I lost it afterwards.
I lost it.
I was going to any vice that I could possibly find.
My OCD amped up a thousand percent.
I was grieving.
First of all, having this person in my life, I loved him so
much. I miss him so much. It's so painful. I'm also grieving the future that I thought I would
have. Like I saw myself in this situation. I saw we talked about our future. I was grieving what
I thought my life was going to be this idea. And I'm grieving somebody who never existed.
idea. And I'm grieving somebody who never existed. He wasn't even there. It was all a lot. You know what I mean? I was like dealing with all this for the first time. I'd never experienced anything
like it. And that's why it took me so long to get over. Sometimes grief will feel irrational.
It'll be like, how am I suffering so deeply? I'm embarrassed to tell people how bad
I'm grieving over this because it's just like, you should be over it by now, but I'm not.
And I want to be, and I'm doing everything. And I was close to Jesus during this time.
And I still, the one thing that I know for sure, yea, though I walk through the valley of the
shadow of death, I will fear no evil for you are with me. Your rod and your staff, they comfort me. The only way to get out of something is simply to go through it. You
have to go through the valley of the shadow of death, coming from someone who always tries to
go around, who always wants to get out of it, who wants to mask my pain, who wants to run away from
my pain. I don't want anyone to know about my pain. I had to go through it.
And because I fought it for so long, it took me a long time to get over.
This is just one heartbreak.
And it was the worst of my life.
And I remember vowing to myself, being like,
I will never allow myself to feel like this again.
It was insane.
Can I ask how long it took you the grieving
almost a year yeah almost to be fully out of it where I didn't think about this person where I
didn't get triggered by this person or even his name if I heard somebody else say his name I mean
it was like PTSD and and that's what happens especially with ungodly relationships as well, is that Satan has
the ability to just intertwine you with someone that you, God has to literally, I think it's two
things. Jesus is a healer and he heals and you also need time. You have to give yourself the
time. I didn't want to. I would call Socrates every day and I'd be like, Socrates, when is it
going to be over? When is it going to be over? I had to allow myself the time yeah to get through it yeah you know and sometimes the time is like
irrational and other people won't understand and other people might even say to you you should be
over it by now but they're not in your body and they don't know what you're feeling, you know? So good. It's, um, you're, you're right. And there's no, there's no
timeline there. You can't, you can't, grief is something everybody has their own way of dealing
with grief and it's messy and it hurts and it's not fatal, but sometimes it feels that way.
And it's not fatal, but sometimes it feels that way. And it hurts so emotionally that it actually feels so physical. And I just understand what you're saying where I literally, it turned physical.
I was physically sick. I mean, my breaking point was, and I told you guys this before, I got admitted to the hospital.
My body completely broke down.
Grief will have you feeling like you are just not going to make it.
And I just, I pray for everyone who is in such deep grief of the loss.
It hurts.
Loss.
It hurts.
I'm so happy you say that about it being physical because Psalm 31 9 says,
Be merciful to me, O Lord, for I am in distress.
My eyes grow weak with sorrow, my soul and body with grief.
Your soul and body becoming weak with grief.
It makes you weak.
Grief sits on your chest.
It's not just in you.
It's not just around you.
It's on you right here.
And you can never have relief.
It feels like there is no relief.
And it's all- all encompassing. It's
all the time. Like you said earlier, it's like you're still, but the world is moving around you.
Grief. It just feels like it's you and your grief and everybody's just living their merry lives,
going back and forth. And you're sitting there being like, I'm not, this is not normal. Dead,
dead. I wonder if you'll ever even breathe easy again. I, yeah, I, because, because I went through so much grief, I can tell you that the, the,
the one thing like after going through so much and being backed up to the, in a corner
to where I couldn't be, I couldn't suppress it anymore.
The one thing God taught me through that is don't run from it. Like when, when I,
I, he, he, he could not allow me to run from it again. Yeah. I, I, and the best thing I did,
that's why I can come on here every day and, and, and be so vulnerable because that's what
truly set me free. Grief is such a natural part of life. And I feel like sometimes as Christians, we put on this, and I'm guilty of it,
where it's almost like toxic positivity in a way where I know some Christians are like,
no, Jesus is the greatest.
And so we can't go through anything.
Depression can't exist.
Clearly, you're not praying enough.
Like clearly, you're not doing enough.
Clearly, you don't love Jesus enough because everything is great and he died for it
all. And while that's true, but it's not true because even Jesus wept, even Jesus felt grief.
And it says in Ecclesiastes that there is a time for everything and a season for every activity
under heaven, a time to be born and a time to die,
a time to weep and a time to laugh, a time to mourn and a time to dance. So there is a time to
weep and there is a time to mourn. And then I love this little passage from John chapter 11.
It's when Lazarus dies and it's the first time that we, and first of all, Jesus showed an array of
emotions throughout the Bible. He experienced rage. I don't know, maybe people wouldn't describe it
as rage, but he was so upset when people were selling merchandise in the temple that he flipped
the tables over and he said, how can you sell merchandise and make it a place of profit,
my father's home? And he experiences so many things. He literally experienced such
anxiety when he was asking God, like, let this cup pass from me. And then it says in John chapter 11,
when Mary reached the place where Jesus was and saw him, she fell at his feet and said,
Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died. When Jesus saw her weeping and the Jews who
had come along with her also weeping, he was deeply moved in spirit and troubled. Where have
you laid him? He asked. Come and see, Lord, they replied. Jesus wept. And then the Jews said,
see how he loved him. So Jesus wept for his friend. He also wept with his friends there that were weeping.
Jesus experienced these deep, deep feelings of intense grief and emotion.
And he knows that we're going to feel these things too.
That's why he's in it with us.
That's why we don't have a high priest that cannot sympathize in our weaknesses
because he was there.
He felt it.
He knows it.
And so we are, it's natural to go through these things. And I feel
like a lot of the times as Christians, we feel so much shame when we feel grief and when we feel
sorrow and it's like, but I should be happy. I'm saved. I can live life with Jesus. Jesus is
completely understandable. That's why he took on human form to come down here to experience what
you did so he could understand you fully. He understands what you're going through and there's no shame.
And even if you go through months and months and months of deep, intense depression and sorrow, there's nothing to be ashamed about.
Yeah.
Yeah, I think that's what set me free.
And you know what?
Mine took a long time.
Yeah.
More than it should have.
Yeah.
But you know what?
What set me free was...
More than it should have.
But what, you know what I mean?
We're made to feel that way. But it's have. Yeah. But you know what, what set me free was more than it should have. But what you know what I mean? We're made to feel that way. But it's like, yeah, yeah. I mean,
I think when you lose, I think when you lose someone that you love, it is you, you, it's almost
like you lose a part of you. Like some, some day, it's like some days you're, you're, you're okay.
But other days it just takes the wind out of you and it will always be like that.
That's life of losing someone you love. When you lose someone that you love that is still alive
and it's that kind of morning, it's hard because it's like you, sometimes you get frustrated with yourself because you're like, how long can I allow this
person to, to, to, to control me, to, to take my days away from me. And so you do get frustrated
with yourself. I sure, I sure did. I was like, I was so embarrassed at one point because I was like,
how can I keep bringing even my friends through this? Like I am, this is, this is going
on a long time, but I went from suppressing it to then saying, Hey, I need help. And when I released
that pain and I just, I mean, you should, you should have seen me asking. I mean, I know I talk
about it a lot, but I literally was like a little girl again, like with my friends and family.
I didn't care.
I needed help.
And I wasn't afraid to talk all day, to call, to go to therapy.
And I'm not afraid to sit here and talk about it because that's when the freedom came.
That's when my healing began.
And I think a lot of people feel so ashamed, especially for the men.
I can't imagine what men go through because they have to always be tough.
And then when they have to lose someone or if they lose someone they love that's still alive, they have to suppress it.
And that's why men feel so angry and the bitterness comes.
And the way to get through the valley, you can't escape it.
You actually have to walk through it.
through the valley, you can't escape it. You actually have to walk through it. And what the most beautiful thing is, is God really does walk through it with you. And you're not stuck in the
valley. He actually walks with you and you get to the other end of it in such a victorious way. And
that's the beautiful thing about grief. It's the beautiful thing about grieving with God
is that you grieve with hope. That's what it is. That's
the difference of someone in the world grieving versus a Christian, a follower of Jesus grieving,
is that we grieve with hope. When I went through that horrific grieving of that relationship,
I was in the worst pain I'd ever experienced from that sort of loss in my life. But I was so close to Jesus that there was hope.
There was hope.
I knew I had an understanding that every single bit of this will be redeemed and restored.
It doesn't take the pain away, but it's his peace that's within me during the grieving. Me and my best friend, Courtney, because she experienced loss.
So we talk about it all the time.
And we're like, how do you get through grief and stuff?
And yes, of course, therapy and you need people to be around.
That's the most important thing.
My people got me through my grief.
Like, you have to be around people.
The worst thing you can do, because I was there, is self-isolate.
We cannot self-isolate during our grief.
We will deteriorate.
Absolutely.
We will deteriorate.
The only way to get through it is with the presence of God,
and that's what I learned.
That is the greatest gift I could have ever learned in my life,
as you get through your grief through the presence of God.
Amen.
And how do you know when you get through it?
You have no idea the things that
He showed me. There were a couple moments that I'll never forget. And any time that I have doubts,
because I still do, because I'm a human being, and I see a lot of suffering in this world.
And some moments that I have, even when I read you guys' prayer requests, I'm like,
how could this be? Why do
they have to go through this? And then I like, I remember these little miracles that he'd show me
during my grief. I had a moment, a moment when I had no money. I had lost my career, which was
such a grieving process for me. I had to let go of the only thing that I
knew. I was in the entertainment industry since I was 17, and I simply could not book a job for
the life of me. It was over. I had no job, no money. I was in a really bad place. I remember
when I started my relationship with God, and I'd go into this little church by my house every single day for hours and hours on end.
It is the only place that I found any type of relief.
And I would sit there and just be like, OK, God, it's me and you.
And I would just ask him, I need help.
I can't book a job.
Like, what am I supposed to do now? And I remember being so scared
and talking to him and, and being like, I'm scared, but I'm going to give it to you because
you're giving me this relief. And I don't really know, but I'm in, cause I was really at, I was
really reluctant on, on believing in God because I didn't have anyone to mentor me to tell me if it was real or not.
And when I had left the church, I had gotten a phone call the minute I left the church.
And he was, and it was a call from an agency saying, you would just, hey, would you want to,
you just book this job. And I looked up and it was one of those moments that it's only through Jesus that I knew it was true. Even with when I had my
real, when, when I was going through my breakup, my horrible breakup that truly broke me to,
broke me to my core. Um, there were so many moments where I was so alone and, and I had no
relief and I'll, and I, I share this on one of the podcasts, but running to the,
running to the beach and jumping out of my skin and sitting on my hands and knees in the sand and
being like, Jesus, I have not slept in days. I have no relief. I can't even eat anything.
I need help. I need sleep. And as I'm talking, boom, I hit the sand. I fall asleep. I wake up two hours later. I look up and it is
all I remember. It was gleaming bright. I was peaceful. I had the biggest smile on my face.
I was, I had, I had been rested. I had been able to spend the rest of the week with my family in
peace. That's only through the presence of
Jesus. And that's what he did. He showed me who he was and how real he was. And as long as you
draw close near him to these moments of being in deep suffering and grief, he will bring you to
the other side and he will do something with your pain. I'm able to help you guys because of what
I went through. And I think how many of you guys that are listening that are going through deep
suffering are going to be a testimony to somebody else that's going through deep suffering? How many
of you guys are going to be able to help people in the grocery store, on the street, or be a voice for this generation, or just maybe in your workplace,
He will bring you to glory. And I believe He brings us through sufferings because He can trust
us with burden sometimes. And that's how He reveals His glory through us is through our sufferings.
Beautiful, beautiful. I told you recently, R, that I almost feel like, because
you and I have been going through some things recently where you and I are so like, we'll take
it on the chin all day for Jesus. Like we love suffering for Jesus. We're so dramatic with it.
But recently I remember having a moment being like, man, God, I just feel a little bit like,
I'm just like trying to enjoy myself for
a second. Like, can we just lighten up just for a second? Like, it just feels like it's thing after
thing after thing. And I felt him so gently put on my heart, like, your suffering is actually my
grace. It is because of your suffering that you depend on me. It is because of your suffering
that you're close to me.
If everything was good all the time, you wouldn't need me. And I don't want that. And you don't want
that. Even if you don't know that, you don't want that. And I realized, and it just gave me so much
peace to know that it's true and it keeps us humble and it keeps us gracious and that you can
never get like, you can never get any sort of way because every single time, God reminds you how unbelievably weak we are without him, but how strong we are with him.
And I love what you spoke to earlier about Jesus' disciple and his mother both going, being at the feet of the cross.
And they're weeping and they're mourning the loss of Jesus, of his friend Jesus, of her son Jesus.
And he sees them together and he says, this is your son and this is your mother.
Now go together.
And it says that the disciple took his mother in from that point forward.
And so Jesus made it very clear that we need each other.
And we have to grieve in community.
A burden shared is a burden lightened.
We can't, and the temptation is to isolate, as you said, but you can't isolate, you guys.
I know every time I've ever been through something, I am on that phone.
Of course, I'm praying all day, but I'm on the phone all day.
My friends, I'll never forget that breakup that I went through.
He better not ever watch this. That breakup that I went through. I'll never forget. It was me,
Amy, Allie and Tiffany were at Tiffany's house, the three of us. It was a Wednesday. I drive over
there and it's like the troops all got together. My three friends all rallied around me. And we
were it was like the morning
and I'm like, my eyes are literally almost like black because of how I have like black eyes from
how much I'm crying and I'm looking at them and I was in so much pain, but I had three people and
my mom on the phone. So I had four and Socrates had five people literally carrying me. The troops
came in and they were there for me. And every time that I went through something, and you know this full well, that somebody
picking up the phone on the other side just to hear your thoughts, oftentimes you're going
to feel like you don't know what to say to someone when they're grieving.
The fact is you probably won't know what to say.
But if you're there, if you're an ear to listen and a shoulder to lean on, it's more than
enough.
You don't have to have all the right things to say, but you have to be there for people and you have to reach out to people so if you are isolating right now I implore you and I
beg you to go and to find people one person that you can talk to that you can be honest with that
you can be like I'm not okay you don't have to have you can't you you don't have to fix my problem
but I need you to know that I'm not okay.
And simply somebody listening and sharing that grief with you is enough.
I love that you say that.
And this goes for somebody else. If you have a friend, and you don't have to really understand it.
I was just talking about this with Courtney.
And she said, you know, when my sister died, this is what the beauty, too, is about grief.
You really see who are your troops.
So true.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
And she said, you know, all of my friends that I thought were my friends, not one of them, all I needed was I didn't even need anyone to talk to me.
I just needed someone to sit there with me in my grief and hold my hand through it. I didn't even need anyone to talk to me. I just needed someone to sit there with me in my grief
and hold my hand through it. I didn't even need anyone to talk to me. And so, and I, and I,
and I get it and that's all. So, so be very mindful of, of people that are dealing with grief,
because sometimes we don't understand. Most people don't understand until you really go through it. That's why the biggest
blessing of my life was actually going through the grief because I can now sympathize and
understand and there's nothing greater than to be able to give that love to someone that's going
through such deep pain. But I love that you say that because, yeah, you have to be very mindful of your friends and grief.
It's so true.
The thing about grief, too, is like grief can take on new forms.
There's some grief that will mark you forever.
There's some grief that is just for a season.
I know you can have a situation and it's actually healthy sometimes to reprocess grief because processing grief is a whole battle in and of itself.
There could be a kid who like lost their parent when they were a kid.
And obviously they will grieve it as a child, grieve that situation.
And then when they grow up, their grief will take on a new form because they have to reprocess their grief.
Now they're grieving in a different sense.
Now they're grieving like I had sense. Now they're grieving like,
I had to go my whole life without this parent. And now I'm realizing all that I missed out on.
And I'm comparing to other people, their life and what they had that I didn't. And that's new grief.
And so it can take on new forms. It's crazy. Grief is insane.
That's why you have to give grace to people.
Yeah.
That's why I, after going through my grief, you go through so much.
And sometimes people don't, won't treat you right.
And they'll be angry.
And it's not because of you.
And most of the time it has nothing to do with you.
It's because they're grieving.
Yeah.
And they go through bitterness and anger and, and then they self isolate.
And then you don't hear from them.
And it's not, and we put it, and then we take it upon ourselves that it's us.
But really, no, they're actually grieving.
They're going through pain.
They're hurting.
There's a couple of Psalms that I really love.
Psalm 71, verse 20.
Though you have made me see troubles, many and bitter, You will restore my life again from the depths of the
earth and you will again bring me up. And then I love from Psalms 55 verse 22, cast your cares on
the Lord and he will sustain you. He will never let the righteous fall. That's why it's just so important to put it all on him. And nothing is
ever too much for God. You can sit there. The greatest gift of my life was being able to sit
there for hours and hours and hours and just tell him everything and giving it to God because it
simply just wasn't my burden to carry anymore.
That's right.
And just giving it to Him and letting Him take care of it.
And boy, He did.
And there is nothing more pleasing to God than giving it all to Him.
It's only the power of Jesus Christ that can heal you.
He is the only way.
I think a lot of us, we believe in God and we go to church and we pray and stuff,
but we don't really believe him until we see it. And like I was talking about earlier,
through the suffering, we can actually see the miracles he will do through your life when you
really lean on him. And I love at the end of Job, he spent every single chapter,
it's him just crying out to God, bargaining with him, being like, how can you do this to me? How
can you take away everything I love? And I'm sure so many of you, because I am myself and Angela too,
we both probably bargained, right? How can you take away? How can you do this to me? How can you make someone that I love suffer?
How can you take away the person that I love?
And you feel like he doesn't love you and you feel like he's not there and you feel like he's never going to come through for you.
And I love at the end of Job when he says, I've heard about you, but now I've seen you with my own eyes.
I love that so much.
And that's the beauty of pain, suffering, and just grief is that you will actually be
able to see that he is a good God and he will bring such glory to your life.
Amen.
So beautiful.
Thank you, Jesus.
I'm just so grateful to God.
Jesus is Lord, Master, Ruler, King, Savior. He is
the name above all names, and he is the only one who has power even over your grief. Grief will
make you feel like you're dying, but guess what? You're not because grief died on the cross with
Jesus. God not only knows our grief, but he bore it on the cross for us. Isaiah 53, 3-5 says,
He was despised and rejected by men, a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief. And as one
from whom men hide their faces, he was despised and we esteemed him not. Surely he has borne our
griefs, he has borne our griefs, it says,
and carried our sorrows. He was wounded for our transgressions. He was crushed for our iniquities.
Upon him was the chastisement that brought us peace. And with his stripes, we are healed.
He bore our griefs and our sorrows. Everything that we deal with, he took it on the cross, which means that
it has lost its power over you. That doesn't mean it's not going to be painful. That doesn't mean
you're not going to feel it. But what it means is even though grief feels like it's going to take
you out and it's just going to ruin your life and it's going to feel like this forever, it will not
take you out because of the power of the cross, because of what Jesus did on the cross.
It's not going to take you out.
And you can put grief under your feet, just like everything else.
And I want to encourage you guys that you just keep going.
You just keep hanging on.
You understand that the enemy, there's something that Jesus gave to us that the enemy can never take away.
And that's
our salvation, no matter how hard he tries.
But what he can do his very best, and I know that he does it to me and Ari all day long,
is he wants to destroy our joy.
Grief comes, the enemy comes to steal, kill, and destroy, and he sends grief to come and
steal our joy, because the joy of the Lord is our strength.
And if we don't have joy, we are weak.
our joy, because the joy of the Lord is our strength.
And if we don't have joy, we are weak. So I encourage you guys, I implore you to not let anybody, anything take away your joy
and understand that joy is a gift from God, a fruit of the spirit that you can have even
through your grief.
So I'm begging you guys to not let Satan do everything that he's doing.
He's trying to ruin your day.
He's throwing things at you all day
to try and steal your joy. Don't let him. Hallelujah. Thank you, Jesus. Through the mess,
through the storm, please, I'm begging you. It's not always going to feel like this. I know it
feels that way, but it's not. It's not. It can't because he bore our grief on the cross, which
means it does not have power over you.
So just ride the wave with Jesus.
Turn to him for everything that you're going through.
Include him.
He cries when you cry.
He does.
He loves you so much that it breaks his heart to see you hurt.
So understand that he's with you in it and he will carry you. in that joy will just lift it a little bit.
It'll lift the grief a little bit.
And understand that you're not alone.
Yeah.
That you're seen that the one thing that I and I'm sure you too, Angela, is like you felt so alone through your grief and you are not alone.
You are seen and it is not going to last forever. And I just,
and I love that you say that, hang on, because really hang on, because if you knew what is on
the other side of that grief, it's, it's, it's going to be so profound. You are going to,
to look at the end. You're going to look back and you're going to say, thank you, Jesus, that I hung on.
Yeah.
And that you went through it.
You're going to rejoice in your suffering.
I promise.
Read the Bible.
Can I tell you anything?
Just read the Bible and see all the promises.
The Bible is a book full of promises that God gives you.
And he promises that your mourning is going to turn into rejoicing.
And we said it before, but I'm just going to say it again.
Don't worry about your timeline.
I actually had a moment, and this just came to me, where recently, actually, I literally
got so frustrated and I'm like, why am I doing this again?
Why am I back here?
Why am I grieving?
And I got that scared feeling.
You know why?
Because that's life.
And there's going to be moments where two years is going to go by
and then you're going to be at a red light and a song is going to come on
that's going to remind you of that person
or you're going to be somewhere and something's going to hit you
and it's going to pierce your heart and you're going to feel stuck again and you're going to feel sick again.
That's okay. That's the part of the process. It doesn't make you different. It doesn't make you
weak. It doesn't make you, you know, it doesn't mean that you're going to go back and you're
going to go back to that whole sickness. It just means that you're having a moment.
Take as much time as you need.
Time, yes.
It's okay.
There's things that still sometimes hit my heart.
And there's days where sometimes, honestly, you want me to be honest with you?
Some days it's still hard for me to get out of bed in the morning.
Sometimes it's still hard for me to even muster up the courage to get ready.
It just is.
That's the whole part of grieving.
But that's where the dependency on God comes.
And that's the beautiful part about life.
And let me tell you, I don't even know.
Sometimes I get, I just, it's crazy the strength I have from where I was.
And like you said earlier, there is nothing more beautiful than dependency on God.
And that's why there is that's part of why there is suffering in this world.
Yeah, absolutely.
He God never wanted us to suffer.
But boy, does he use it for good because that's who he is.
It's what he does.
He's going to get you out of your situation. And I just pray in the name of Jesus that everyone
who's in the middle of grief, that we work towards acceptance, that we work toward healing. And like
Ari said, healing is not linear. It's not. And it's okay if you have a bad day. It's okay if it
feels like you're never going to get out of it. You're not in it alone. Ari and I grieve things all the time.
We even grieve.
We had to grieve the life.
Our lives changed so quickly just going from the world to being true followers of Jesus
who wanted to live holy and righteous.
We had to grieve our old life.
I mean, there are little— you have to grieve careers. You have
to grieve when the life you thought you were going to live just isn't your reality anymore.
I pray for everyone who's grieving fertility issues. I pray that Jesus meets you in this
whole situation. I pray for total healing in your womb and in your body and that you will
be multiplied just like God promises in the Bible. And in the meantime in your body and that you will be multiply just like God promises
in the Bible. And in the meantime, I just pray that you would come to a place of acceptance.
Life is, it's rough. It's so hard. Hallelujah. Thank you, Jesus. It's, we got a hallelujah.
Thank you, Jesus, through the whole thing, because otherwise it'll crush you. But no,
it won't because we have Jesus and he loves you so much that he died for you. I'd like to invite you guys into a time of
praying to receive the gift of salvation. If you've never prayed this before, if you've never
invited Jesus, if you've never accepted him, you guys, there is a God who will hold your hand
through every difficult thing that you
ever walk through. He loves you so much. This gift is free. He created you with the intention of
having a relationship with you, that you would not go through these things alone, that he would be
with you, that he would carry it, that your burden would not be yours to carry, but he literally
invites you to receive him so he can carry it for you.
So please say this with us.
Heavenly Father, I believe the scripture that says that Jesus Christ is your eternal son.
I believe he went to the cross and died for my sins.
I confess to you that I'm a sinner.
I need your forgiveness.
I'm asking you to save me, Jesus. I'm trusting you to do it
right now. I accept the forgiveness of my sins. I accept your gift of salvation. I accept you as my
personal Savior. Fill me with your Holy Spirit and be the Lord of my life. In Jesus' name. Amen.
In Jesus' name.
In Jesus' name. Amen.
If you said that prayer for the first time, hallelujah.
Thank you, Jesus.
We're so happy to have you with us.
Welcome to the family.
Jesus loves you so much.
I hope, I pray that you catch the revelation of how much Jesus loves you
because it'll change the way that you move through the world.
Yes, we love you so much.
Hallelujah. Thank you, Jesus. We we love you so much. Hallelujah.
Thank you, Jesus.
We love you guys so much.
We love you.
I love you.
Before we go, are you grieving?
Is your heart hurting?
Are you going through something so massive that you can't get out of bed?
Put it in the comment box and we will be praying for you. We love you so much. We know that it hurts, but you have, again, two sisters right
here who have been through such deep, deep grieving that we didn't even think we would be
able to make it through. And we did. We're standing here stronger than ever, and you will be too.
We love you so much. We appreciate you so much. God bless you and make
sure you put your prayer requests in the comment box so we can be praying for you. We love you guys
so, so much. May the Lord bless you and keep you. May he make his face shine upon you and be
gracious to you. May he turn his face towards you and give you peace. We love you so much we would do anything for you do you guys want to hang out
later like we love you so much really do you no seriously what are you guys doing call us later Thank you.