“You are never alone, for I am always here.” ~ 41:10
Laura came to the
park most afternoons, settling on the same bench under the old sycamore tree.
Its branches stretched skyward as if in silent prayer. She carried a solitude
that felt both sacred and heavy—a quiet isolation sharpened by modern
expectations.
The weight of being a thirty-something, single woman applauded her independence yet questioned her choices. She owed her strength to her voice, yet society's unspoken judgments sometimes made the room feel smaller, as if others shrank away from her self-reliance.
Among the branches
and benches, Laura’s loneliness echoed softly. Watching life unfold was safer
than joining it. She observed the world, aching at times, burdened by the
weight of her own distance.
Couples laughed in
a language that seemed just beyond her reach, while families moved together in
a rhythm she hadn’t yet mastered. She watched children chase birds and wondered
whether she would ever feel that free, that safe, that noticed.
Laura listened to the
wind rustling the leaves, to the gentle rhythm of her own heartbeat, to the
whisper in her soul. In the stillness, she felt God’s call: “I am here. You
are not alone.”
Looking closer,
Laura truly began to notice those around her—a mother soothing a fussy toddler,
an old man feeding ducks with focused attention, and strangers passing with silent
burdens of their own. Life began to flow back in.
She started with
small steps: a warm smile to the mother, a polite nod to an old man, letting
her presence quietly acknowledge theirs. Subtle, yet each became a tiny conduit
for grace.
Over time, her
presence stretched outward. She offered a spare blanket to the mother with the
restless toddler. She shared coffee with the old man by the pond, listening
intently as he spoke of a love that endured beyond loss. Laura smiled at a
weary stranger on the path, and occasionally, a small spark of connection
flickered back.
She felt God’s hand
guiding her, showing that grace was not meant to be hoarded, but shared through
small acts of kindness. What had once been a wall of isolation was becoming fertile
ground for compassion and empathy; a bridge reaching outward to a broken world.
The bench beneath
the sycamore had become more than a place to rest; it was a sanctuary from the
constant demands of life’s expectations. In the patient rhythm of stillness,
God was shaping her into someone whose quiet presence could meet others right
where they were.
In the hush of the park, Laura realized that her loneliness carried
purpose. Even in solitude, she was never abandoned. Her quiet moments were rich
with possibility—a space to root herself in God’s peace, cultivating the
courage, patience, and empathy her voice needed to truly flourish.
She lifted her face to
the sky, letting the breeze brush her cheeks, and whispered a prayer:







