
I thought I was looking for background information for my upcoming book.
Instead, I found a binder.
Not just any binder, mind you. A thick, heavy one that was stuffed with printed blog posts, journal entries, notes scribbled on scraps of paper, and thoughts I had carefully tucked away years ago. Somewhere along the way, I had forgotten it even existed.
Lately, I’ve been spending my mornings working on the book. Digging through old blogs. Reading journal entries. Trying to piece together the story of widowhood’s first year. Some days it feels a bit like archaeology, while dusting off old memories to decide which ones still belong.
After reading a journal entry from January, 2020, I remembered the binder.
Years ago, when I first started writing, I printed many of my blog posts. Not all of them. Just the ones that seemed important at the time. The ones that made me stop and think because they carried a little extra weight.
As it turns out, those pages of yesterday were yesterday’s found treasures.
Sitting in my chair with the binder on my lap, I began turning pages. Some made me laugh. Some made me wince. A few brought tears to my eyes. More than once, I found myself thinking, Did I really write that?
Apparently, I did.

What surprised me most wasn’t the writing itself.
It was meeting the woman who wrote it. Grieving the loss of her husband, she was so very lonely while trying to figure out what would come next.
She was learning how to live in a house she had never planned to occupy alone. Learning how to make decisions by herself. Learning how to survive birthdays, anniversaries, holidays, and ordinary Tuesdays.
She was far stronger than she knew.
At the time, she didn’t feel brave. Most days she felt frightened, exhausted, and overwhelmed. Yet there she was on those pages, getting up every morning and putting one foot in front of the other.
Writing.
Praying.
Walking.
Trying again.
And somehow, without realizing it, she left breadcrumbs for the woman I would become.
One journal note simply read:
“I miss dating. But I need to be very careful not to confuse loneliness for anything other than what it is.”
Wise words.
Words I had completely forgotten that I wrote.

There were other notes as well. Little observations. Tiny moments. Thoughts captured before they could drift away. Most would never mean much to anyone else. Yet together they told the story of a life slowly rebuilding itself.
Page after page reminded me that healing rarely arrives all at once. It comes in small pieces.
One day, you manage breakfast. Another day, you laugh unexpectedly. A few months later, you realize you have gone several hours without crying. And one day, years later, you open an old binder and discover that God was doing far more than you realized at the time.
As I read through those pages, I began to see something I couldn’t see at the time.
The book didn’t begin this year when I sat down to organize chapters. It didn’t begin when I decided on a title. The book began in every moment I chose to keep going.
Every blog post.
Every journal entry.
Every prayer.
Every tear-stained page.
Every tiny act of faith.
God was writing the story long before I knew there would be a book.
Maybe that’s true for all of us.
We spend so much time looking ahead that we forget to look back. We assume growth is happening somewhere in the future, just beyond our reach. But sometimes the evidence is already there, tucked away in a drawer, a photo album, an old journal, or a forgotten binder.
Waiting patiently to remind us how far we’ve come.
So today, I am grateful for a dusty old binder. Not because it’s helping me write a book, but because it reminded me of something much more important. The treasure was never hidden somewhere else. It was hidden in the story all along.
And sometimes, all we have to do is turn the page.

— Joy
Where new life grows from grief.






































