When God Heals, He Heals Completely

There are moments in life when the ache feels unending. It sits deep in the chest, like a weight you can’t shake off. Maybe it’s the grief of a loss, the sting of rejection, the fatigue of chronic illness, or the quiet loneliness that lingers long after the world has gone to sleep. We become experts at surviving – smiling through the silence, functioning while broken, convincing ourselves that this is just how life will be.

But the beautiful truth is that God doesn’t leave us there.

When God heals, He doesn’t just patch the wound with a plaster. He restores. He reaches into the hollow spaces we try so hard to fill ourselves and brings life where we felt empty. He doesn’t just silence the ache, He transforms it.

I’ve learned that healing often doesn’t happen overnight. Sometimes it’s quiet and slow, like the sunrise creeping over the horizon after the longest night. There’s no fanfare, no sudden moment when everything is “fixed.” Instead, it’s the gentle awareness that you’re breathing again. You’re not just existing – you’re living.

And it’s not because we’ve figured out all the right prayers or because we’re strong enough to push through. Healing happens because God is faithful. He sees the cracks we try to cover. He knows the silent battles we fight and the tears no one else sees.

If you’re in that aching place today, don’t give up. Don’t believe for a second that God has forgotten you. He is near, even when you can’t feel Him. He knows every detail of your pain, and He knows exactly how to restore what’s been broken.

When God heals, it’s never halfway. It’s not just about survival – it’s about revival. It’s about turning the hollow places into something full of hope and beauty again.

“He heals the brokenhearted and binds up their wounds.” – Psalm 147:3

But I also know this: healing doesn’t always look the way we imagine it will. Sometimes the ache lingers longer than we hoped. Sometimes the miracle we prayed for never comes in the form we expected. And sometimes, healing isn’t something we experience fully this side of eternity.

This is the tension we live in – the now and not yet of God’s Kingdom. Yes, God brings healing now – in our hearts, our minds, our relationships, our bodies. But we also wait for the not yet – the day when every tear will be wiped away, when all pain will cease, when we’ll be made whole in the fullest sense.

That doesn’t mean His healing isn’t real in the present. It just means we trust Him to carry us through the in-between. We learn to hold space for both: the hope. that He is healing us today, and the faith that one day, everything broken will be made new.

So if you’re still waiting, still aching, still asking – know that you’re not forgotten. You’re living in the middle of a promise, and God is faithful to finish what He started. Wholeness is coming. If not in this life, then in the one to come.

He did it for me. He’s doing it now. And one day, He will do it fully for you, too.

All my love,

Anna x

Myalgic Encephalomyelitis and me

My journey with Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME) is one that I could never have anticipated, and yet it has shaped my life in ways I am still trying to comprehend. It has been four years since I received the diagnosis, which, in the grand scheme of things, is not that long. But to me, it feels like a lifetime. A lifetime of limitations, of losses, of learning to navigate a world that no longer fits the way it once did.

Of all the chronic illnesses I have been diagnosed with, ME is the one I would get rid of in a heartbeat. It is cruel beyond belief. It strips away the ability to live life in any predictable or reliable way. There is no cure, no universally effective treatment – only management, and even that feels like a fragile balance. Some days, I can do more. Other days, even sitting up is too much. The unpredictability of it is one of the hardest things to live with. 

There have been times over the last four years where I have been completely bed-bound, unable to do anything but lie in the dark, too exhausted and in too much pain to even sit up. Those periods were terrifying, but I always held onto hope that I would find my way back to a more functional state. And, at times, it did. There were moments when I could leave my flat for short trips, where I felt like I was reclaiming slivers of my old life. But now, since sepsis, those moments are fewer and farther between.

I can now only leave my flat for essential appointments, the ones that must be attended in person. Anything that can be done from home, I do remotely. My world has shrunk in ways I never thought possible. I require a wheelchair to mobilise outside because my legs are too unstable to carry me for any meaningful distance. Inside my flat, I often rely on a walking stick to move between rooms. Even then, most of my day is spent in bed, waiting for the couple of ‘functional’ hours I am granted each day. Those brief windows of time where I feel somewhat capable of doing small tasks, of engaging with the world beyond my bed. 

One of the most distinct and cruel markers of ME is the way your body punishes you for overstepping its limits. When I push too hard, even slightly, I pay for it. The flares are brutal, and the warning signs are unmistakeable. When I have overdone it – whether that means sitting up too long, engaging in too much conversation, or even just focusing too hard on something – I feel it almost immediately. My legs burn as if they are on fire, a sensation so intense that it is impossible to ignore. It is my body’s way of screaming at me that I have no rested enough, that I have ignored its pleas for stillness.

The thing about ME is that it is not just about fatigue. That word does not do justice to the bone-deep exhaustion that no amount of sleep can fix. It is like being weighed down by an invisible force, making every movement feel like wading through cement. It is pain that radiates through my muscles and joints, an unrelenting ache that never truly disappears. It is cognitive dysfunction – brain fog so thick that I forget simple words mid-sentence, struggling to focus, and sometimes feel as though my mind has simply stopped working altogether. It is sensory overload, where lights are too bright, sounds are too loud, and even the touch of fabric on my skin can feel unbearable.

Since sepsis, my body has become even more fragile. I used to have at least a little energy to ration throughout the day, but now, every action comes with a cost. The simplest tasks – brushing my teeth, getting dressed, making a cup of tea – feel monumental. I have to think about every movement, weigh whether it is worth the energy expenditure, knowing that if I push too far, I could be bedridden for days. My life has become a delicate balancing act between doing too much and not doing enough.

Sleep offers no relief. No matter how many hours I spend resting, I wake up just as drained as before. And even on nights where exhaustion consumes me, sleep doesn’t always come easily. The pain, the discomfort, the sheer weight of my body’s brokenness keeps me tossing and turning, desperate for rest that never truly arrives. When I do sleep, I wake up feeling like I have run a marathon in my dreams, my muscles aching as if I had been fighting through the night. 

The isolation that comes with ME is another layer of cruelty. I have lost the ability to maintain relationships the way I once could. I miss out on gatherings, on conversations, on simply being able to exist in the world in a way that feels normal. Friends and family understand to an extent, but unless someone has lived through it, they can never fully understand. My dad was actually diagnosed with ME when I was a baby and, though he doesn’t struggle any more, it means that my family have a very good understanding of my day-to-day life.

I miss spontaneity. I miss being able to say yes to things without immediately calculating the toll it will take on my body. I do not know what the future holds for me in terms of ME. It is scary waking up each day, not knowing how the day will go, what your body will cope with. And it is terrifying when you experience a decline – is this what is going to tip your body over the edge? Is it just a temporary flare, something that’s going to stick around for a long time, or, god-forbid, be permanent? 

What I do know is that, since sepsis, things have been worse than ever before. I have lost more than I ever thought I could, and I am still trying to come to terms with that. But I have also learned resilience in a way that few people understand. I have learned to exist within my limitations, to navigate a life that looks nothing like the one I imagined. And, most of all, I have learned that survival is not just about living – it is about adapting, about finding ways to exist within the cracks of what was lost, about holding onto hope even when it feels like everything is slipping away. 

My next post is going to talk about what people with ME want you to know, as well as exploring some of the ways other people with the condition describe it to others.

Until then,

All my love,

Anna x

April’s Sepsis Story

I had a brainwave a couple of days ago and thought it would be really good to share as many stories of sepsis as possible on this platform. I might not have the widest reach in the world, but I have had people reading from across the world and sepsis is so serious that to me, it feels like a no-brainer. Awareness saves lives. I just want to thank every person who has agreed to share their story with me as it takes a lot to put yourself out there. Over the next couple of weeks I’ll be sharing various stories – please read and show some support to these amazing humans for wanting their story out there to hopefully help others!

On Saturday, September 2, 2017, I delivered a healthy baby boy and I was the happiest woman on earth. My husband and I had prayed for this child for years and this was going to be the start of our new adventure. What I did not know then was that this adventure was going to have a very rough start, one that still leaves me with nightmares.

On the day I was supposed to be discharged from the hospital I began to feel sick. I began to experience fever, chills, overall feeling of weakness, became short of breath, and felt like my heart was racing. I told my doctors all of my symptoms, but was quickly brushed off and was told that I was likely “just anxious about being a new mother.” Some tests were run and my White Blood Cell (WBC) count was higher than the previous tests, but again I was brushed off and told, “An elevated WBC count is normal after child birth.” When I was shivering from my fever, I was told to take a hot shower and one doctor even turned the thermostat in my room up to 80 degrees to stop the shivering. When my fever turned to sweats a nurse brought me a fan, again I was not taken seriously. Over the next few days I would continue to complain to doctors, but I continued to be ignored. One doctor even told me I was being “crazy” and needed to “stop”.

After doctors had given me enough Ibuprofen to make my fever go away for a while, they told me my new mom anxieties would likely go away when I got home and they sent me home with a prescription for anxiety medication. Not being a medical professional, or knowing what an elevated heart rate, fever, and elevated white blood cell count meant, I naively believed the doctors, that I would feel better once I got home.

Upon going home my symptoms did not improve. I continued to take the prescribed medications, including the anxiety medication prescribed by the doctor. My heart continued to race and I could not sleep or care for my newborn baby. Within about 36 hours of being released from the hospital, I couldn’t take it anymore and returned to the hospital first thing 9/08/17. On the way to the hospital I told my mother about the doctor telling me I was “acting crazy”, and was second guessing going back for fear that I would be told the same thing and sent home again. I am thankful my mom kept driving and insisted I get checked out. After a short stay in triage I was admitted into the hospital due to suspicions of an infection. Over the next 24 hours in Labor and Delivery my condition did not improve, I got progressively sicker and sicker as each hour passed. I went to the hospital to get better, instead I laid there getting worse. The OBGYN doctors had no real answers for my family. In the early morning hours of 9/09/17, I was finally taken to the ICU by a nurse from a different department who looked at my labs and knew something was extremely wrong. Had he not taken quick action, there is no doubt I would not have survived another 24 hours in the Labor and Delivery unit.

Over the next 2 weeks I would be treated for sepsis, endomitritis, septic shock, and all the other issues that go along with those, I.E.. kidney failure, shock liver, unstable blood pressure, pulmonary edema,  blood clots, and the list goes on. I don’t remember much from my 9 days in the ICU and my earliest memories of waking up from my medically induced coma are filled with nothing but confusion. Where was my son? Did I even have a baby? Was that a dream? Whose hand did I trace the letters “C-R-U-Z” in to when I had a tube in down my throat?

I would later learn that was my mother’s hand that I traced my son’s name in to and that was one of the very first things I did when I woke up. As I started to become more aware my family and doctors carefully tried to explain to me that I had developed an infection of an unknown source. That was the very first time that I had ever heard the word, “sepsis.”  At the time, I had no idea what septic shock even meant. I was very confused. I had no idea that I had literally just escaped death. I had no idea that during my time in ICU the doctors told my family to call those closest to me to say their goodbyes.  I had no idea that my husband had to think about how he was going to raise his son without a mother. I had no idea that my son came so close to growing up without his mama. I had no idea what I had survived had killed so many others.

My husband recently visited another hospital in our area and noticed several posters about the symptoms of sepsis and we all talk about how if we had seen that information what might have been different. I constantly find myself saying, “I wish I had known about sepsis.”

Although my story of being a new mom got off to a rough start, today I am a happy, healthy, mama to a silly, smart, and sometimes a bit of a wild child boy. On the days when I get upset about missing out on the first month of dirty diapers, midnight feedings, and sweet baby cuddles I am reminded that not all who experience sepsis are as lucky as me. Now more than ever, I hear stories about people who have lost limbs, had severe long-term problems, and even died from sepsis.  Throughout my one month stay in the hospital I constantly heard from medical professionals how “rare” sepsis is, but as I have done more research I am realizing sepsis really isn’t rare at all.

As I continue to share my story  I find people just don’t know what sepsis is. I try to stress to everyone that while my sepsis experience was related to child birth, sepsis can affect anyone from something as small as a cut on your finger.

My goal in sharing my story is to help educate others about the symptoms of sepsis and the importance of advocating for your own health or the health of those around you.  Because sepsis can affect anyone I want to help raise awareness across all audiences, but my experience has led me to have a special place in my heart for mothers-to-be. I  I hope that more OBGYN teams will educate themselves on sepsis so that no family has to go through what mine did and even more so, I hope that pregnant women learn the symptoms and stand their ground if they feel that something is not right.