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  • Dear Jordan…Making Room for God and Therapy
    2026/02/26

    This week was marked by grief. After the passing of my aunt, I found myself sitting with emotions in a way I was never taught to growing up. Loss has a way of exposing what you’ve healed — and what you’ve suppressed. And in that reflection, I realized how different my relationship with pain looks today compared to the version of faith I inherited as a child.


    In this letter, I unpack the dangerous myth that emotional struggle equals spiritual failure. I talk about what it means to grow up in a culture where mental health was spiritualized, where prayer was prescribed for everything, and where seeking therapy felt like a betrayal of faith. I share how emotional suppression shaped my adulthood, how it left me unequipped in moments I desperately needed clarity, and how I eventually learned that God was never asking me to choose between faith and help.


    This episode walks through grief, trauma, abuse, spiritual confusion, and the quiet rebuilding that followed. It explores the psychological impact of suppressing emotions and the biblical truth that God values wholeness — not performance. I speak about the turning point when I realized that therapy didn’t weaken my faith; it strengthened it. That faith gives hope, but therapy gives tools. That prayer uncovers what hurts, and counseling helps you process it.


    If you’ve ever been told to “just pray more” when what you needed was support…

    If you’ve ever felt ashamed for struggling emotionally while still loving God…

    If you’ve ever wondered whether seeking help meant you weren’t faithful enough…


    This letter is for you.


    Because God and therapy are not competitors.

    They can sit at the same table.

    And healing often requires both.

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    15 分
  • Dear Jordan…You Are More Than a Label
    2026/02/19

    We live in a world that asks us to define ourselves early and often—by labels, diagnoses, roles, and categories. But identity was never meant to be finalized that way.


    In this episode of Dear Jordan, I reflect on labels—political, psychological, cultural, and personal—and how easily they shift from tools of understanding into cages that limit growth. From ADHD and trauma labels to comparison in education and family systems, this letter explores what happens when people are reduced to categories instead of seen as whole, complex individuals.


    Through personal stories, psychology, and faith, this episode looks at:

    • Identity beyond labels and diagnoses

    • ADHD, trauma traits, and the spectrum of human experience

    • Comparison, giftedness, and worth in education

    • Why belonging should never require shrinking

    • The difference between description and destiny


    This letter is for anyone who has ever felt boxed in by a role, a diagnosis, a comparison, or a version of themselves that no longer fits. It’s about embracing difference, resisting identity foreclosure, and learning to belong to yourself before trying to belong anywhere else.


    Dear Jordan is a letter-style podcast about identity, faith, motherhood, healing, creativity, and becoming—written from lived experience, not perfection.


    You are allowed to grow.

    You are allowed to change.

    You are allowed to be complex.


    And you are allowed to be more than a label.

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    14 分
  • Dear Jordan…Being a “Good Wife” Cost Me My Peace
    2026/02/12

    Before I was a mother, I was a wife.

    And I entered marriage believing my job was to be good—not safe, not cherished, not protected.


    In this episode of Dear Jordan, I explore how early beliefs, religious conditioning, and trauma shaped my understanding of submission, marriage, and worth. This letter unpacks the psychological impact of negative identity labels, trauma bonding, and why so many women confuse endurance with faithfulness.


    Through a blend of personal story, Christian theology, and trauma-informed insight, this episode challenges the idea that submission requires silence, self-abandonment, or suffering. We talk about nervous system safety, boundaries after abuse, and what happens when healing disrupts familiar power dynamics.


    This episode is for women who are:

    • Healing from emotional, spiritual, or domestic abuse

    • Navigating faith after trauma

    • Learning to set boundaries without guilt

    • Choosing peace over proximity

    • Recovering from people-pleasing and survival mode


    This letter is for my daughter, Jordan—but it’s also for anyone learning that growth does not require permission from the people who benefited from your silence.


    Peace is not selfish.

    Boundaries are not betrayal.

    Healing does not make you cold—it makes you honest.


    Dear Jordan is a letter-style podcast about faith, healing, motherhood, trauma recovery, and becoming who you were always meant to be—without shrinking to survive.

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    15 分
  • Dear Jordan…Motherhood Is a Relationship, Not a Role
    2026/02/05

    This letter began with a long week, a snowstorm, a broken wrist that never quite lets me forget it exists, and a moment in a restaurant that forced me to pause and look at myself through my children’s eyes.


    What followed wasn’t really about the restaurant at all.


    It was about the quiet belief many of us inherit—that being a good mother means becoming smaller, quieter, more exhausted, and less ourselves. That love looks like endurance. That responsibility requires erasure.


    In this episode, I write to my daughter about the lie I had to unlearn: that motherhood is a template to follow instead of a relationship to build. I reflect on how emotional unavailability can grow out of survival, how children don’t bond with perfection but with presence, and how becoming a mother didn’t require me to disappear—it required me to come back to myself.


    This letter is about choosing growth over endurance, honesty over performance, and relationship over roles. It’s about learning that you cannot raise a child into freedom while living in quiet captivity yourself.


    If you’re a parent questioning the model you inherited, or someone who grew up without emotional space and is still naming what was missing, this episode is for you.

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    16 分
  • Dear Jordan… No Year Is Ever Wasted When Purpose Is at Work
    2026/01/29

    In this letter, I talk to you about success—not the kind that’s measured by titles, timelines, or other people’s opinions, but the kind that’s rooted in purpose.

    We live in a world that’s obsessed with outcomes. With checking boxes. With proving that time was “well spent.” And when life doesn’t unfold the way we planned, it’s easy to label entire years as wasted. I’ve done that myself. More than once.

    But purpose has a way of rewriting that narrative.

    In this episode, I reflect on what it really means to succeed, why alignment matters more than achievement, and how no season—no matter how confusing, painful, or quiet—was ever empty if purpose was still at work beneath the surface. This letter is about letting go of regret, redefining success, and learning to trust that God wastes nothing, even when we don’t yet understand the why.

    This one is for the years that didn’t look impressive…
    and the lives that turned out meaningful anyway.

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    19 分
  • Dear Jordan...then comes a baby and a ton of baggage.
    2026/01/22

    In this episode of Dear Jordan, I write a letter about responsibility—the kind that comes long before a baby ever does.

    This isn’t a conversation about love or chemistry. It’s about the weight of choices that have the potential to create life, and how rarely we’re taught to slow down and consider what those choices actually require. Through personal experience, psychological truth, and biblical wisdom, I explore what it means to choose wisely when intimacy can lead to permanence.

    This letter reflects on pregnancy, partnership, emotional maturity, and the realities of co-creating a life with another human being. It examines how culture minimizes sex, how biology and attachment don’t, and why the character of the person you create life with matters far more than attraction or timing.

    This episode is not about blame or fear. It’s about awareness—so wisdom doesn’t always have to come after consequence.

    If you’ve ever felt the weight of decisions made too quickly, or wished someone had spoken honestly before permanence entered the room, this letter is for you.

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    22 分
  • Dear Jordan...then comes marriage…
    2026/01/15

    Marriage is often sold as a feeling. A milestone. A natural next step after love.

    In this letter, I slow things down and talk honestly about what marriage actually is — not as a fairytale, but as a spiritual covenant, an emotional partnership, a psychological merging, a legal contract, and a financial commitment.

    This episode is a reflection on the things I didn’t fully understand before I said “I do,” and the lessons I learned by living through them. I share how love alone is not enough to sustain a marriage, why patience matters more than passion, how emotional and psychological mismatches surface once commitment is real, and what it means to legally and financially bind your life to another person.

    This letter isn’t written to discourage marriage. It’s written to bring clarity — especially for the version of my daughter who will one day stand at the edge of big decisions, and for anyone listening who wishes someone had explained these things before they learned them the hard way.

    If you’ve ever wondered why marriage feels heavier than it was described…
    If you’ve questioned whether love should be enough…
    Or if you’re navigating the aftermath of a commitment you entered without all the information…

    This letter is for you.

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    30 分
  • Dear Jordan…first comes love…
    2026/01/08

    In this episode of Dear Jordan, I write a letter about love—the kind we hope for, the kind we misunderstand, and the kind we often learn the hard way.

    I reflect on how early experiences shape our understanding of love, how grief and loss can change what we reach for, and how feelings that look like love can sometimes be chemistry, familiarity, or survival instincts in disguise. Through personal reflection, psychological insight, and biblical grounding, this letter explores the difference between attention and affection, intensity and devotion, sacrifice and self-abandonment.

    This episode isn’t about giving rules or telling anyone what to do. It’s about slowing down long enough to recognize patterns, to understand why certain relationships feel powerful but unsafe, and to learn how discernment protects both the heart and the spirit.

    At its core, this letter is about learning that healthy love doesn’t confuse, rush, or destabilize. It brings clarity, safety, and peace. And it begins—not with another person—but with knowing yourself.

    Written for my daughter, Jordan, and shared with anyone who has ever questioned what love is supposed to feel like, this episode is an invitation to choose love that feels like safety, not survival.

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    19 分