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May/Mental Health Month - PTSD: The Mind’s Way of Remembering What the Body Can’t Forget

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  PTSD isn’t just about flashbacks or nightares. It’s about memory—how the mind and body remember danger long after the danger is gone. People often think PTSD means being “stuck in the past.” But for those who live with it, it feels more like the past being stuck in them. A sound, a smell, a tone of voice—anything can open the door to a moment that never really ended. PTSD is not weakness. It’s not drama. It’s not a refusal to move on. It’s the nervous system doing its job too well—protecting, scanning, bracing, even when safety has returned. For some, it comes from a single event. For others, it’s the accumulation of many small ones: chronic stress, emotional neglect, repeated loss, or living too long in survival mode. And for many, it’s invisible. They look calm, competent, even cheerful—but inside, their body is still negotiating with ghosts. Healing from PTSD isn’t about erasing memory. It’s about teaching the body that the present is not the past. It’s about learning that ...

✨ How Christians Differ in Their Devotion to Mary

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  Note: Today is the Feast of the Blessed Virgin Mary in the Romand Catholic Church. Catholics and Orthodox venerate Mary with deep love; most Protestants respect her but avoid devotional practices. Catholics and Orthodox are surprisingly close to each other — the real divide is between both of them and Protestant traditions. 🕊️ Catholics: Mary as Immaculate, Assumed, and Intercessor Catholics hold four Marian dogmas: Mother of God (Theotokos) — defined at Ephesus in 431, shared with the Orthodox. Perpetual Virginity Immaculate Conception — Mary conceived without original sin. Assumption — Mary taken body and soul into heaven. Catholic devotion includes: Rosary Marian feasts Apparitions (Lourdes, Fatima) Titles like Ark of the Covenant , Seat of Wisdom , Queen of Heaven Catholics see Mary as the model disciple , the New Eve , and a powerful intercessor who prays for the Church. ✨ Orthodox: Mary as Panagia, the All‑Holy One Orthodox Christians share the ancient devotion to Ma...

What God Is Doing in the Dark Night of the Senses

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  When everything feels absent, God is not gone — God is working underground. 🌘 1. God is teaching you to love without reward In the early stages of prayer, we often love because we feel loved. In this night, God withdraws the sweetness so that love can mature. It’s the difference between loving a friend for their gifts and loving them simply for who they are. 🌘 2. God is purifying the senses The senses are not bad — they’re just limited. They can only grasp what is tangible, emotional, or imagined. God is preparing the soul to perceive the divine in a deeper way — through faith, not feeling. 🌘 3. God is shifting your center of gravity Before the night, your spiritual life may have revolved around experience. After the night, it begins to revolve around presence. You move from “I feel God” to “I trust God.” That shift is the foundation of contemplative union. 🌘 4. God is cultivating interior stillness The silence that feels empty is actually fertile. It’s the soil where divine...