Halftime: Reflections on 2026 and the Road Ahead

Halftime thoughts.

Every year around the year’s midpoint, I find myself pausing long enough to evaluate where God has brought me and where He’s still leading me.

The first half of the year—especially these past three months—has been marked by much-needed growth, course correction, new opportunities, and genuine healing. Not the kind of healing that arrives overnight, but the kind you only recognize when you look over your shoulder and realize the arrow is finally pointing upward again. I’m grateful for that.

Much of this progress has come through a combination of what God has been asking me to lay down and what He has been faithfully replacing it with. As Paul reminds us, God’s grace is made perfect in weakness, not because weakness is desirable, but because it becomes the stage upon which His strength is displayed (2 Corinthians 12:9-10).

That doesn’t mean grief has disappeared.

In many ways, I still consider “the griever” because I am one. I remain a recovering bereaved parent learning how to faithfully navigate a world that often doesn’t know how to care for those carrying profound loss. Scripture tells us to “weep with those who weep” (Romans 12:15), yet many people simply have never learned what that looks like in practice. They don’t intentionally neglect grieving people; they’re simply unequipped to enter pain they have never personally experienced.

For a grieving person, being understood carries tremendous emotional and relational value. As months and years pass, silence can begin to feel like abandonment. Invitations become fewer. Conversations become shorter. Friends move on with life while your world still feels permanently altered. Somewhere in the recesses of our minds, we begin wondering whether the relationship was ever as strong as we believed. Sometimes that conclusion is accurate. More often, it is simply the grief interpreting silence through wounded eyes.

One of the greatest lessons God has been teaching me is that misunderstanding does not automatically equal malice. Sometimes people aren’t withdrawing because they’ve stopped caring. They withdraw because they don’t know how to care. They fear saying the wrong thing, so they say nothing at all. Ironically, that silence often becomes the very thing that wounds us most.

Looking back, I believe one of the deepest forms of forgiveness is releasing people from the offense of misunderstanding you. Some of the harshest words ever spoken to me occurred during seasons when my autistic mind couldn’t fully process my own weakness while simultaneously navigating profound grief. There were moments when neither side truly understood the other. My pain was misunderstood, and their limitations were equally misunderstood by me.

The reality is that ignorance is unavoidable. If we’re living life together—raising families, serving in churches, investing in friendships—we’re all going to have moments of poor execution. We’ll say the wrong thing. We’ll say nothing. We’ll miss opportunities to show up. None of us perfectly reflects the compassion of Christ every single day. That’s why Paul exhorts believers to “bear with one another and forgive one another if any of you has a grievance against someone. Forgive as the Lord forgave you” (Colossians 3:13).

I’ve come to believe that grief matures our understanding of care faster than almost anything else. By the time someone has walked through profound suffering, they’ve learned that presence often matters more than words, consistency matters more than grand gestures, and quiet companionship often ministers more deeply than carefully crafted advice. Our expectations of others naturally rise because our own understanding of compassion has deepened.

But this is where humility must temper wisdom.

Most people haven’t walked through the valleys we’ve walked through. Their capacity to care exists within the boundaries of their own experiences. They aren’t necessarily uncaring; they’re simply still growing. Just as we hope others will extend grace toward grief they cannot fully comprehend, grieving people must also extend grace toward those who are still maturing in their understanding of compassion.

That realization has changed how I read 2 Corinthians 1:3-4. Paul describes God as “the Father of compassion and the God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our troubles, so that we can comfort those in any trouble.” The comfort God gives us isn’t intended to terminate with us. It becomes the pattern through which we learn to comfort others. Sometimes that also means remembering that not everyone has yet received the same lessons suffering has taught us.

At the same time, grief cannot become an entitlement card. It cannot become permission to remain bitter toward a world that no longer understands us. Nor can it become an excuse to avoid relationships and settings simply because awkward conversations might happen. Bitterness feels protective, but it slowly becomes another prison. Scripture repeatedly calls us toward forgiveness, not because every offense is small, but because Christ has forgiven infinitely greater debts within us (Matthew 18:21-22; Ephesians 4:32).

Some people genuinely have abandoned you. Others have failed you. Some will never apologize. Some may never even recognize the hurt they caused. Those realities are painful, but they are not outside God’s ability to redeem. “The Lord is near to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit” (Psalm 34:18). He sees every lonely moment that no one else noticed.

So let God deal with the abandoner and embrace the call to pray for them.

Release the hurt you’ve carried through the valleys and shadows. Don’t allow grief to collect resentment until bitterness disguises itself as conviction. That burden was never yours to carry forever.

If you’re faithfully pressing into Christ day after day, He will gradually give you the strength to surrender every source of hurt into His hands. Forgiveness rarely begins with strength; it begins with surrender. We forgive because we’ve first been forgiven. We extend grace because we’ve first received grace. And we continue moving forward because nothing—not grief, misunderstanding, abandonment, nor even death itself—can separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord (Romans 8:38-39).

Perhaps that is one of healing’s greatest milestones. Not when grief disappears, because it won’t this side of eternity, but when forgiveness quietly becomes greater than offense, hope becomes stronger than despair, and the arrow—by the grace of God—continues pointing upward.

Cover graphic creds: ChatGPT

Join the Discussion

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.