
There is a moment in grief that nobody prepares you for.
Itโs not the funeral.
Itโs not the first holiday.
Itโs not even the anniversary of their death.
Itโs the first time you genuinely laugh again.
I remember the first time I laughed after Q passed away.
For just a split second, I forgot.
I laughed.
And then almost immediately, guilt came rushing in.
Not because I thought Quintin wouldnโt want me to be happy. I know he would.
The guilt came from realizing that life was continuing without him.
The kids would keep growing.
Milestones would happen.
Graduations.
Future weddings.
Future grandchildren.
Family traditions would change.
New memories would be made.
And Q would never know any of it.
That was a hard pill to swallow.
Why Happiness Feels So Wrong After Loss
When you lose your spouse, you donโt just lose a person.
You lose an entire way of life.
The life you built together disappears overnight.
Every area of your life changes.
Parenting changes.
Friendships change.
Finances change.
Household responsibilities change.
Intimacy changes.
Even your identity changes.
Suddenly the person who helped carry the weight of the world is gone.
And now youโre expected to keep living.
People often think grief is only about losing someone else.
But what I discovered was that I was grieving myself too.
The version of me that existed when Q was alive was gone.
In many ways, the day Q died, a part of me died too.

The Things People Say That Donโt Help
I know people mean well.
I truly do.
But some of the things people said during my grief journey felt impossible to hear.
โAt least you still have your kids.โ
โYour husband left you financially secure.โ
โQ would want you to be happy.โ
โYouโre so strong.โ
โEverything happens for a reason.โ
โGod wonโt give you more than you can handle.โ
The reality is none of those things replaced my person.
Not one of them.
Financial security doesnโt replace a husband.
Children donโt replace a spouse.
Being strong doesnโt make loss hurt less.
And while I know people were trying to help, most of their words fell on deaf ears because I simply couldnโt imagine happiness ever existing alongside grief.
Healing Takes Time
One of the greatest misconceptions about grief is that time heals all wounds.
I donโt believe thatโs entirely true.
Time alone doesnโt heal.
What you do with the time matters.
But time is still necessary.
Healing requires both.
Learning to live again is like rewiring your brain.
Youโre taking traumatic memories and slowly allowing God to create space for beautiful ones again.
That process doesnโt happen overnight.

Itโs slow.
Messy.
Painful.
And holy all at the same time.
You Donโt Get To Choose The Loss
One truth that changed my life was realizing this:
You donโt get to choose what happens to you.
But you do get to choose what you do next.
I Didnโt Choose The Loss, But I Chose The Healing
I didnโt choose to lose my husband.
I didnโt choose to become a widow.
I didnโt choose this road.
But eventually I realized I had a choice to make.
I could stay trapped in bitterness.
Or I could slowly begin choosing healing.
Not because I wanted what happened.
But because I didnโt want grief to have the final word.
Choosing Joy Doesnโt Mean Forgetting
This is where many grieving people get stuck.
We think choosing joy means weโre leaving our loved one behind.
But joy and remembrance can exist together.

I believe learning to choose joy is one of the greatest ways we can honor those we love.
Not because we stop missing them.
Not because the ache disappears.
But because their life mattered enough to inspire us to keep living.
And yet even knowing that, guilt still shows up.
Maybe youโve felt it too.
You smile and feel guilty.
You take a vacation and feel guilty.
You enjoy a holiday and feel guilty.
You start dreaming again and feel guilty.
You meet someone new and feel guilty.
The guilt whispers:
โIf youโre happy, maybe you didnโt love them enough.โ
But thatโs a lie.
Love isnโt measured by how miserable you remain.
For a long time, I thought my pain was proof of my love.
The deeper I hurt, the more it showed how much I loved him.
But eventually I realized something:
My suffering wasnโt honoring Q.

My living was.
My healing was.
My laughter was.
My willingness to keep showing up was.
Renewing Your Mind Daily
Part of healing has been learning to recognize what grief is trying to tell me.
The anger.
The confusion.
The unanswered questions.
The shock.
The sadness.
Those feelings still show up.
But now when they do, I pause.
I acknowledge them.
I give myself grace.
And then I surrender them to God.
Not because itโs easy.
Because itโs necessary.
Scripture tells us to renew our minds daily.
Do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind- Romans 12:2ย
Thatโs because our minds are often a battlefield.
The enemy would love nothing more than to convince us that our story ended when theirs did.
But it didnโt.
The old version of me died when Q died.
Thatโs true.
But God has been faithfully rebuilding something new.
We Were Never Meant For Death
I believe one of the reasons grief feels so unbearable is because we were never created for death.
Death was never Godโs original design.
The pain feels unnatural because it is.
We were created for relationship.
For connection.
For eternity.
Thatโs why grief leaves such a deep ache.
But thatโs also why the hope of Heaven matters so much.
Because this isnโt the end.
The Hope Found In Christ
John 3:16 says:
โFor God so loved the world that He gave His one and only Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish but have eternal life.โ
Because of Jesus, death doesnโt get the final say.
Because of Jesus, separation is temporary.
Because of Jesus, we have hope.
The kind of hope that produces joy even when circumstances donโt make sense.
A joy that points directly back to Him.
This is a true Joy that we will see our loved ones again!
Letting Go Of The Guilt
Today I know two things.
Quintin wants me to live fully.
And my Heavenly Father wants me to live fully too.
The ache is still there.
I still miss him.
I always will.
But I am choosing joy anyway.
Iโm choosing to laugh.
To dream.
To love.
To serve.
To live.
And I am saying goodbye to the guilt of being happy again.
Because happiness doesnโt dishonor his memory.
It honors the life we built together.
For a long time, I spent most of my energy looking backward.
Looking at what was.
Looking at who I used to be.
Looking at the life I thought I would still have.
If Iโm honest, there were seasons when I became so focused on what was behind me that I completely missed what God was placing in front of me.
But eventually God began teaching me something powerful:
Healing isnโt about forgetting what was behind me.
Itโs about trusting Him with what is ahead of me.
The more I released my grip on guilt, the more I began to see that God wasnโt finished writing my story.
In fact, I believe He was doing a new thing all along.

Today I am making a choice to get rid of the guilt and shame of living a full life of abundance.
God created me to live an abundant life here on earth so I could overflow into the lives of others from the abundance He has poured into me.

Life is but a vapor.
It is short.
So seize every moment with the people you love.
Spend intentional time learning to love well.
Serve well.
Forgive often.
And point people to the One who loves us the very most, Jesus.
Friend, Can I Ask You Something?
Have you ever felt guilty for smiling again after loss?
For laughing?
For taking a trip?
For dreaming about your future?
For finding joy?
Do you believe choosing to live your best life honors the person you lost?
Or is that something you still wrestle with?
Iโd love for you to share your story in the comments below.
Not because youโre alone.
But because youโre not.
Your story may be the encouragement someone else desperately needs today.
Letโs create a community of hope together.
Letโs remind each other that grief and joy can coexist.
And that choosing to live again isnโt betrayal.
Itโs healing.
And healing is something worth celebrating.