“...hope is never wasted. Even if what I hoped for did not come to fruition as I had imagined, as I had hoped. Hope is placing the beautifully vulnerable parts of ourselves, our raw selves, into His hands. I believe hope moves His heart; but hope also moves our hearts into His hands. Hope builds trust.”
Natalie Brenner“I love them both as though I birthed them both, but also as though I adopted them both.”
Natalie Brenner, This Undeserved Life: Uncovering The Gifts of Grief and The Fullness of Life“My parents are humans too. This has been one of my greatest awakenings in adulthood: my parents being regular people, too. They have baggage and losses, grown up in imperfect homes with imperfect families just as I did. Life hasn’t been easy on either of them between the mixture of poor decisions and bad breaks; this world lacks perfection for us all.”
Natalie Brenner, This Undeserved Life: Uncovering The Gifts of Grief and The Fullness of Life“Too many men I know experience shame because society places pressure on them to withhold emotion: emotion and sensitivity is weak. I have found the opposite is true: emotion and sensitivity is what makes us strong.”
Natalie Brenner, This Undeserved Life: Uncovering The Gifts of Grief and The Fullness of Life“...when I decided to be fully honest about whatever my heart undergoes, I found immense peace among the chaos of uncertainties. In my honesty and by acknowledging our big, big God, I found peace.”
Natalie Brenner, This Undeserved Life: Uncovering The Gifts of Grief and The Fullness of Life“Wholeness is birthed through vulnerability and sensitivity, which is often conceived in brokenness. Jesus taught me this.”
Natalie Brenner, This Undeserved Life: Uncovering The Gifts of Grief and The Fullness of Life“I must acknowledge that though his adoption embodies graciousness, it is also a reminder this world is not as it should be. Brokenness permeates our world. Sure, beauty is born from ashes, but the ashes don't just magically disappear. Suffering and all that is wrong in this world still exists. This side of heaven, tragedy remains and the moments of her son becoming ours is a representation of joy and suffering deeply intertwined. Our son, the living proof and blessing that love is what makes a family, reminds us that adoption is born out of undeniable loss. Irrevocable loss of wholeness, of what was meant to be.To only acknowledge the beauty without giving voice to the tragedy, is to detract from adoption. In diminishing the tragedy of adoption, I decrease my son's story, along with others a part of the adoption circle. I would be choosing to ignore a massive portion of who he is.”
Natalie Brenner, This Undeserved Life: Uncovering The Gifts of Grief and The Fullness of Life“Loss of any sort should stir up emotion; if it doesn’t, it’s because we’ve trained ourselves to be numb. We’ve bought into the great societal lie that emotional and sensitive is bad, is shameful, is weak, and worse yet is unlike Him.”
Natalie Brenner, This Undeserved Life: Uncovering The Gifts of Grief and The Fullness of Life“Fast forgiveness is a part of Christian culture I want to help change and transform. I ache for a journey of Jesus-like forgiveness. The kind demanding time and suffering in the process.”
Natalie Brenner, This Undeserved Life: Uncovering The Gifts of Grief and The Fullness of Life“I began realizing it was okay to just sit with Him instead of always reading and journaling prayers or hustling off to the next bible study. It was okay to just be still. It was possible to find Him in the immense stillness, the hidden parts of my heart. He was always there in my hiddenness.”
Natalie Brenner, This Undeserved Life: Uncovering The Gifts of Grief and The Fullness of Life“In my gut-wrenching honesty and by acknowledging our big, big God, I found peace.”
Natalie Brenner, This Undeserved Life: Uncovering The Gifts of Grief and The Fullness of Life