Hope is Here
Easter is a season that speaks of hope, renewal, and life after death. But for mothers who have lost a child to murder, these words can feel distant, almost impossible to reach. How can anything feel hopeful when your world has been shattered? For most, hope can feel like something meant for other people.
And yet… even here, hope can still exist.
Not the kind of hope that rushes healing or erases pain. Not the kind that asks you to “move on” or pretend everything is okay. But a quieter, deeper hope, the kind of hope that gently sits beside your grief and whispers, you are not alone.
Grief after homicide is complex. It is the most complicated grief I have experienced and counseled others through. It carries layers of trauma, unanswered questions, and a deep sense of injustice.
It is important we remember, as mothers, that your love didn’t end when your child’s life was taken. The love you feel is still alive, strong, present, DEEP, and aching. And that love is not something to be fixed. It is something to be honored (valued).
Easter reminds us that even after the darkest day, something new can emerge. Not the same life. Not the same joy. But a different kind of living; a way of carrying both sorrow and meaning at the same time.
Hope might look like:
Getting out of bed on a day that feels heavy
Saying your child’s name out loud
Allowing yourself to feel, even when it hurts
Connecting with another mom who understands (community)
Hope is not loud. It doesn’t force itself. It often shows up quietly, in small moments that remind you that your story is still unfolding. As we know, holidays can amplify absence. They can highlight the empty chair, the missing voice, the life that should still be here. And also, with allowance, if we look, we may be able to see even the smallest glimpse of light.
Because hope, like Easter, doesn’t deny the pain of what came before. It simply reminds us that pain is not the end of the story.
You are carrying the unimaginable.
Carry it with HOPE AND LOVE.
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