February 26, 2026

A Letter to My Future Self by Gloria Guest


The first questions I have when I think of you: Who are you now? How old you are? How are you feeling? Are you happy?

Happiness is elusive though and your present and past selves have certainly learned that. It comes and goes based on life circumstances, unlike joy that remains deep inside in spite of them. My present and past selves are no expert on joy either though…I’ve had it at times…but I’ve struggled so much to hold onto it.

But let’s stick with you…my future self. You too seem elusive. Why then do I choose to write to you? Maybe because I’ve written a lot about my younger self and some about my present, but never about you, my future. Setting goals has never been my strong suit but if I’m to connect with you, from the place I sit in the present, I sort of need to set some. How else can I even begin to imagine who you might be? Or help you be who you want to be? Sandi Somers's post, writing about how she wrote to her future self, and asking herself some key questions, was a big help to me. I’ve attempted to answer those questions myself. Thanks Sandi.

‘What would I attempt if I were sure the Lord were with me infusing me with wisdom, love courage and strength?’ Big question. Short answer is that I would attempt to finish that memoir that has been hanging around in my life since around 2005.

‘What obstacles seem to be standing in my way?’ Well that’s easy. It’s me. My fear specifically. And the specific things I need for God to give me beyond the courage and wisdom that Sandi mentions to help me, is less of me and more of Him.

The steps I need to take? Oh right. There are steps. This is where I stumble. I look too far ahead. Fear of what others will ‘think’ of me. Fear of how family will respond. Fear is likely my first big step I have stumbled on over and over again. My memoir is a complicated story of family dysfunction and abuse, festering wounds that led to my mother’s early death and a sister's suicide; a lifelong difficult journey of healing for myself. It’s not comfortable but still a story I think needs telling. Some voices do not quiet down until they are told. I had no voice as a child and my sister didn’t either.

Here in my memoir I attempt to blend her voice with mine and God's redeeming love with the painful fact that some things aren’t fixed this side of heaven. Back to the steps though…
-One day at a time….I can write for ‘now’ without thinking about the ‘future’. Someday perhaps the now will meet up the future when I ever get it published. Focus on the now.

-Schedule a writing time for just ‘memoir’ writing preferably once a week. If I can’t write on my memoir I can journal.

-Journal every day. That is where the best ‘stuff’ of memoir comes from; free flowing thought even if it’s from other places and happenings.

-Prayer. This memoir will never happen without prayer, and I have lacked in that department. Perhaps I think that if I don’t pray, I won’t have to do it. But God’s promptings to write are steadfast. I need to pray. And perhaps have others pray with me. Spiritual warfare as our family has found out in the last couple of years is very real.
‘How is the Lord prompting me now to step out in risk?’ This very letter has been the prompt I needed. In the past few years I’ve slipped back into depression and have allowed a lot of my motivation to slide downhill. I’ve read and learned much about depression in my past and understand just how complicated it is, with no easy answers. Yet sometimes I read something that connects with where ‘I’ am at and believe to be true about ‘me’. One thing I read was when we aren’t living true to our self and aligning with the purposes that God has placed on our hearts, depression often then comes in the door. That rings true for me in this time and in this place….

So dear future self; as you’ve stepped forward into the purpose that you believed God has set before you, you were not alone. Every battle you have fought in your past has produced a strength and resilience in you that drew on to write what you were called to. In my present I smile to think of you lowering your pen deep into the ink well of God’s grace and mercy; laying by the green pastures and still waters He has prepared for you as you write the tough stuff that has forged you into who you are. You lean heavily on your Shepherd who you understand now has many times left the one hundred to find you; clinging to the side of a cliff or deep in a hole; but He’s always found you and brought you back. I believe you understand more than you do now how He loves you with a Father’s love. You are His and He alone carries you now, your present, and your past yet.

“His mercies are new every morning; Great is Your faithfulness.” (Lamentations 3:23)



Gloria writes from a small prairie town in southern Saskatchewan; coming full circle back to her husband's home town where they farmed for many years. She refers to herself as a bit of gypsy due to her many moves to various towns, cities, and provinces throughout her lifetime and draws from those varied places and experiences heavily in not only her memoir writing but other genres too. She loves the prairie crocus and sunsets and sunrises, the grandeur of the northern Alberta forest, the charm and quaintness and beautiful rivers of her southern Ontario roots.


February 25, 2026

Dear Twenty-Year-old Me by Mary Folkerts

 


Dear Almost-20-year-old me,

Oh girl, if only this were possible. That fifty-some year-old me could go back in time to share some advice and encouragement with you. After the initial shock of how we’ve aged, I hope you'll hear my words and take them to heart.

🌸

Girl, you are loved! Don’t be so concerned about people’s opinions of you! Embrace your uniqueness and be you. You don’t need to be like the girls in the magazines or the best friend who is outgoing and has all the friends. Be you. And be confident that the One who made you created you precisely as you are for a purpose! His eye was on you from conception, and He sees you. He knows all the bumps and bruises and loves you fiercely. Learn to trust God's love!

🌸

Don’t be self-centered. Think of yourself less (NOT think less of yourself). Learn early to give a helping hand without an incentive.

🌸

The counseling you attempt to sit through and don’t apply yourself to? Do it. Do the hard work of understanding yourself, and when you are my age, you will thank me! Don’t be so consumed with “oh, I’m the only broken one. No one wants someone with so many issues that needs counseling”. Everyone has broken pieces, girl; we’re just all broken differently. The benefits of speaking through and untangling life's knots are immeasurable. Get the tools you will need to help you navigate your way through the ups and downs.

🌸

Shame and guilt are two different things. Guilt is “I did something bad,” and God forgives and restores you from that. Shame is “I am bad”, and this thought is not from God. It’s a lie that will ensnare you and keep you stuck in self-deprecation.

🌸

That advice that the older, more experienced friend gives you? Don’t shrug it off as if you know better. You could save yourself a lot of heartache if you take heed!

🌸

I hate to say this part, but here it comes. You think that once you’ve found the man of your dreams, once you’ve settled down into marriage, that life will be complete. Don’t be fooled. There will always be “the next thing” you add to your “if only” list. Learn to enjoy life now! You know that saying, that someday TODAY will be the day you look back on fondly? It’s true. Be in the now. Don’t think that life will be better when—(Side note: the man of your dreams? It turns out that dreams change, and what you thought you wanted won’t be as important as what God knew you needed).

🌸

Nothing will ever be perfect. Perfection is highly overrated and unattainable. It will, in fact, derail you if you keep those tendencies up. Allow yourself to learn how to say, “I did my best, and that’s good enough.”

🌸

Grow your faith. Build a solid foundation underneath you. Know what you believe, and surround yourself with friends who will help you stand firm. You will need it as you get older. I don’t want to spoil all the surprises for you, but there will be things that come that will shake you to the core. Learn early to trust in the God who knows everything about you and still loves you completely.

🌸 

Endings are painful, but they can become new beginnings if you turn them on their head. Perspective is key!

🌸

Life doesn’t have to be easy to be good. Difficulties in life are the rule, not the exception. God never said that He would give you a life without trouble, but He did say He would be with you THROUGH the trouble. Make sure you walk with Him when the sun shines, so you don’t have to frantically search for Him when it rains.

🌸

Don’t feel obligated to dwell on every thought that passes through your mind. You will find that the negative, untrue thoughts will lead you down a sad road. Train your brain early to do what the Bible says, “Be careful what you think, because your thoughts run your life.” (Proverbs 4:23 NCV)

🌸

Good habits are good, and bad ones are hard to break. Begin now! There will come a day when you wish you had made more effort to develop the good ones and to break the bad ones.

🌸

Don’t waste your time. Time becomes more precious the older you get. Value it, use it well.

🌸

And one more thing—
Use sunscreen on your face,
and oh—
easy on those potato chips.

Love your more experienced, more mature, still learning, still stumbling, but grateful fifty-some-year-old self.




Mary Folkerts is mom to four kids and wife to a farmer, living on the southern prairies of Alberta, where the skies are large and the sunsets stunning. She is a member of Proverbs 31 Ministries' COMPEL Writers Training, involved in church ministries and music. Mary’s blog aims to encourage and inspire women and advocate for those with Down Syndrome, as their youngest child introduced them to this extraordinary new world. For more inspiration, check out Joy in the Small Things https://maryfolkerts.com/ or connect on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/maryfolkerts/



February 24, 2026

Dear Brenda by Brenda J Wood




Dear Brenda,

There she is! The same name as me! The same colour 
hair as me!

The same middle initial as me! The same weight as me
and even the same birthday month as me.

She must be me! We both write and we both publish.

We both read the same type of books! We both want to
lose twenty pounds!

She must be me! We are both widows. We lived in the
same area! Surely, she is me!

But she is not me.

She is the me who fantasied about losing twenty pounds
and living

with perfect children and a doting husband. Those days
are past…well except for the

warm climate which never did. (Oops, and that twenty-
pound thing!)

Instead, my husband died and the children have flown the
coop.

That Brenda has to make it on her own now and she does.

But that other elusive Brenda? She lives in the Azores.
She found me

because of something I wrote twenty-five or thirty years
ago. Everything I said about

her is true! We are like twins in so many ways. And this is
how she found me.

Like many others, I wrote for the devotional page
PresbyCan.ca, from May 25, 1996, to March 31, 2025.

Eventually editor Robin Ross organized those 10,441
devotionals into a low-maintenance project.

Now five writings appear daily in our mail boxes.

We still comment, enter our prayers and more but the
writings are all oldies, but goodies.

My other Brenda found me because of a certain
devotional.

I searched it by my name and date of the piece.
Immediately it popped up.

I am writing all this to tell you to be careful what you put
out online. It never goes away.

It is still there. Make it a good one! Nothing lasts forever?
Don’t kid yourself.

from Brenda


(Top) Image by Ron Lach on Pexels



Brenda J Wood has authored more than fifty books. She is a seasoned motivational speaker, who declares the Word of God with wisdom, humour, and common sense.






February 20, 2026

Gonna Write Myself a Letter by Sharon Heagy





Dear Sharon,

What a challenge to write this letter. When you think of the past, your autopilot goes to the mistakes you've made and the 'woulda, shoulda, coulda' moments that may have changed the direction for your life and the lives of others. For some reason you must choose to ponder the abundance of blessed days of your existence, and there are many. Even the grand errors of your life are filled with "good and perfect gifts" (James 1:17) and led to the most amazing one of all - the grace, mercy and agape love of God.

If you think of the future, you realize your rope is getting shorter and you no longer entertain the illusion of youth that assures you will live to a ripe old age. There are no guarantees for anyone. Yet that realization fills your heart with thanksgiving for the years and adventures you've had. The course of the life you are living today can change in an instant.

(Well, Sharon, so far this letter is not a letter of encouragement. What else have you got?)

What else have you got? You have today. This moment in time. This precious, remarkable, exquisite moment. Turn it over in your hands and see it glow. Appreciate its brevity and fragility like a soap bubble resting in your palm for one brief nanosecond. Are you going to waste it? There will be another won't there? Another and another, all popping into your life like popcorn in a pot. Slowly they start pop.....pop....pop. Then suddenly they are popping like crazy! Popopopopopopopop until just as suddenly they are gone.

Treasure the moments, but don't hoard them. They don't belong to you. They belong to Him. Seek His wisdom and use them wisely. This life is not all about you. It's about Him, it's about others and then it's about you. We are all in this together, in that order - first, second, third. At least that is what I think you should strive for in all the moments you have left, however many that will be and however quickly they will pass. As John Wesley said,

"Do all the good you can,
By all the means you can,
In all the ways you can,
In all the places you can,
At all the times you can,
To all the people you can,
As long as ever you can."

Discover the miracle of God's creation in each person you meet. They are "fearfully and wonderfully made." (Psalm 139:14) Witness the beauty of a sunrise and let the crashing waves of the ocean take your breath away. Listen to the whisper of wheat waving in a field of grain. Let your heart warm and giggle as you hear the laughter of children, new life. "Rejoice with those who rejoice; mourn with those who mourn." (Romans 12:15) Embrace the sacredness of silence. Seek the awesomeness of God in every day. Be obedient to His beckoning voice.

Print out this letter, Sharon, to read for the next few days then store it away in a place you are sure to discover later. Soak in these directions until you are overflowing with grace into the lives of others. Building, encouraging, nurturing. Sharing the love He has so freely given to you. Share through written word or physical deed. Through prayer and supplication. In any way His limitless creative way chooses. This is what you have. As the Gaither song says, 'We Have This Moment, Today.' (YouTube link here)

With love,
Sharon




Sharon Heagy writes from the wonderful town of Rockglen, Saskatchewan where she lives with her husband a big dog and furry cats. Their kids have flown the coop and made lives for themselves and their families, as it should be. She writes to bring hope and humour to a world that needs both. She can be reached @ sharonheagy@gmail.com Thanks for taking the time to visit today.