I didn’t wake up asking for a lesson.
I woke up asking a question.
When, Lord?
When will things be different?
When will healing finally arrive?
A year has passed since surgery.
By my own calendar, I decided I should be past this.
Past the restrictions.
Past the tenderness.
Past the reminders that my body has its own pace.
But today, my belly disagrees with my timeline.
If I’m being honest, it may also disagree with my choices.
Perhaps the third cup of coffee was ambitious.
Perhaps chocolate and I — though still emotionally attached — are currently not on speaking terms.
And perhaps I should have remembered the boatload of readily available internet wisdom that calmly, repeatedly explains the very misery I have managed to create for myself.
Still, I find myself asking God the same question Scripture has echoed for generations.
“How long, Lord? Will you forget me forever?” (Psalm 13)
That cry reminds me that impatience is not a lack of faith.
It is often proof that we believe God hears us well enough to answer.
What if healing is not only about what is removed,
but about what is relearned?
Without a gallbladder, my body asks for gentleness.
Without certainty, my heart does the same.
Maybe the invitation today is not to rush healing,
but to remember that restrictions are not punishment —
they are protection still at work.
And maybe God isn’t offended by my when.
Maybe He meets it with mercy.
“Because of the Lord’s great love we are not consumed,
for his compassions never fail.
They are new every morning.” (Lamentations 3:22–23)
That promise doesn’t say mercy arrives when I finally get it right —
only that it shows up faithfully, even when I don’t.
So today, I loosen my self-imposed deadlines.
I stop arguing with my body.
I release the belief that progress must look linear to be real.
I may not control the timeline,
but I can choose attentiveness over impatience.
And instead of asking, When will this be over?
I ask a better question:
Lord, how do You want to meet me here?
Because even here —
especially here —
He is present.
Love, Chelle

