I went forward like everyone else.
Not rushed. Not hesitant. Just… carried.
I was viaitinf with the early service at my son’s church, when the Pastor had called us to come sign our names on the wooden cross that had been standing since last week’s Easter service. A simple act, he said. A physical way to mark what God had already done.
But nothing about it felt simple.
Tears started before I ever stepped out.
I watched the seniors go first
Slow steps
Steady hands
Lives the world sometimes overlooks
But heaven still calls by name
I saw the former addict sign
Not as who they were
But as who God kept
I saw those once incarcerated
Writing their names like chains had finally agreed to let go
A blind man signed
A woman limping signed
And my own deaf son… signed
Lord… that alone almost took me out
Each name wasn’t just written
It was declared
Healing
Freedom
Promise
Still in progress, but already claimed
The children came excited
Unafraid of space running out
Because children always believe there’s room
And when space did get tight
The Pastor lifted the cross higher
So those who couldn’t bend could still reach
Even at the feet… there was still room
That part preached all by itself
But what stayed with me…
What *lingered*…
Was where my hand landed
A rough place
Scratched
Uneven
The kind of spot that, if you rubbed it the wrong way, could leave a splinter
And I paused
Because it felt like my life
Not smooth
Not polished
Not presentation-ready
But still part of the cross
And right there, in that imperfect place
I wrote my name
Careful
Intentional
Fully aware
That Jesus didn’t die for smooth stories
He died for splinters too
For the places that still catch
Still sting
Still remind you that healing isn’t always pretty
And yet…
That rough place held my name just fine
Didn’t reject me
Didn’t shift me to a better spot
It received me
As-is
And I heard it clear as day in my spirit
“You don’t need a polished place to belong here.”
So I signed
Not because I have it all together
But because the cross already made room for every part of me that doesn’t
“By His wounds we are healed.” — Isaiah 53:5
Signing your name in places that don’t feel smooth yet
Trusting God with the parts of your story that still feel rough
Believing that even here… you belong
**Love, Chelle**
defygravitywithoutwings.com

