“The only limit to our realization of tomorrow will be our doubts of today. Let us move forward with strong and active faith.”
— Franklin D. Roosevelt
Grief often clouds the idea of tomorrow. Many grieving parents wake up unsure how to make it through another day. The idea of moving forward can feel like betrayal or even abandonment of the one we lost. Faith becomes a foreign word. Doubt takes up permanent space in the mind. Every small decision can feel like a mountain. But deep within grief lives the possibility of courage. Courage does not erase pain. Courage simply whispers, “Try again today.” Grieving parents live minute to minute, slowly learning that survival itself is an act of faith.
Doubt tells a grieving parent that joy will never return. Doubt insists that meaning died with the child we loved. Doubt is loud, persistent, and familiar. Faith, on the other hand, begins as a whisper. Faith does not mean certainty. Faith means trusting that love endures even when we feel broken. Some days, faith means taking a walk. Some days, faith means answering a message. Faith does not always feel powerful. Sometimes faith feels like choosing not to give up. And sometimes, that is more than enough.
Faith allows grief to soften into remembrance. Doubt isolates, but faith connects. Faith says, “You are still here. You still matter.” A grieving heart can still create meaning, even in pain. Parents who have lost a child understand the depth of life in a way others may never touch. That depth creates space for beauty, even in sorrow. When grief and faith walk together, healing becomes possible. The path is not quick or easy. But it is real. And it begins with one quiet step.
Thought for today: Doubt can paralyze. Faith can carry. Take one step today, no matter how small, with strong and active faith.