Recently, I’ve been reflecting on the word faithful. Not in a big or spiritual way, but just in a simple, everyday way. With how fast things change these days, I’ve been wondering what it really means to be faithful.
Choosing Faithfulness in a Fast-Changing World

Redefining Faithfulness
For me, it no longer means holding on tightly or never changing. I’ve done enough changing to know that growth often requires letting go. What faithfulness requires now is a quieter commitment: to remain dedicated to my existing choices, particularly when motivation is low and certainty is absent.
The Practices That Hold Me
This is most evident in my day-to-day rituals. Writing, prayer, moments of stillness, gentle rituals like Morning Pages and journaling that anchor my days. None of these are dramatic. Some days they feel nourishing; other days they feel flat. I keep returning to them not out of inspiration, but because these practices resonate with me. They’ve been there for me during grief, caregiving, and when I was just plain exhausted and not doing so well.
Faithfulness and Inner Trust
In The Gifts of Imperfection, Brené Brown writes about cultivating intuition by learning to trust ourselves. To listen inwardly, even when certainty is absent. This idea has stayed with me. Faithfulness, I’m learning, is deeply connected to that inner trust. It’s listening inwardly instead of constantly looking outside for permission or answers. It’s believing, especially on tough days, that some quiet wisdom already lives within me.
Self-Care as a Way of Life
This has also changed my perspective on self-care. I want to stop seeing rest as just a quick fix when I’m at my limit. I want self-care to be something I do all the time, like a peaceful, committed thing. Something I do every day to stay rooted and grounded and be myself.

Being faithful, for me, looks like showing up flaws and all. Instead of pushing harder, I’ll try being nicer to myself, especially in the words I say to myself. I can rest without calling it quits, pause without leaving myself behind. It means trusting slow progress even when I can’t see it.
Being faithful for me today simply means returning to what steadies me, to what matters, to myself again and again. Not perfectly.
Just faithfully.
We’re focusing on the word/ theme of faithful on Write Bravely in May.
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