A Loved one dies.
Am I going crazy? Am I going to make it? Where is God in all this? Many of the people aroun.
Your heart begins asking questions.
The emotional pain can be intense.
Your world is upended.
And, true to his loving nature, he continues to take my losses and use them A Loved one dies.
He continues to bring healing to my injured soul, though never quite in the way I ask for or anticipate.
He has led me through the valley of the shadow of death many times.
He kept me alive.
Even in my darkest moments, God was there, embracing me in my pain and whispering to my wounded heart.
Over time, they piled up and threatened to crush Gary\'s heart.
Some were deep and even debilitating.
The losses kept coming.
If you don\'t, I\'m history.
Then, I must find a way to use the pain for good, or else what is this all for? God, only you can do this.
He said to himself, If this is what life is like, I must find a way to handle the hits that come.
Gary wondered if he was going to make it.
He was functionally orphaned by the time he was 15.
He grew up feeling damaged, sad, and lonely.
His childhood was riddled with sexual abuse, bullying, disappointments, failures, deaths, estrangements, and divorce.
Loss invaded Gary\'s life early.
A former missionary and pastor, Gary knows the spiritual questions that tug at your heart during this time of loss.
Multiple award-winning author, speaker, hospice chaplain, and Grief specialist Gary Roe has become a trusted voice in Grief recovery who has been bringing comfort, hope, and encouragement to wounded hearts for more than three decades.
And that\'s what Grief Walk is all about.
You need to know he is walking with you in your pain and grief.
You need to experience his compassion and love.
And most of all, you need the comfort of God\'s presence.
You need to know that you will get through this, even though you will not be the same person you were before.
You need to know that you\'re not alone in this.
You need to know that you\'re not crazy and that your Grief is normal.
You need to know that it\'s okay to hurt, to be sad, and to grieve.
You need something more than this - far more.
You\'ll get through this.
You\'re strong.
It\'s okay.
They utter cliches and platitudes.
Am I going crazy? Am I going to make it? Where is God in all this? Many of the people around you don\'t know what to say or do.
Your heart begins asking questions.
The emotional pain can be intense.
Your world is upended.
A Loved one dies