and you, my cherished Stillwater Petticoat Society,
I wish to speak today of something tender, and I ask your patience, for this is not a matter that yields to haste.
I have noticed, as perhaps you have too, the many beautiful images that drift across our screens: bread rising, children barefoot in fields, milk poured warm from the pail, homes ordered by prayer and promise. Often, these scenes are accompanied by declarations of devotion — words of service, faith, and holy intention.
There is nothing inherently unlovely in this.
And yet.
There are truths one may only speak after she has lived long enough inside them.
I was raised in religion. First Pentecostal, then Mormon, for many decades of my life. I knew the hymns by heart. I knew the rules by memory. I knew how to perform goodness, obedience, cheerfulness, and sacrifice until my body could no longer distinguish devotion from erasure.
And I say this with care, not accusation; the cost was very high.
I do not speak of belief itself, but of the weight placed upon women in its name. Of the quiet expectation to endure endlessly. Of the sanctification of exhaustion. Of the way suffering is so often mistaken for virtue.
There were seasons when I smiled and served while something vital inside me slowly disappeared. There were years when the promise of goodness required me to deny my own knowing. There was a time — and I say this plainly, because it matters — when I was suicidal, not because I lacked faith, but because I had been taught to abandon myself in order to keep it.
I know now that many women live this way sincerely. Lovingly. With their whole hearts. I also know that sincerity does not prevent harm.
It is difficult to name this without sounding unkind, and so I will be precise:
I have often found that those who spoke most loudly of love and godliness were, paradoxically, the most severe with other women — and with themselves. Judgment was cloaked as concern. Control dressed itself as care. Cruelty slipped through in the name of righteousness.
This is not a universal truth. It is not a condemnation.
It is an observation born of long intimacy.
And here is where I wish to be especially gentle — with them, and with myself.
I understand now that this, too, is a belief system at work. A structure that promises safety through order. Meaning through sacrifice. Belonging through sameness. When one has given her life to such a system, questioning it can feel like death itself.
So I no longer meet it with anger.
I meet it with distance.
And with compassion.
I am still unlearning the reflex that says holiness must hurt. I am still releasing the belief that goodness requires disappearance. These ideas linger like old songs — softer now, but not entirely gone. A pinch, as one might say. And that is all right.
Healing does not require haste.
love that requires you to leave yourself is not love.
devotion that demands your silence is not sacred.
and a God who asks for your erasure is not one I recognise anymore.
I now believe in a gentler order. One that allows rest. One that honours discernment. One that permits a woman to belong to herself first.
If you recognise yourself anywhere in these words — if you feel a tightening, or a softening, or a long exhale — know that you are not alone, and you are not wrong for noticing.
There is a way of living that does not require performance.
There is a faith that does not demand exhaustion.
There is a holiness in being alive.
I write this not to persuade, but to make room.
A Benediction for the Tenderhearted
May you be released from the belief that love must wound in order to be real.
May you lay down every burden that was never yours to carry.
May you trust the quiet knowing in your own body.
May you recognise the voice of goodness when it speaks without fear.
May your life become a sanctuary rather than a proving ground.
And if you are still unlearning — if a pinch of old fear yet lingers — may you treat yourself with the same mercy you so freely offer others.
You are allowed to belong to yourself.
With tenderness and a heart still learning mercy,
Lady Raquel






