Turns out, He heard me anyway.
I didnât clasp my hands.
I didnât bow my head.
I didnât whisper sweet reverence
or quote Scripture like a good little Christian.
I prayed like someone who had been gaslit by grief,
ghosted by God,
and handed too many âeverything happens for a reasonâs
when the reason never showed up.
My voice cracked.
My fists clenched.
And my middle finger was very much involved.
đ¤ When Rage Becomes a Prayer Language
Nobody tells you that sometimes,
the only prayer you can offer is a profanity-laced scream
shouted into the sky
with mascara running and hope on life support.
They say, âGod listens to a humble heart.â
Cool.
But what about a heart held together by trauma tape
and years of unanswered prayers?
Because some of us werenât raised on mercy.
We were raised on fear.
And the first time we prayed with honesty
was also the first time we got real loud about our rage.
đ§ Psychology + Spirituality Insight:
- Anger is a survival response, not a spiritual flaw.
- Grief and belief arenât oppositesâthey often share the same body.
- Trauma survivors pray differently. We donât sugarcoat itâwe bleed it.
- Cussing during prayer isnât rebellion. Itâs honesty without editing.
đ Grace Without Good Manners
I wasnât trying to be reverent.
I was trying to not disappear.
And if God couldnât handle my rage,
what kind of deity was I praying to?
So I offered Him my fury.
My questions.
My triggers.
My unfiltered, post-meltdown, therapy-hardened,
middle-finger-flavored plea for presence.
And you know what?
He didnât flinch.
He didnât punish.
He just stayed.
đ Holy Enough
This is for:
- The ones whoâve screamed at heaven through clenched teeth
- The ones who didnât kneel, but collapsed
- The ones who were told to âwatch their toneâ while praying
but still showed up anyway