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Showing posts from December, 2025

Grateful Hearts, Faithful Steps, and a Merry Christmas!

 As this year comes to a close, I want to take a moment to simply say thank you. Thank you to everyone who has taken the time to read my blogs, share them, comment on them, or even just quietly follow along. When I first started writing, it wasn’t about numbers or reach—it was about being real, sharing my journey, and hopefully encouraging someone along the way. Your support has meant more than you know. Writing these blogs has been both humbling and healing for me. They’ve allowed me to reflect on where I’ve been, where God has brought me from, and where I’m being led next. Some posts were easy to write, others required vulnerability and prayer, but each one came from the heart. Knowing that they resonated with others reminds me that God can use even our simplest words for a greater purpose. I’m especially grateful for the conversations that have come from these writings. Whether it’s a message, a phone call, or a conversation in passing, hearing how something I wrote encouraged...

The Heart of Retail: Why Boycotts Like “We Ain’t Buying It” Hurt the People Who Can’t Afford It

After years as a Walmart Store Manager, one truth became crystal clear to me: the heart of every big retailer isn’t the CEO, the shareholders, or the corporate office. It’s the hourly workers. The cashiers who greet you with a smile. The stockers who lift heavy freight through the night. The associates who clean spills, run returns, and keep shelves full. They are the engine that keeps these stores alive. And when the recent “We Ain’t Buying It” protest called for a boycott of Walmart, Target, Home Depot, and Amazon over the holiday weekend, my first thought wasn’t about the corporations — it was about those workers. The protest aims to make a statement by urging people not to shop from Thanksgiving through Cyber Monday. People have every right to speak up on issues they care about. But having spent years in the trenches of retail, I know exactly who feels the impact first. It isn’t executives in office towers — it’s the people standing on tile floors for eight hours, earning hourly w...