The Virtue of Silliness

Why the Sweet, Playful Spirit of Woman is Love in Its Highest Form

“A joyful heart is the health of the body, but a depressed spirit dries up the bones.”
Proverbs 17:22

The Happy Mother
George Elgar Hicks (1824–1914)

“To be simple and full of laughter is no small virtue;
it is the humility of the heart that knows it is loved.”
Grace Armstrong

This reflection is drawn from my upcoming book, The Power of Virtue, a work exploring feminine strength, virtue, and the restoration of womanhood.

The restoration of the feminine soul begins not with anger, but with joy remembered.

There is a sacred kind of silliness that belongs uniquely to woman; the lighthearted, tender playfulness that makes a child laugh and teaches him that the world is good. It is the sweetness that delights in tickling a baby’s toes, singing nonsense songs while folding laundry, or dancing barefoot in the kitchen because the soul is too full of life to stay too serious all the time. This silliness is not immaturity. It is joy made visible; the mark of a woman whose heart is still free enough to love without calculation. Like a child.

God designed women to be near the child, not only in the womb but in spirit too. Her hormonal and nervous systems are exquisitely tuned for relational bonding and emotional reading. Her moods shift easily, her empathy runs deep, and her sensitivity allows her to detect what words cannot say. These are not a flaws but a features. Woman was created to form life at its most impressionable stage. A mother’s face is the first mirror of the world a child sees,  and the peace or stress reflected there imprints the child’s soul more deeply than any lesson later taught.

It is no wonder, then, that in the Christian hierarchy of love, Christ leads the husband, the husband leads the wife, and the wife leads the children. The pattern is not one of domination, but honor, respect and protection. The man must shoulder the heavier labors, dangers and physical extremes so that the woman can be free to dwell in that gentler realm where both bodies and souls are formed. Her power is inward, spiritual, delicate yet powerful beyond measure; and therefore indispensable. When a man carries too little and a woman too much, both collapse in mind, body and spirit. She becomes brittle, he becomes aimless, and the home grows cold.

The laughter of a woman is the echo of the Garden; where child like joy was once effortless, but is now endangered. It is the sound of a small heart still innocent enough to trust in Love.

Maternal Affection by Hugues Merle. This painting, to me, captures the heart of finding joy in motherhood.

“Cheerfulness strengthens the heart and makes us persevere in a good life.”St. Philip Neri

To live under constant stress, competition, or masculine worldly pressure exhausts the feminine design. Women can succeed in those worlds, and many have, even in pre-modernity; but it often costs them their laughter, softness, and feminine joy. It is a kind of soul-crushing triumph. Modernity calls this “empowerment,” but what it often produces are anxious, sarcastic, and joyless women — quick to mock what is innocent and to turn every sweetness into irony. Today’s pop culture humor, soaked in nihilism, celebrates this decay. It is no longer the laughter of delight but the smirk of despair.

This loss of feminine silliness is a cultural tragedy. For when woman loses her ability to be lighthearted, the moral atmosphere of civilization grows heavy. Silliness, rightly ordered, is humility in motion; the ability to laugh at oneself, to find delight in small absurdities, and to put others at ease with her own foibles. It is a fruit of joy, not vanity or frivolity. A mother who can kneel to play, sing, or joke with her children transmits a deep and needed security to their souls; she teaches them that love is not earned but enjoyed, cherished, and shared in self-giving communion.

“Truly I tell you, unless you turn and become like children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven. Whoever humbles himself like this child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven.”
Matthew 18:3-4

Psychologically, this maternal playfulness releases oxytocin; the bonding hormone that lowers stress and strengthens emotional connection. It heals the nervous system of both mother and child. In contrast, chronic stress floods the body with cortisol, hardening the heart and darkening the mind. A society of anxious women becomes humorless not by chance but by chemistry. We were never meant to live as machines; our design is relational and rhythmic — to nurture, to rest, to rejoice.

The modern woman does not need more ambition to attain worldly success; she needs permission to be gentle again; with herself and her loved ones. To be silly without shame or guilt for not being “productive” enough. To let her laughter sanctify the home instead of silencing it with her deep sense of unfullfilment. Feminine silliness is the joy of a trusting and faithful soul. It is the playfulness of the heavenly realms breaking into the ordinary. Silliness is a salve for both the learning souls, and the weary ones. Silliness nurtures, heals and connects hearts!

When such laughter returns; the sweet, unselfconscious laughter of women who are not trying to prove themselves by impossible standards; children will again feel seen and safe, husbands will reconnect with their higher purpose, and civilization will once more remember what it means to be connected to the divine order that makes love intelligible and life worth living.

When laughter is restored to woman, order is restored to love. This is where renewal begins; not in protest or pride, but in the quiet strength of joy.

The Cross Means Nothing if Christ is Not God

A Faith Built on a Creature Is No Faith at All

“Those who deny that the Son is God, deny the Father also.” St. Athanasius, the “hammer” of the Arians

Christ Pantocrator, Monastery of St. Catherine, Sinai (6th century)

If Jesus Christ were a creature—made, and not begotten—then He would not be God. 

And if He is not God, there is no salvation. Because no creature can save another creature.

Only God saves.

This is the entire point of the Nicene Creed:

“God from God, Light from Light, True God from True God, begotten not made, consubstantial with the Father.

Why did the Church fight so fiercely against Arianism?

Because Arianism destroys Christianity at its root. It turns Christ into a kind of “super-angel,” which means the Incarnation was not God Himself taking on our nature; just some spiritual middle-manager pretending to be God. That is blasphemy.

What is the Heresy of Arianism?

Arius – 4th Century Priest and Heretic:

The Son is not eternal or co-eternal or co-unbegotten with the Father. He did not exist before He was begotten. The Son has a beginning, but God is without beginning.”

Arianism is the ancient heresy that claimed Christ was not truly God, but a created being—exalted, powerful, even heavenly, but not equal with the Father.

It began with Arius, a 4th-century priest who could not accept the mystery that the Son is eternally begotten, not made. By calling Christ a creature, Arianism stripped the Incarnation of its meaning and reduced the Cross to the death of a mere man. The Church recognized immediately that this was not a minor theological mistake, but a denial of Christianity itself—and the early councils fought it with everything they had.

Watch this short video about the history of Arianism

These passages alone are fatal to Arianism:

John 20:28
Thomas does not call Him “a messenger.” He calls Him:
“My Lord and my God.”
Colossians 2:9
For in Christ the fullness of the Godhead dwells bodily.
Titus 2:13
Waiting for the appearance of the glory of our great God and Savior, Jesus Christ.

This is why the Church did not treat Arianism as a harmless philosophical disagreement.

The Nicene Creed (325 A.D.)

We believe in one Lord Jesus Christ,
the only-begotten Son of God,
God from God, Light from Light,
true God from true God,
begotten, not made,
consubstantial with the Father.

It goes straight to the heart of the faith. If Christ is not God, then the entire structure of Christianity falls apart—not gradually, but all at once. The Sacraments, the Gospel, the hope of salvation itself; all of it depends on the truth that the Son is of the same divine substance as the Father.

If Christ is not God, then every sacrament collapses. Not “becomes diminished” — but collapses, and here is why:

Because:

1. The Cross

If Christ is only a creature, then the Cross is the suffering of just another man.

The Crucifixion — Fra Angelico (c. 1440–1445)

• A creature cannot bridge the infinite gap between fallen humanity and the Almighty God.

• A creature’s death cannot atone for the sins of the world.

• A creature cannot offer a sacrifice of infinite value.

So the Cross, without Christ’s divinity, becomes:

• A tragic execution.

• A martyrdom at best.

• A symbolic gesture with no real power.

If the Cross has no divine power, then there is no redemption and we remain bound to our sins, with no chance of salvation.

2. The Eucharist

If Christ is not God, then:

• The Eucharist cannot be His Body.

• It cannot be His Blood.

• It cannot convey grace.

It cannot transform the soul in holiness.

At that point, we are merely eating bread and performing a sentimental reenactment of the Last Supper.

  • No Real Presence.
  • No Communion with God.
  • Just a ritual meal between creatures.
  • The entire foundation of Christian worship becomes a hollow performance.

“The Son is not like the Father by grace, but by nature. He is God from God.”

3. Baptism

If Christ is not God, then Baptism is:

• Not a rebirth.

• Not a washing of sin.

Not a joining to Christ’s Body, the Church.

Because a creature cannot give the Holy Spirit, and Baptism is only regenerative by the Holy Spirit.

St. Cyril of Alexandria
Baptism of Paul the Apostle (Germany) 

So if Christ is not God, then Baptism is just:

• Bathwater and empty tradition.

• Ceremony and empty tradition.

• Social initiation and empty tradition.

A symbolic gesture that does nothing and is merely empty tradition.

No grace. No new creation. And no adoption as sons and daughters of God.

St. Gregory of Nazianzus (The Theologian):
“What is not assumed is not healed.”
If Christ is not truly God and truly man, the human race is not saved.

The Last Judgement, detail of Jesus, 1305-13, Fresco,

The Entire Faith Stands or Falls on This One Truth

If Christ is not God:

• Incarnation is a myth.

• Salvation is a myth.

• Every sacrament is empty of grace, and only a myth.

The Church has no authority, and Scripture is nothing but a beautiful MYTH.

This is why the Church Fathers fought Arianism so adamantly. Because the denial of Christ’s divinity is not a small error; it is the total annihilation of Christianity.

Either Christ is God, or Christianity is false.

There is no middle ground.

Which is why the Nicene Creed does not hedge its words:

“True God from True God, begotten not made, consubstantial with the Father.”

The Holy Trinity – 1460 Laurent Girardin 

This is not poetry, but a line drawn in the bedrock of the Church. Cross it; and you have stepped out of the Christian faith and into heresy. 

St. Athanasius — the hammer of the Arians:
“If the Son is a creature, then we are worshiping a creature.
But if we worship a creature, we are no longer Christians.”


“He became what we are that He might make us what He is.”
(i.e., divinization is impossible unless He is God.)

A Christianity where Christ is not God is no Christianity at all. It is a hollow shell with the name “Jesus” — who is an IMPOSTER and not the True Jesus – pasted on it. 

This is why the Church draws the line here—hard and clear.

Either:

Christ is the Eternal Son, one in being with the Father, or you are outside the Christian faith. Not because of arrogance; but because Truth has boundaries that cannot be crossed. And this boundary is the cornerstone of the whole structure of Christianity. 

Arianism is NOT Christianity. 

Saint Nicholas Slapping Arius –– Public Domain

St. Augustine:
“If Christ were not God, He could not be the Mediator of God and men.”

And so the question is not merely doctrinal — it is personal. If Christ is God, then He is not merely a teacher to admire, but a Lord to worship. He is the One before whom every knee shall bow. He is the Lamb upon the Throne. He is the Alpha and the Omega.

We either receive Him as True God, or we create a false christ in our own image.

There is no middle Christ.
There is no halfway divinity.
There is only the Eternal Son — or an idol.

Therefore:

Let us confess Him boldly. Worship Him rightly. And never be ashamed of the creed that proclaims Him.

“My Lord and my God.” (John 20:28)

In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.
Amen.

— Grace

Christ’s Appearance to Mary Magdalene after the Resurrection by Alexander Ivanov 

The Gospel Under Fire in Sudan

A Call to Christians Everywhere

As churches burn across Sudan, believers cling to the only liberty no tyrant can steal: FAITH

If one member suffers, all suffer together.”— 1 Corinthians 12:26

True love is never safe. It is sacrificial.

It bleeds, forgives, and endures for the sake of another. The persecuted Christians of Sudan are living proof of this — men, women, and children who cling to Christ even when the cost is everything.

As St. Maximilian Kolbe once said:

“Love lives by sacrifice, and the more a soul loves, the more it will sacrifice.”

The world calls it tragedy, but Christianity calls it love perfected; the kind of love that turns suffering into an offering, and persecution into prayer.

Self-giving love.

“You cannot love the truth and not suffer for it.” St. Catherine of Siena

The Crisis

Across Sudan, Christian families are enduring a storm of horrific persecution and grief.

Churches bombed. Pastors tortured. Families fleeing through burned villages with nothing but the cross around their necks.

The war between the Sudanese Armed Forces and the Rapid Support Forces has become a shadow war against the Church itself; a campaign of destruction driven by militant ideology and decades of totalitarian Sharia rule.

In June 2025, three churches in North Darfur were bombed, killing the faithful at prayer.

Over a hundred Christian sites have been seized and desecrated.

Christians are arrested, beaten, and forced into hiding.

Some now meet in secret, worshipping  beneath the sound of shellfire.

This is not just politics. It is a war on the human soul; on the freedom to believe, to love, and to live in peace as children of God.

What We Must Remember

A society that removes individual choice cannot sustain freedom.

And when belief is punished, all human action becomes enslaved.

Sudan shows what happens when a nation replaces the religious freedom with totalitarianism and government coercion: freedom dies, dignity collapses, and poverty spreads like plague.

We who live in relative peace must not look away.

Their suffering is a warning….and a call to crush totalitarian systems before they have time to flourish. 

A Call to Prayer

Pray for the men trying to protect their families, widows and orphans, for pastors in hiding, for the traumatized children of war who have seen their churches and families reduced to ash.

Pray for courage among those who still choose Jesus even when it costs them everything. Sacrificial love is the greatest love there is!

Pray for conversion of hearts among those who persecute them.

And pray that freedom — both of faith and of conscience — may rise again in Sudan.

“The blood of the martyrs is the seed of the Church.”

May that seed, watered by tears and faith, bloom again on Sudanese soil.

O God of all power and mercy,
who gave Your Son to bear the Cross for the salvation of the world,
look with compassion upon Your servants who suffer for your name’s sake.

Strengthen their faith, increase their hope, even as they are martyred,
and grant that their patient endurance may lead many souls to conversion.
Protect them by Your grace and bring them to the joy of eternal peace.

Through our Lord Jesus Christ, Your Son,
who lives and reigns with You in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
God, forever and ever.
Amen.

The Unformed Heart: How modern women mistake passion for power and what true strength really is.

Miranda – The tempest *oil on canvas *100.4 x 137.8 cm *signed b.r.: J.W. Waterhouse / 1916

“She opens her mouth with wisdom, and the teaching of kindness is on her tongue.”— Proverbs 31:26


I’m no model of perfection, thats for sure- I am a woman of modernity, raised to conform to the popular culture… but slowly learning to let grace rule where my pride really really wants to.

For years I mistook sharpness for strength and emotion for power. I thought being tough was the way.

But temper is not strength, it’s unformed virtue needing desperately to be shaped and developed.

When a woman learns temperance, her fire doesn’t die; it’s refined into something with true strength and authentic grit.

Her peace becomes power. Her gentleness becomes authority.

Temperance is the virtue that brings harmony to our emotions and desires, allowing reason to guide feeling and emotion, rather than be ruled by it.

“Angry people are not always wise.”— Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice

Prudence is the wisdom to see clearly and choose rightly — to pause, discern, and act in accordance with truth instead of impulse.

Together, they form the quiet strength of a woman who governs herself with grace

The world tells us women to express every feeling, to fight and be heard – but wisdom doesn’t yell or take low shots. Wisdom governs itself, and by its calm composure commands more than rage ever could.

This is how the soul becomes luminous again …not by suppression, but by refinement.

The unformed heart is loud and angry. The virtuous heart is still and dignified.

Yom Kippur and Christ: How the Day of Atonement Foreshadows the Cross

One of the most beautiful things about being Catholic is seeing how the Old Covenant is not discarded, but fulfilled in the New Covenant, in Christ. I love how the Old Testament is full of shadows, symbols, and prophecies that find their completion in the New Covenant. Yom Kippur, “the Day of Atonement”-is one of the most striking examples.

Below is a simple explanation of the Jewish meaning of Yom Kippur and how Catholics understand its fulfillment in Jesus Christ.


The Meaning of Yom Kippur (Jewish Understanding)

Yom Kippur is the holiest day in the Jewish calendar. It falls shortly after Rosh Hashanah and is dedicated entirely to repentance, reconciliation, and atonement. Traditionally, it includes:

  • A 25-hour total fast (no food or water)
  • Abstaining from work
  • Public confession of sin
  • All-day prayer and synagogue services
  • Seeking forgiveness from both God and others

In ancient Israel, Yom Kippur was the one day when the High Priest would enter the Holy of Holies to make atonement on behalf of the people (Leviticus 16).

Two goats were offered:

  1. One was sacrificed, its blood sprinkled inside the sanctuary.
  2. The other… the “scapegoat” … had the sins of the people symbolically laid on it and was sent into the wilderness to die.

A bull was also sacrificed for the priest’s own sins. The ritual restored the people to covenantal purity before God.


How Catholics See Yom Kippur Fulfilled in Christ

The Church doesn’t abolish the meaning of Yom Kippur, but recognizes that its deepest purpose was completed by Jesus.

Christ is the True High Priest

“We have a great high priest, Jesus the Son of God… He entered once for all into the Holy Place.”
— Hebrews 4:14, 9:12

Just as the High Priest entered the Holy of Holies once a year, Jesus entered the true heavenly sanctuary – not with animal blood, but His own.

Christ is the Sacrifice

“He has appeared once for all at the end of the ages to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself.”
— Hebrews 9:26

The goats and bulls were temporary symbols. Christ is the eternal offering, “He who takes away the sins of the world.”

Christ as the Lamb of God , the New “Scapegoat

“The Lord has laid on Him the iniquity of us all.”
— Isaiah 53:6

Jesus is the one who carries our sins away…outside the city, onto the Cross, and into the tomb, as the Lamb of God.

The Day of Atonement Becomes Good Friday

Yom Kippur was a yearly event. Christ’s sacrifice is “once for all.” Catholics live the fulfillment of that atonement in:

  • The Mass – the one sacrifice made present
  • Confession – the personal application of Christ’s atonement
  • Good Friday – the true Day of Atonement for the world

As St. Augustine famously said:

“The New Testament lies hidden in the Old, and the Old is unveiled in the New.”

And St. Thomas Aquinas reminds us:

“All things in the Old Law were figures of Christ.”

This is why the Catholic Church doesn’t reenact Yom Kippur as a ritual – its meaning has already reached its fulfillment in the Passion of Christ.


Side-by-Side: Yom Kippur and Its Fulfillment in Christ

Old Covenant (Yom Kippur)New Covenant (Christ)
High Priest enters the Holy of Holies once a yearChrist enters the heavenly sanctuary once for all (Hebrews 9:12)
Goat sacrificed for sins of the peopleChrist becomes the perfect sacrificial Lamb (John 1:29)
Scapegoat carries sins into the wildernessChrist bears our sins and is crucified outside the city (Isaiah 53:6, Hebrews 13:12)
Animal blood sprinkled on the mercy seatChrist offers His own blood (Hebrews 9:14)
Yearly ritual of atonementOne eternal sacrifice (Hebrews 10:10)
Confession and fastingConfession and penance in the Sacrament of Reconciliation
Temple sanctuaryHeavenly sanctuary and the Church as His Body
Covenant renewed temporarilyCovenant fulfilled eternally

What This Means for Catholics

We don’t look at Yom Kippur as something foreign to our faith; it’s part of our roots in salvation history. It prepares the world for Christ.

  • Good Friday becomes the true Day of Atonement.
  • The Mass is the living memorial of the one sacrifice.
  • Confession is our personal participation in the atonement He won.
  • Fasting and penance continue the spirit of repentance the day was meant to inspire.

As Pope Benedict XVI put it:

“Jesus does not abolish the Old Testament; He brings it to fulfillment by giving it its definitive interpretation.”

And the Catechism confirms it:

“The sacrifice of Christ and the sacrifice of the Eucharist are one single sacrifice.”
— CCC 1367


Conclusion

Yom Kippur shows us the yearning of Israel for a true and lasting atonement. In the New Covenant, that longing is not rejected – it’s completed.

I love seeing how the Old Testament foreshadows Christ, and how the New Covenant fulfills what the Old began. The shadows have become substance. What was done once a year in symbol is done once for all in truth.

Christ is our High Priest, our Sacrifice, the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world.
And He didn’t just enter the sanctuary of stone – He opened Heaven.

In the Gospel of John (1:29), John the Baptist exclaims, “Behold, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world,” referring to Jesus Christ. This phrase identifies Jesus as the perfect, sacrificial Lamb, an echo of the temple sacrifices, signifying that his death on the cross provides atonement for humanity’s sins and offers salvation.

Christianity Is Not a Puddle, It’s an Ocean

St. Francis de Sales
“The measure of love is to love without measure.”

The latest horrors in the news made me stop and think about forgiveness.

People argue: Should unrepentant murderers be forgiven? Is that even possible?

I honestly don’t know if absolute forgiveness is possible for all of us. But the question reveals something deeper to me: how little most people actually know about Christianity.

Because the truth is this; Christianity is not a puddle. It is an ocean.

The Shallows

Before I converted, I thought I knew Jesus. I thought I knew Christianity. But looking back, I was only splashing in a puddle beside the ocean. I had the childish basics: “Be kind. Forgive. Love everyone. Be compassionate.”

But that’s not the fullness of Christianity by a longshot. That’s basic morality- the same lessons any parent might teach a toddler. It has depth, but only ankle-deep.

I have noticed that many cradle Catholics seem to live in this shallow place permanently, never going beyond their first lessons. They know about Mass, but not why it matters. They know they should pray, but they rarely do. They may even be devout in appearance but never venture beyond the shore. They believe that their catechesis, their Christian education and formation ended in childhood.

The Depths

Little by little I have begun to wade deeper.

Real catechesis and deep formation to Christ is like being swept out to sea…overwhelming at first, even frightening. The Jesus I discovered as I studied and prayed -more and more – was not the Jesus I had imagined as a spiritual infant. In fact, Christianity is infinitely richer, truer, more beautiful than I ever dreamed. It is a course of study on par with earning multiple PhDs over a lifetime, yet with one difference: it is Divine.

I am still at the high school level, if that – I have so much to learn. It is deeply humbling.

But the deeper I go, the more it transforms me. Virtues are no longer nice ideas but are like muscles that must be strengthened. Forgiveness, for example, is no longer me just saying “I forgive you.” As I grow in the virtue of forgiveness, I can feel myself stretching my childish understanding of it into what hopefully may someday become saintly forgiveness, where my soul learns to forgive as God forgives, as Jesus forgave on the cross. As Jesus forgives me every day.

This doesn’t happen by accident. It happens through grace, discipline, prayer, and daily practice. My formation to the Divine Logos may extend after my life here is over, in the purification of Purgatory – before I am purified enough to receive the Beatific Vision. I will be grateful for this should it be in my soul’s journey to meet God face to face!

Why Most Christians Stay Shallow

This age worships ease and comfort, and we blindly project this love of convenience onto our faith. Many Christians cling to the “once saved, always saved” idea of salvation -a spiritual shortcut that feeds sloth and makes prayer, regular repentance, confession, discipline and receiving the sacraments seem unnecessary.

Even many Catholics nowadays live as though comfort is the highest good. They skip confession for years. They go to Sunday Mass or Easter Mass- out of habit or tradition but rarely pay much attention to God, never try to deepen their prayer life or read the Bible, and never make an actual effort to train their souls in virtue.

This is why modern Christians look at forgiveness and virtue as impossible ideals instead of living realities. They never left the shallows.

How to Go Deeper (Even in the Novus Ordo)

Matthew 7:24–25
“Everyone then who hears these words of mine and does them will be like a wise man who built his house upon the rock… and it did not fall, because it had been founded on the rock.”

Some Catholics despair, thinking the loss of the Latin Mass or the spirit of Vatican II has left us stranded. But that’s not true. You can be a traditional, devout Catholic even in the Novus Ordo, if you take the call seriously.

  • Go to daily Mass whenever possible.
  • Pray unceasingly. THIS IS KEY. Pray the rosary daily. Learn mental prayer to pray like the saints. Set a daily rhythm of prayer that cannot be broken.
  • Read Scripture as living Word, not as occasional inspiration. Let the Scriptures speak to your heart.
  • Go to confession regularly and receive the Eucharist as often as possible. Purification of your soul is not optional.
  • Fast and forsake worldly attachments. Sacrifice is part of being Christian. Carrying your cross is part of being like Jesus!
  • Live as though your vocation is to become a saint – because it is.

This is the saint’s journey. It is hard. It is not convenient. But it is the only way to move from puddle-splashing to swimming in the depths.

Hebrews 5:14
“But solid food is for the mature, for those who have their faculties trained by practice to distinguish good from evil.”

The Ocean Awaits

When I look back at what I once thought Christianity was, I almost laugh. I thought I was in the ocean, but I was playing in a muddy puddle. And that is where way too many modern Christians still remain, arguing about things they don’t even understand, like children arguing physics with a PhD in physics.

But if we dare to dive deeper, if we who love God with all our hearts take up discipline, prayer, and the pursuit of virtue, we will discover that Christianity is not shallow at all. It is endless, infinite, and alive.

It is the ocean of God Himself.

Dive in, my friend, and see! “The water is fine.”

Grace

From Logos to Lunacy, What Happened to Education?

The Halls of Learning Have Become Temples of Inversion

I saw through the communist indoctrination in college back in the ’90s. It made me sick. I dropped out and got a job as a cocktail waitress at Harvey’s Lake Tahoe.

I went on to work many odd jobs singing, waiting tables, selling timeshare, selling other products, but I never settled on a career path. Nothing felt right.

I’ve watched ever since as that indoctrination machine only got more powerful, more invasive, more demonic.

Most young people then and now have been surrounded by well-meaning voices of family, friends, and mentors who subtly (or not so subtly) pressure them to prove their worth by going down the path of “higher education.”

But let’s be honest: Most of us can’t afford to send our children to the rare Christian or conservative colleges that still stand. And even those aren’t perfect.

The pressure to conform, to bow before the cult of the radical left, the one that controls almost every university and public institution, is suffocating. The options so few and frankly either intimidating and out of reach for most people – or demeaning, uninspiring, and miserably unpleasant.

And it is not neutral.

It is not kind.

It is not tolerant.

It is demonic. Full stop.

This is the upside-down spirit of the age: A loveless, cruel, anti-human, eugenic and sickly secular ideology that wants to tear our children from truth, from beauty, from natural law, and from God Himself.

If you don’t believe in God yet, fine. But you’d have to be blind not to see that something truly evil is loose in the world.

Something that hates the good.

Something that mocks and murders innocence.

Something that calls what is pure “hateful” and what is perverse “liberating.”

I believe it’s demons.

You may not believe in them, but they believe in you. They know how to invisibly influence you and harm you through your desires, your thoughts and emotions. Your vices. Your sins.

This is a spiritual war for your soul, and if you can’t see that yet, I beg you:

Open your soul.

Stop scrolling.

Get silent.

PRAY.

Because the Spiritual War is real, and our children’s souls are on the front lines, and ours are too.

LARPing as Men: Why modern women feel exhausted, and how to return to our true feminine strength

There’s a strange trick that modern culture has played on us as women.
In the name of “empowerment,” we’re told to prove ourselves in masculine arenas; in competition, in the workforce, in the constant hustle, in the ring of performance and production. 

We may not even call ourselves feminists, yet the culture has trained us to be in a feminist mindset as our default: so much  in our masculine energy that we feel anxious when we are in our feminine – a nagging feeling that we must strive to keep up with, or even outdo men. 

How sad is this?

The truth many of us don’t want to admit ourselves? Most women’s nervous systems simply weren’t designed and are not capable of thriving and being healthy in that constant, masculine fight mindset. Hunter mindset. WARRIOR mindset.This doesn’t feel natural to most women, on any level – emotionally, mentally, spiritually and physically. It doesn’t feel good.

LARPING AS MEN DRAINS MOST WOMEN, AND DRAINED WOMEN ARE MISERABLE WOMEN!

Think back to childhood. Most boys wrestled every chance they got. Girls gravitated toward dolls, soft blankets, stuffed animals, imaginary families and relationships. Even when some of us joined in the roughhousing, it wasn’t usually our deepest joy – we loved nurturing, creating beauty, and being close to the people we loved. Some girls liked to fight boys, but it was from a competitive and masculine space that we did so. A need to feel “equal.”

How sad is this?

And yet, as adults, we’ve been told that true womanhood means competing like men, hustling and fighting like men, climbing ladders like men. We’ve been tricked into believing that to be pro-woman means to reject the very essence of our softness, our receptivity, our tender strength.

But living in that space long-term leaves many of us anxious, bitter, hardened, and weary. Because the truth is: we were made to be soft and gushy creatures. To bring warmth and love into the spaces we touch. To nurture our families, to care for our communities, to fill the world with beauty, gentleness, and soul. That is not weakness. That is power of a completely different kind — the kind the world desperately needs. beauty, gentleness, and soul. That is not weakness. That is power of a completely different kind –  the kind this world SO desperately needs in this time. 

When we step back into that energy, we often realize that the masculine arenas don’t actually feel comfortable or positive for us. They’re not “bad,” they’re just not ours. 

And that’s okay.

The work is not about judging women who find themselves stuck in masculine performance mode-  it’s about compassionately asking: Does this actually make me happy? Does this feel like who I am?

I’ve been there. I’ve felt the pull to “prove myself,” to try to live like a man and reject my soft and feminine nature because I thought it was weakness. But the more I soften, the more I allow myself to embrace my God-given femininity, the more alive and joyful I feel.


So what can we do to step back into feminine energy?

  • Rest without guilt. Your worth isn’t measured by output. Let your nervous system exhale.
  • Create beauty. Cook, decorate, garden, craft, sing — whatever awakens your soft creative joy.
  • Nurture. Care for children, pets, friends, or even plants. Pour love into something that thrives under your touch.
  • Receive. Let yourself be cared for, supported, and cherished by men instead of competing with them.
  • Sisterhood. Connect with other women who want to live in gentleness and authenticity. Build each other up.
  • Pray and re-align. Ask God to restore your feminine heart and give you peace in the role He designed for you.

We don’t need to prove ourselves by living like men. We don’t need to LARP as something we’re not. We need only to return to what we already are: beloved, radiant, tender, life-giving women.


Can the Age of the He-Woman Stop Already?

Feminism told us we women would be “equal” if we were like men.
Equal in the workplace. Equal in ambition. Equal in providing.

So now women are expected to pour out just as much masculine energy as men (gotta be equal, right?) And still come home to cook, clean, mother and be the perfect little wifey with femininity and grace.

But here’s the twist no one wants to admit:
Masculine energy doesn’t submit to masculine energy. But most men want their women to bring home the bacon (masculine provider energy required) yet still be soft and submissive. This Is rarely possible and actually leads women to resent their man for expecting that. It doesn’t feel right.

So what happens in a marriage when no one yields? Head-butting!

We’re told men and women are interchangeable but clearly God didn’t design us that way. Sure, some men adapt better than others. They lean more feminine. They can take a back seat and yield equally to their woman. They do their equal part in maintaining the home, or at least try. They don’t demand their working wives larp as stay at home wives at home. As they shouldn’t!

Others – MOST- still want a sweet, nurturing wife who does most of the home stuff but wants a paycheck from her too.

But how can she be both mother and man? It doesn’t FEEL right to most men when their woman has a lot of masculine energy. She gives off controlling mother vibes to them. Because mothers use masculine energy when they discipline and teach their kids. So men grow unattracted to women who give off macho mother vibes.

Most women cant be really gentle and sweet -and focused on and driven to succeed in the world at the same time. How can she be both submissive at home and stressed over money and career at work? It’s ILLOGICAL. Very few women can do this.

And we wonder why the birth rate is plummeting.
We’ve sterilized not just our bodies but our souls.

This is not empowerment. It’s exhaustion. Hopefully the Age of the He-Woman is soon behind us.