God Has Not Forgotten This Season
For the woman who wonders, in the quiet moments, whether He sees what she is carrying.
He sees the unspectacular
The Bible is full of stories of dramatic divine intervention — but it is also full of something quieter and perhaps more relevant to where you are: a God who notices what others overlook.
He noticed Hagar in the wilderness — not a central character, not a hero of the faith, just a woman who was desperate and alone. He saw her. He named the place Beer Lahai Roi — the well of the Living One who sees me.
He noticed the widow with two coins. He noticed the woman who had been bleeding for twelve years, who touched the hem of His garment in a crowd, and stopped to find her, to see her, to call her daughter.
What forgetting would actually mean
When you wonder if God has forgotten this season, consider what that would actually mean: the One who numbers the hairs on your head has somehow lost track of the most significant pain of your current life. The God who knit you together has not noticed what has been happening to you.
That is not who He is. It has never been who He is. The feeling of being forgotten is real. The forgetting is not.
What you can do is bring what you actually have. The honest complaint. The single sentence of faith. The willingness to sit in the presence of a God you cannot feel right now and be honest about that. That honesty is itself an act of faith — because it assumes there is Someone to be honest with.
Look for the evidence in places you might overlook. Not the burning bush. The unexpected kindness. The conversation that came at the right moment. The morning that felt inexplicably lighter. He is in those small things. He has been here the whole time. This season is not outside His knowledge or care. It never was.
What this does to you — The Need to Be Seen
Being seen — genuinely, accurately — is a fundamental neurological need. When we feel unseen, the brain registers it as a social threat, activating the same stress response as physical danger. Sustained invisibility produces:
- · Increased cortisol — chronic stress from carrying something unseen
- · Diminished sense of self — we partly know who we are through being known by others
- · Depression risk — sustained invisibility is a significant contributor to depressive symptoms
- · Disconnection from meaning — when our experience is not witnessed, it is harder to make meaning of it
What helps your brain feel genuinely seen:
- · One honest witness — tell the real story to one person who can hold it without fixing it
- · Journaling — writing your experience makes it visible to yourself, which has genuine neurological benefit
- · Prayer as conversation — approaching prayer as honest dialogue with Someone who already knows changes the neurological experience
- · Community — being known in even a small group provides significant neurological support
- · Nature — being in the created world increases the sense of being held in something larger
You were made to be seen. By other people, yes — but first and most completely by the One who formed you. That seeing has not stopped. It does not stop.
The Still Her Identity Guide is a private space where you can be honest about who you are — separate from anyone else's awareness of it. Start with yourself. The seeing begins there.
→ Download the free Still Her guide at coachagenna.comAnd if you are ready to work through this with a guide beside you —
→ Schedule a free discovery call at coachagenna.com
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