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There is a voice that knows exactly where to find you — and it has been speaking to you in the silence.
Loneliness after child loss is not what most people think it is.
It is not the absence of people. You may have people around you every single day — people who love you, people who show up, people who are genuinely trying.
And still, in the middle of all of that, you can feel more alone than you have ever felt in your entire life.
Because the one person you want in the room is not there.
That absence has a physical weight to it that nobody warned you about. It is not just something you feel in your heart.
It settles into your body. The weight sits on your chest in the morning before your feet ever hit the floor. Then it follows you into the grocery store, into family gatherings, into church on Sunday morning.
And most of the people around you have no idea how much you are carrying.
When Andrew died, I had never felt more alone or forsaken in my entire life. The trauma of the way he died was where my thoughts lived for a long time.
Every single day my eyes opened I was reliving it.
And what made that loneliness even more intense was something I was completely convinced of — that Andrew died alone. That God had turned His back on him and walked away.
That was the story leading my life every single morning.
My thoughts were being reinforced over and over. I was alone. And Andrew was alone.
The weight of carrying that — not just my loneliness but what I believed was his — was the kind of overwhelming that takes the very breath out of your lungs.
Maybe it is not just your loneliness you are carrying right now. Maybe it is your child’s loneliness too.
If that is where you are today, you are not wrong for feeling it. What you are carrying is real. And there is something on the other side of this conversation I believe God has been waiting to show you.
There is a story in 1 Kings 19 that I keep coming back to when I think about this kind of loneliness.
His name is Elijah.
He had just done something miraculous on Mount Carmel. Something that required extraordinary faith and courage. And then his life was threatened — and he ran.
Not just away from the danger. He ran until he had nothing left.
He came to a broom tree, sat down under it, and prayed that he might die.
“I have had enough, Lord,” he said. “Take my life; I am no better than my ancestors.” — 1 Kings 19:4
He did not dress it up. He did not perform for God. Nor did he try to say the right thing or check the right boxes.
He just said — I am done. I cannot do this anymore.
Those were words I said to God more times than I can count after Andrew died. I know what it is to hit that wall. To be so emptied out by grief that the only honest prayer left is I have had enough.
Maybe that is where you are right now.
Maybe you have been running — not physically, but in all the ways grieving moms run. Staying busy. Staying numb. Always trying to stay just far enough ahead of the pain that it cannot fully catch you.
Elijah thought if he ran far enough he would find a place where he did not feel alone.
He did not find that place.
But he found something better.
Here is what I want you to notice about what God did for Elijah in that moment.
He did not correct him.
Nor did he hand him a list of everything He had already done for him. He wasn’t trying to tell him to pull himself together or remind him how far he had already come.
He sent an angel with bread and water.
Not once. Twice.
And He let him sleep.
“Get up and eat, for the journey is too great for you.” — 1 Kings 19:7
He knew exactly what Elijah needed in that moment. Not a sermon. Not a rebuke. And not an explanation.
Presence. Provision. Rest.
This is the God who meets you in your loneliness. Not with answers. Not with a timeline for your healing. And not with a list of what you should be doing differently.
With bread. With water. And with the quiet mercy of letting you rest.
And when Elijah had eaten and rested — this is when the still small voice came.
Not in the wind. Not in the earthquake. And not in the fire.
In the stillness.
God was not absent in Elijah’s loneliness. He was waiting for Elijah to come to a place where he could actually hear.
I think about that a lot. How many times I was so consumed by the noise of my grief — by the reliving, the reinforcing, the convincing voice that I was alone — that I could not hear the one voice that had never once stopped speaking my name.
The still small voice was always there.
It is there for you too.
Not long ago someone left a comment that sent me digging deep into the Word of God.
She asked — how could God allow my son to die when His own Word says that a good Father, when his son asks for bread, would not give him a stone?
It is an honest question. And it deserves an honest answer.
“Which of you, if your son asks for bread, will give him a stone? Or if he asks for a fish, will give him a snake? If you, then, though you are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father in heaven give good gifts to those who ask him!” — Matthew 7:9-11
Here is what I believe with everything in me.
The bread Jesus was referring to in this scripture was Himself.
He is the bread. He is the one who nourishes. And He is the one who feeds — just like He fed Elijah underneath that broom tree when Elijah had nothing left. When he was done. When he was empty. After he had run as far as he could run.
When we come to God in the rawness of our grief and we say Lord I have had enough — He does not give us a heart of stone.
He does not reject us coldly and turn away.
He gives us the bread.
Himself. The sustainer of life. The springs of living water.
That is not a God who has abandoned you in your loneliness.
That is a God who has been kneeling beside you in it — offering you the one thing that can actually hold you.
Not the physical presence you are aching for. Not the voice you are desperate to hear one more time.
Himself. His presence. His still small voice
There is something I have watched happen over and over again with the moms I work with.
And it happened to me too.
When our children are no longer physically here with us, we don’t just lose them.
We lose the version of ourselves that existed in relationship to them. We lose the daily rhythms that were built around their presence. And we lose the future we had mapped out in our hearts.
And somewhere in the middle of that grief, we realize something.
So much of what made us feel secure — so much of what made us feel grounded and known and loved — was wrapped up in their physical presence in our lives.
And now that presence is gone.
The enemy knows exactly where to find us in that. He knows that the silence is loud. He knows that the empty space is heavy. And he will use every bit of it to whisper —
You are completely and totally alone. Nobody sees you. Nobody knows what this is costing you. Not even God.
That is a lie.
But it is a convincing one when you are living inside it every single day.
Here is the hard and holy truth.
The presence of God has always been the foundation we were meant to build our lives on. Not on the physical warmth of the people we love. Not on the arms around our neck or the voice saying I love you.
Those things are beautiful. They are gifts. And losing them is devastating beyond words.
But our security was never meant to rest on someone else’s presence in our lives.
It was always meant to rest on His.
Grief, as brutal and stripping as it is, has a way of clearing everything away until it is just you and Jesus. And in that stripped-down place He is asking a question.
What have you built your foundation on?
That is not condemnation.
That is an invitation.
I don’t want you to walk away from this with just a nice thought about bread and Elijah.
I want this to land somewhere real.
When we learn to lean into the still small voice — when we begin to practice listening for the one who has never once left us — something begins to shift.
Not overnight. Not without tears. And definitely not without hard days.
But something shifts.
His presence becomes the lifeline.
Not a feeling. Not an emotion that comes and goes depending on how your day is going.
A lifeline. Something solid underneath you that holds even when everything else has given way.
Elijah heard that still small voice and it gave him exactly what he needed for his next step.
Not the whole journey. Just the next step.
That is all God is asking of you today.
He’s not asking you to figure out the forever. Or to understand why. And He’s not asking you to stop missing your child with every single cell in your body.
He just wants you to lean in. Just to listen. And to let Him be the bread that sustains you through this next moment. This next hour. This next day.
“The Lord himself goes before you and will be with you; he will never leave you nor forsake you. Do not be afraid; do not be discouraged.” — Deuteronomy 31:8
He has not given you a stone.
He has given you Himself.
And He goes before you into every hard moment that is still ahead — not waiting for you on the other side of it, but already there, in it, holding what you cannot hold alone.
That is the God who has never once stopped speaking your name.
Or your child’s.
This conversation goes even deeper in the podcast.
🎙 Episode 281: The Loneliness No One Warned You About: Grief, Isolation, and Finding Your Way Back on The Grief Mentor Podcast
If you are sitting in the loneliness right now — if the weight of it has been following you into the ordinary moments of your day — this episode will sit with you in it. You will hear Teresa’s own story of carrying not just her loneliness but Andrew’s. You will hear what God did for Elijah when he had nothing left. And you will hear what begins to shift when you lean into the still small voice.
Press play. You do not have to carry this alone.
If what you read today resonated with you — if you are sitting in that loneliness and you need a place where somebody actually sees you in it — this is for you.
The free monthly support group is a space where grieving moms come together and nobody has to explain themselves. Nobody has to perform. You just show up and lean in together.
👉 Join the Free Monthly Support Group at The Grief Mentor
With care and prayer, Teresa Davis


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