𝐒𝐔𝐍𝐃𝐀𝐘 ℛ𝑒𝒻𝓁𝑒𝒸𝓉𝒾𝑜𝓃 𝐇𝐔𝐁
Welcome to SUNDAY Reflection HUB with Ndu. A little corner of the internet where we pause, reflect, and appreciate the blessings life still gives us, even in difficult seasons.
Today, I invite you to share something you’re grateful for, a lesson you learned, a small win, a prayer answered, or simply a moment that made your heart smile this week.
This is more than just a comment section, it’s a space for honesty, healing, encouragement, and connection. Your story might be exactly what someone else needs to read today. 🤍
So take a deep breath, reflect for a moment, and tell us:
What are you grateful for this Sunday?
Comments
But this morning I woke up in my own apartment, made coffee in my own kitchen, and sat by the window realizing how much my life has changed since those dark days. The apartment is small. The furniture doesn’t match. Some months are still financially difficult. But it’s mine, and there’s peace here. Looking back, I realize how many times I almost gave up on myself completely. Today, I’m grateful for survival, for second chances, and for every small step that slowly brought me back to life again.
Yesterday I surprised her with groceries, flowers, and a small gift after getting my first decent paycheck from my new job. When she saw everything, she became emotional and said, ‘You don’t have to take care of me now, my son.’ But honestly, I wanted her to feel appreciated for once. I wanted her to feel seen after spending so many years putting everyone else before herself. Watching her smile today healed something inside me. Today, I’m grateful for mothers who carry entire families on their backs without ever asking for recognition.
Today my grandmother invited all of us over again for the first time since the funeral. At first everyone seemed awkward because we were all trying not to cry, but eventually we started sharing funny memories about my grandfather — the terrible jokes he loved repeating, the way he always fell asleep during football games, and how he secretly gave grandchildren extra dessert when nobody was looking. By the end of the afternoon, the house was full of laughter again instead of only grief. It reminded me that people we love never fully leave us as long as their stories continue living through us. Today, I’m grateful for family memories that continue bringing people together even after loss.
This week I received my acceptance letter to study medicine, and when I gave it to my father, he became completely silent for a few seconds before tears started running down his face. I have never seen my father cry before. He hugged me tightly and kept saying, ‘Thank you for making all the sacrifice worth it.’ Honestly, hearing that broke me emotionally because I know how much pain and pressure he carried quietly all these years. Today, I’m grateful for hardworking parents whose sacrifices often go unnoticed.
But this morning I took myself to the beach just before sunrise, sat quietly listening to the waves, and realized something important: I survived every single moment I thought would destroy me. I’m still here. I’m still trying. I’m still healing even on the days it doesn’t feel obvious. For the first time in months, I felt peaceful inside my own thoughts instead of fighting them. Today, I’m grateful for personal growth, emotional healing, and the strength that quietly develops during painful seasons.
At one point she smiled at me and said, ‘One day these memories will feed your heart when I’m gone.’ I had to look away because I immediately felt tears building in my eyes. Sometimes we don’t realize we are living inside moments that will later become priceless memories. Today, I’m grateful for grandparents, traditions, and the quiet love that exists inside ordinary family moments.
Today he unexpectedly showed up at my house carrying coffee and bread from our favorite childhood bakery 😂 We ended up sitting outside talking for almost five hours about life, mistakes, memories, and everything we never properly addressed before. At one point we both started laughing about silly childhood arguments, and it felt like years of distance suddenly disappeared. Family relationships can become complicated over time, but moments like today remind me that love still exists underneath all the silence sometimes. Today, I’m grateful for reconciliation and second chances between people who still care about each other deeply.
Today I took myself out alone for breakfast, left my phone in my bag, and simply allowed myself to exist peacefully without pressure for once. I watched strangers walking by, listened to music softly playing in the café, and realized how long it had been since I truly slowed down enough to hear my own thoughts clearly. Healing isn’t always dramatic. Sometimes healing looks like finally allowing yourself to breathe again after carrying emotional weight for too long. Today, I’m grateful for rediscovering pieces of myself I thought I had lost forever.
Today I sat in a coffee shop laughing with friends who genuinely love and respect me, and suddenly I realized how far I’ve come emotionally. Healing has not been easy. There are still moments when old memories return unexpectedly, but I’m no longer surviving, I’m finally living again. Today, I’m grateful for healing, safe love, and the courage to choose myself after years of pain.
But today I stood in front of a group of young women and shared my story publicly for the first time. I was shaking while speaking, but afterward several women hugged me and told me my words gave them strength. I realized healing becomes more powerful when pain stops living in silence. Today, I’m grateful for courage, survival, and the ability to help others through my story.
Today I attended church with my mother for the first time since my release. After the service, she hugged me tightly and said, ‘You still deserve a chance to become better.’ I cried harder than I expected because guilt can make you believe you no longer deserve love or forgiveness. I know I cannot erase my past, but every day I wake up trying to become someone my family can be proud of again. Today, I’m grateful for second chances and people who believe change is possible.
But recently I realized forgiveness is not about excusing what someone did. It’s about refusing to let the pain control the rest of your life. Today, after years of therapy, tears, and healing, I can finally say I forgive the person who harmed me, not because they deserved it, but because I deserved peace. Today, I’m grateful for freedom from bitterness.
Yesterday night I walked home alone for the first time without feeling terrified. It may sound small, but for me it felt like reclaiming a piece of my life that trauma stole from me. Healing isn’t linear, but moments like this remind me I’m stronger than I think. Today, I’m grateful for progress and resilience.
Today he is three years sober. We sat together on the porch this morning drinking coffee while he apologized for things he did when I was younger. Hearing genuine accountability from him healed something deep inside me. Today, I’m grateful for recovery, honesty, and families that choose healing over silence.
But today I looked in the mirror and realized something important: what happened to me was not my identity. I am still kind. I am still worthy. I am still capable of happiness and love. Trauma changed me, but it did not destroy me. Today, I’m grateful for survival and the slow return of self-love.
This morning I watched her laughing loudly while cooking breakfast with friends in her apartment, an apartment she once believed she would never have the courage to live in alone. Seeing peace on her face today made me emotional because I remember the fear she used to carry constantly. Today, I’m grateful for courageous women who choose freedom even when it’s terrifying.
But recently I visited the prison where he is serving his sentence. I expected hatred, but instead I saw a broken human being carrying immense regret. I’m not saying forgiveness is easy or simple, but I realized revenge would never heal my family’s pain. Today, I’m grateful for the difficult journey toward peace.
Today my daughter showed me a drawing she made of our family, and underneath my picture she wrote the words ‘My safe place.’ I cried immediately because it made me realize I broke a cycle that once hurt me deeply. Today, I’m grateful for healing generations through love.
After prison, most people looked at me like I would never change. But today I celebrated five years of honest work, stability, and rebuilding trust with my family. Some wounds take years to heal, but I wake up every day determined not to become the person I used to be. Today, I’m grateful for transformation and mercy.
Today I danced in my kitchen while cooking dinner with the person I love now, someone gentle, patient, and safe. Halfway through dancing, I suddenly realized I no longer live in fear inside my own home. That realization almost brought me to tears. Today, I’m grateful for healthy love and emotional safety.
Today he came to my son’s birthday party sober, employed, and trying genuinely to rebuild relationships. Watching him quietly help clean up after everyone left made me emotional because I could finally see the effort he’s making to change. Today, I’m grateful that people are more than the worst thing they’ve ever done.
Today my therapist asked me a simple question: ‘What if your survival deserves compassion instead of shame?’ I cried the entire drive home because I realized how harshly I’ve treated myself for years. Today, I’m grateful for healing conversations and the possibility of self-forgiveness.
Now I mentor young boys growing up in similar environments. Today one of them told me, ‘You make me believe I can choose a different life.’ Hearing those words felt heavier than he probably realized. Today, I’m grateful for the chance to help someone avoid the mistakes I made.
But one day she told me, ‘Forgiveness doesn’t erase what happened. It just means I refuse to spend the rest of my life carrying poison inside my heart.’ Those words changed the way I understood healing completely. Today, I’m grateful for the wisdom of survivors.
Today I spoke to young university students about accountability, addiction, and how one terrible decision can alter your future permanently. If my story prevents even one person from making the same mistake, maybe something meaningful can still come from my past. Today, I’m grateful for opportunities to give back instead of destroy.
Tonight I sat outside under the city lights with friends laughing freely, and suddenly I realized I felt present instead of afraid. Healing happens so slowly sometimes that you don’t notice it until a peaceful moment surprises you unexpectedly. Today, I’m grateful for progress.