The View We Couldn't Change
What Does It Mean to Be Resilient?
Resilience isn’t about having it all together.
It’s about the capacity to bend without breaking, to recover with faith, and to move through life’s transitions with grace and courage.
Leading with resilience means trusting the process — even when everything feels uncertain.
When Life Relocates You
Before my children were born, my husband and I relocated to California for his job. It all happened so fast. One day we were packing boxes; the next, we were stepping off a plane and starting our house-hunting journey.
We must have looked at over 200 homes. Every time we found one, it disappeared before we could act. I started to wonder if this move was even meant to be.
Then one day, our realtor said,
“This one’s a little rough… but it has promise.”
At that point, I was tired. Discouraged. Ready to give up.
But when we walked inside, my husband’s eyes lit up.
“This is our home,” he said.
I looked around — the carpet was peeling, the cabinets were dated, the paint was worn. I thought he was crazy.
Until we stepped into the backyard.
There, in the distance, stood the mountains — strong, breathtaking, unshakable.
We could change everything inside that house… but not that view.
Right then, I realized — sometimes what’s meant for you doesn’t look perfect at first glance. It’s potential wrapped in imperfection.
We made the offer. We moved in. We began again.
Building Something Beautiful, Piece by Piece
The remodel began.
We ripped up carpets. Tore down cabinets. Painted walls.
We rebuilt the backyard deck board by board.
Slowly, this “rough” house became our home.
And one day, I came home from work — and it was complete.
The process taught me something about resilience:
Growth isn’t instant. It’s built in layers — through patience, persistence, and vision.
A New Kind of Beginning
Shortly after, I started a new job at a small clinic in Fountain Valley, California. I loved my work and my clients — 30 people I got to walk beside in their own healing journeys.
One afternoon, I wasn’t feeling well. The office manager, who had been hoping for a baby herself, smiled and said,
“You’re pregnant.”
I laughed. “I’m not pregnant.”
But later that day, curiosity won. I stopped at Walgreens, grabbed a handful of pregnancy tests, and went home.
Behind a door with no knob, I waited. My husband called from the kitchen,
“What do you want for dinner?”
The test turned positive.
I opened the door and said,
“How about a baby, Dad?”
The look on his face — the joy, the disbelief — it’s etched in my memory forever. That night, a new chapter of our family story began.
Twenty Years Later
Our son, Ethan, is now twenty years old.
And every time I think back on that season — the move, the remodeling, the waiting, the joy — I see the thread of intention that ran through it all.
Even when things felt uncertain, we were building something meaningful.
Resilience, I’ve learned, isn’t just about surviving. It’s about becoming.
It’s about seeing beauty in the mess, trusting the timing, and holding faith through transformation.
Rooted Reflections
We can’t always control what changes around us — but we can choose how we show up inside the change.
Resilience invites us to lead with love, anchor in gratitude, and trust that even the rough places can hold promise.
So today, I invite you to pause and reflect:
Where in your life is something “rough but promising”?
What might happen if you said yes to the process instead of fighting it?
How can you move forward with both grace and intention?
Closing Thought
Resilience doesn’t just rebuild homes — it rebuilds hearts.
And when we move with intention, even uncertainty can become sacred ground.
If this reflection resonated, subscribe to Conversations with Resilience — a space for love, growth, and grounded living. Each week, we’ll explore what it means to create on purpose, lead with grace, and nurture relationships that last.

Listening to your beautiful voice sharing this frames a beautiful day. Thanks for your grace & inspiring pockets of ☮️ peace.