Thanksgiving created a short workweek, and honestly, I needed it. I’m still shaking off the sickness I brought back from Florida and the exhaustion that has been piling up for weeks. We didn’t have big Thanksgiving plans, mostly because everyone seems to be sick right now, but I didn’t mind the quieter version. I actually welcomed it.
There’s something funny about Thanksgiving. It’s supposed to be about gratitude, but half the time we’re too busy prepping big meals and trying to create the perfect family moment to actually be thankful. And if we’re being honest, a lot of holidays are spent trying to make imperfect families feel perfect for a day.
So when everyone had to bow out this year, I didn’t feel the usual disappointment. I love my people dearly, but the slower pace felt like a gift. It ended up being just me, my mother, and my kids, and I didn’t hate that one bit. It felt manageable. Peaceful. Human.
We even sat down and watched nearly the entire Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade, something I genuinely don’t remember doing since childhood, if ever. And in that slow, quiet space, I finally had room to think about what I’m truly thankful for right now.
And can I tell you? God has been so incredibly good to me. When I think about my lowest point, the unraveling, the heartbreak, the way grief and anger twisted themselves into knots I thought I would never untangle, I am overwhelmed by how far He’s brought me. Walking through the tragedy of a divorce nearly broke me. I truly believed I would be swallowed by my own anger and crushed under the weight of what I had lost.
God pulled me out of that pit. A deep, messy, suffocating pit. He put my feet back on solid ground, on real ground, on His Word. He gave me my mind back when it felt scattered into a thousand pieces. He restored my relationships. He steadied me. He has been faithful in ways I could never deserve.
But here’s the thing no one likes to talk about: Even after God pulls you out of a pit, there are days when it’s tempting to climb right back in.
Sometimes something small triggers me, and before I even realize it, I’m right back in those weeks after the separation, angry, raw, hurting all over again. My anger can rise up like it never left. And in those moments, God has to remind me: This ground is too hard-fought.
It’s holy. It’s sacred. It’s ground He strengthened me to reach.
When you’ve walked through something like that, when God Himself has hauled you out of darkness and steadied your feet, you don’t throw away that progress. You don’t trade the healing for the illusion of control. God and I have been through too much. He’s brought me too far.
I have my kids. I have my mother. I have a handful of relationships that matter deeply. And if you have that, whatever your “family” looks like, and you have your health? You are rich. Truly rich. And yet, I still remain most faithful for not being in the pit.
I don’t know what I’ve done to deserve such blessings, but the Lord keeps pouring out His faithfulness anyway. And this year, in the quiet and the slowness, I’ve finally had the space to see it clearly.
The Pit
He knew they were angry, but he hadn’t expected this.
Jeremiah’s feet scraped against the stone floor as the guards shoved him forward, their hands rough and impatient. He could hear the muttering above, the officials, the ones who had grown tired of hearing God’s warnings. They wanted him silenced. Erased. Buried without bloodshed.
A cistern would do the job.
Jeremiah looked over the edge and felt his stomach twist. It was deep, deeper than he expected. A narrow throat of worn stone dropping into darkness. No ladder. No footholds. Only a ring of faint light at the top and the stale breath of earth below.
He didn’t fight them because that would only make it worse. And besides, he had learned long ago that obedience to God often put him in places that didn’t make sense. But knowing that didn’t make the fear any less real.
The ropes scraped against his arms as they lowered him. Not gently. Not carefully. Just enough control to avoid killing him outright. Jeremiah’s sandals brushed against the wall, searching for something solid, but the stone was slick. He swung helplessly in the shaft, turning slow circles, the light narrowing above him.
And then he felt it, the mud. His feet broke the surface with a cold, sucking sound. He sank immediately past his ankles. Then his calves. The ropes slackened until they were useless, dangling beside him. When they finally let go, Jeremiah plunged deeper, swallowed to the knees by the mire.
He tried to lift his foot, but it didn’t move. The mud held him like a fist while the darkness closed around him. The smell was sharp, damp earth, rotting vegetation, old water that had long since dried up, leaving only the residue of decay. The walls sweat with moisture. Every sound echoed strangely, the drip of condensation, the shifting mud, his own breath coming quicker now.
He reached up, fingertips brushing the empty air where the ropes had been. They were already gone.
Above him, their voices grew faint. “Let him die there, he deserves it.”
Then the grating slam of a stone cover slid back into place. Jeremiah stood alone, waist-deep in cold muck, with nothing to lean on, nothing to climb, nothing to brace against. His legs trembled with the strain of holding still. Any movement made him sink farther. The mud made a slow, gurgling sound around him, as though the earth itself was swallowing.
Panic came in waves. He tried to swallow it. He tried to breathe. But the helplessness was overwhelming. He thought of the prophecies he had spoken, words God had set on his tongue like fire, and wondered if this was how they would end, unfulfilled, washed away in a pit where no one could hear him.
Hours passed. Maybe more. His muscles burned. His voice weakened. The world narrowed to breath and darkness and the constant pull of the mire. There was no path out, no strategy, no escape. Only God.
And then, footsteps. Soft, careful footsteps. Not the hurried stride of officials or soldiers, but these were different. Then, a man’s voice, trembling with concern, filtered through the narrow opening above.
“Jeremiah, the king has sent help.”
The man's name was Ebed-Melek. Jeremiah felt tears sting his eyes. A foreigner. A servant. A man with no political power had risked everything to speak up for him, to plead for mercy, to obey God in a palace full of fear.
Ropes dropped down into the darkness, but along with them came a bundle.
“Put these cloths under your arms,” Ebed-Melek called down. “So the ropes don’t hurt you.”
Jeremiah held the rags in his hands, soft, worn, smelling of age and dust. Such a small thing. Such an unnecessary thing, in the eyes of the world. But it told him everything:
God was not rescuing him carelessly, God was rescuing him tenderly. Jeremiah wrapped the cloths under his arms. The ropes tightened. Pain shot through his shoulders, but it was a good pain, pain that meant upward movement, pain that meant hope.
The mud released its grip reluctantly, sucking at him as though unwilling to give him back. Inch by inch, he rose. His legs scraped against the walls. His breathing came hard. But he rose. Through each painful breath, light grew stronger, air grew warmer, and voices grew clearer. Until finally, his feet hit stone.
Solid ground.
He collapsed to his knees, trembling, filthy, exhausted, but free. Above him, Ebed-Melek’s face appeared, etched with relief.
Jeremiah knew no one climbs out of a pit like that alone. You don’t find solid ground without the hand of God. You don’t get rescued with rags unless the One who rescues you cares about the bruises no one else can see. And once you’ve felt the weight of the mud, once you’ve known the darkness of the pit, once you’ve been lifted by grace you did not earn, you never forget it.
You never take that ground for granted.
Thanksgiving In The Quiet Places
Our Thanksgiving Day ended without much fanfare. No big closing moment, no dramatic final slice of pie. Most people weren’t feeling well, so everyone ate early, visited a little, and then trickled out to go rest.
And honestly? As an introvert, I loved it. The quiet felt like a gift wrapped just for me. The rest of the long weekend slipped by in that same gentle way. We put up the Christmas tree, pulled out the decorations, and settled into the rhythm of the season. Time marches on whether we’re ready or not, and before we know it, a new year will be standing at the door.
But Thanksgiving does something that rushes right past if we’re not careful. It prods us to stop, to notice, to remember. This year, more than ever, I’ve been reminded of the deeper kind of gratitude, the kind that has nothing to do with the meal on the table or the twinkle lights in the living room.
The God we serve isn’t just the God of Christmas gifts or holiday blessings or pretty pictures on a postcard. He is the God who reaches down into the darkest places of our lives, into the pits we never thought we’d escape, and pulls us out with a tenderness we don’t deserve.
A God who rescues gently.
A God who pads the ropes.
A God who refuses to harm us any more than life already has.
Whether we ended up in the pit because of our own choices, or someone else’s cruelty, or circumstances that blindsided us, He is faithful all the same. He doesn’t shame us for falling. He doesn’t scold us for sinking. He just meets us there, and He lifts.
And those are the things I’m truly thankful for this year.


























