all devotionals

Put the Backpack Down: A Guide to Letting Go

Old pain does not leave on its own. Naming it, interrupting the loop, and surrendering it to God is how you finally get your hands free.

You're in the shower, water running, and out of nowhere it's back.

That conversation you replayed a hundred times.
The moment you said the wrong thing, or they did something unforgivable.
It hits like it happened this morning, even though it was two years ago.

You didn't invite it.
It just showed up, the way it always does.

Your brain treats that memory like a live event.
The emotional centers fire the same signals whether you're reliving 2023 or standing in your kitchen right now.
Cortisol floods your system, your heart rate climbs, your body thinks the threat is still here…

But carrying old pain into new seasons costs you something you can't see on a spreadsheet.
It costs you presence. Clarity.
The energy you'd otherwise pour into the people who need you most.

The weight doesn't leave on its own. It waits for you to decide it's time.

Surrender is the bravest move a person can make:
handing what's too heavy to Jesus and trusting He can hold what you can't.
That exchange is how you get your hands free again.

Free to build, free to lead.
Free to love people without dragging old wounds into the relationship.

You were made for more than managing yesterday's damage.

Here's your focus for today:

  • Name what you're carrying: Write down one specific memory or hurt that keeps resurfacing and acknowledge it honestly.
  • Interrupt the loop: When the memory returns today, say out loud, "That was then, and I'm choosing now."
  • Make the exchange: Spend five minutes in prayer, handing that specific hurt to God and asking Him to rewrite the narrative around it.
  • Anchor your day in this truth: “Cast all your anxiety on him because he cares for you.” (1 Peter 5:7)

Today's a good day to put the backpack down.

You've carried it long enough.

This is some text inside of a div block.
sponsored by
This is some text inside of a div block.

More American Christian Articles

Are Your Goals SMART Enough?

Set SMART goals rooted in faith. Align ambition with God’s purpose & turn your inspired dreams into God-glorifying action.

What I Learned about Depression from Michael S. Lundy

Struggling with mental health isn’t a failure of faith. Learn how compassion and presence can be the greatest form of ministry.

Love Yourself as God Loves You

Love yourself like God does—on purpose. Steward your life, trust His voice, and take faithful action even before you feel ready.

What’s So Good About Good Friday?

Good Friday invites surrender and sacrifice—not as loss, but as the beginning of resurrection life, purpose, and eternal strength.