
Communication with Grace
The timing of this post isn’t a coincidence. Something triggered me this week, and I needed the reminder of peace and love that’s always around me. I’m so thankful for this life—but when I fall into old loops, I lose sight of that gratitude.
In my last post, I shared how easily we can get trapped in those loops. If you haven’t read it yet, I encourage you to—it means a lot to me and sets the stage for this conversation.
Lately, I’ve been on a mission to get back on track. I’m thankful for the past, even for the struggles, because they gave me the gift of awareness. I’ve gone back to my old notes from therapy, support groups, and Bible studies. Over the years, I’ve filled journals with revelations, free-writing, and raw prayers. Revisiting those pages has inspired me to share more.
The post before this one came from those notes, and this one does too.
And here’s the wild part—while preparing this post about communication, I kept stumbling across other reminders about the same subject: blog posts, podcasts, even random conversations. Everywhere I turned, communication kept coming up. That tells me this is something many of us wrestle with, and maybe you need this reminder too.
But I don’t want to overcomplicate the message. So here it is, simply, as I wrote it in my notes:
The Simple Model of Communication
There should always be a Talker and a Listener.
- The Talker shares their grievance with honesty.
Example: “I felt really hurt when you…” - The Listener responds without judgment or defensiveness—only to confirm they understand.
Example: “I want to make sure I’m understanding you. You’re saying you felt hurt when I…” - Then the roles switch. The Talker becomes the Listener.
Example: “Yes, that’s right.” - Now the Listener speaks—not to “win,” but to seek peace with admiration and grace.
Example: “I’m sorry I made you feel that way. That wasn’t my intention…”
When both people walk away feeling heard and respected, the conversation has done its job. That’s communication at its best.
I wish all relationships worked this way. Unfortunately, many don’t. The real issue is that not everyone shares the same goal. Some people don’t care if the other person feels loved or understood. They only care about being right, protecting themselves, or coming out on top.
That’s why, before you enter a tough conversation, pause and ask yourself: Does this person actually want resolution, or are they just ready for a fight?
If it’s the latter—a “right-fighter”—you may want to excuse yourself. You cannot have healthy communication with someone who refuses to listen.
✨ That’s the note I want to leave you with today: choose peace, choose respect, choose to walk away when needed. Communication should build bridges, not burn them down.

Sk-

If this post spoke to you, I’d love for you to share it with someone who might need the same reminder.
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💬 Let’s keep the conversation going—drop a comment below and tell me your thoughts on communication and grace.
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