Tag: love

  • Triggered but Trusting God in the Heat of the Moment

    Triggered but Trusting God in the Heat of the Moment

    By: Your Sista Ritza | Redemption & Recovery

    Let me just say this up front—I don’t always get it right.

    As much as I want to reflect God’s love in my words and actions, I’m still a work in progress. Some days, I feel strong and full of peace. Other days… all it takes is one moment, one comment, one raised voice—and suddenly I feel myself slipping. That’s what a trigger is for me. It’s anything that shifts my energy and makes me come out of character.

    I know who I want to be: kind, calm, grace-filled.
    But sometimes who I actually am in the heat of the moment? Whew… it’s a whole different story.


    Let’s Be Honest: I Have Triggers

    One of my biggest triggers is when someone raises their voice at me. Maybe it’s from my childhood, maybe it’s just how I’m wired, but when I feel like someone’s yelling at me instead of talking to me—I feel my body go tense. My jaw clenches. My heart races. And if I’m already tired, hungry, or stressed… the chances of me staying calm drops fast.

    Now, on a good day, I’ve learned to pause and take a deep breath. That one breath helps me remember who I am and whose I am. I remind myself, You belong to Jesus. You don’t have to react like the old you.

    But on a bad day?
    When I’m not spiritually centered?
    Let me tell you… that breath feels real short and the flesh rises up fast.

    I’ve even caught myself warning people—”Watch your tone,” or “You’re crossing a line.” And in those moments, I’m not trying to be holy. I’m just trying to stop myself from snapping.


    Respect Is a Big Deal to Me

    I value respect deeply. When I feel disrespected—especially by someone close to me—I go straight into defense mode. And if I’m being real, that defense mode is usually powered by fear.

    • Fear of not being heard.
    • Fear of being dismissed.
    • Fear of being abandoned.

    Those fears… they don’t just sit quietly. They scream. And they show up loud in my anger.

    That’s why Celebrate Recovery has been such a blessing. It’s where I first admitted that my anger wasn’t just a reaction—it was a reflection of something deeper.

    Step 1: We admitted we were powerless over our addictions and compulsive behaviors, that our lives had become unmanageable.

    My anger didn’t always look wild from the outside. But on the inside, I was fighting for control… and losing.


    A Moment I’m Not Proud Of

    Last year, I had a huge argument with my husband. Now, we’re not perfect—we’re two strong people doing life together, and disagreements happen. But this one? It spiraled fast.

    He raised his voice.
    Bing! Triggered.
    He threatened to walk out.
    Bing! Triggered again.

    And then… I watched his back turn toward the door, and in an instant, something in me snapped.

    It wasn’t planned. It wasn’t thought through. It was like every fear I’d ever buried came rushing to the surface all at once—abandonment, rejection, insecurity, not being enough. All of it boiling in my chest like a volcano ready to blow.

    Without thinking, I reached out and grabbed his shirt.
    Not to hurt him—God knows I wasn’t trying to be violent—but I needed him to stop. To stay. To hear me.
    I just couldn’t let him walk away.

    It was like I was trying to hold the whole thing—our argument, our marriage, my heart—together with my clenched fist. And for a split second, I thought maybe if I could just keep him from leaving, I could control the damage.

    But the second my hands touched that fabric, I felt it in my gut—
    This is not who I want to be.

    The grip of my fingers around his shirt wasn’t strength. It was desperation.
    And that moment? It shook me.

    He left anyway.
    The door shut with a heaviness that echoed through the house—and through my heart.

    I stood there frozen. My chest was heaving. My hands were still curled, as if holding onto air would somehow bring him back. But he was gone.

    And just like that, the silence came rushing in.
    No more yelling. No more footsteps. Just me… standing alone in a space that now felt unfamiliar. Hollow. Like the peace had been ripped right out of it.

    I screamed.
    Not at him.
    At the air.
    At the pain.
    At the weight of all the things I didn’t know how to fix.

    Tears poured hot down my face as I paced the living room like a caged animal—trapped not by walls, but by my own emotions.
    I was angry. Embarrassed. Ashamed.
    Ashamed that I had let my anger drive me to that place. Ashamed that after everything I’ve learned and everything I believe, I still lost it.

    And that’s when I remembered…
    God.

    Not the distant, far-away version of Him.
    The real, right-here, ever-present Father who doesn’t walk out when things get ugly.
    The One who sees me—mess and all—and doesn’t flinch.

    I cried out, “God, please… help me. Save me from myself. I don’t want to be like this.”
    It wasn’t a polished prayer. It wasn’t pretty.
    It was raw and broken—but it was real.

    In that moment, I wasn’t trying to be a good Christian. I wasn’t trying to look like I had it all together. I was just a daughter, desperate for her Father to hold her and make her whole again. In that sacred, broken space, something shifted.

    The anger didn’t disappear. The guilt didn’t vanish.
    But God met me in the middle of it.
    Not with lightning bolts or punishment—but with a whisper:
    “I’m here.”

    That whisper wrapped around my shame like a warm blanket, not excusing what I had done, but inviting me to bring it into the light.

    Eventually, I wiped my face. And I knew what I needed to do next.

    I confessed my failure. I asked God for forgiveness and I made amends to my husband.

    We talked. We listened. We took a breath.
    We didn’t solve everything in one conversation, but we took a step toward each other again… not just as husband and wife, but as two imperfect people trying to follow Jesus together.


    Through that moment, we began learning something new about each other—and about ourselves.

    We learned to honor each other’s space.
    We learned that our triggers may be different, but they’re both rooted in pain.
    And we learned that healing happens faster when we stop trying to win and start trying to understand.

    Now, we both recognize when we’re nearing our edge.
    We’ve learned to press pause, to walk away when needed, and to circle back with grace.

    We’re not perfect.
    We still mess up.
    But now, we invite God into the messy middle instead of waiting for everything to be fixed.

    Because this isn’t just about anger or arguments.
    It’s about surrender.
    It’s about growth.
    It’s about trusting that Jesus isn’t just working in me—He’s working in us.

    Step 6 (Celebrate Recovery): We were entirely ready to have God remove all these defects of character.

    Step 7: We humbly asked Him to remove all our shortcomings.

    💭 Let’s Reflect Together

    If you’ve ever lost your cool, felt ashamed after a fight, or struggled to show up as the person you want to be—take heart. You are not alone, and there is no wound too deep for God to heal.

    Let’s slow down and sit with a few questions that might help you open your heart to what God is doing underneath the surface:

    • What situations or tones tend to trigger you the most? Can you connect them to something deeper—like fear, rejection, or past pain?
    • When was the last time you reacted in a way you weren’t proud of? How did you respond afterward—to yourself, to the person, to God?
    • Are you trying to control or contain something right now that God is asking you to surrender?
    • What would it look like to pause in the heat of the moment—and invite God in instead of powering through it alone?
    • Is there someone you need to make amends with—not to fix everything perfectly, but to own your part and walk in humility?
    • Are you willing to let God work on your character, even if the process is slow, messy, and sometimes painful?

    Sweet friend, healing isn’t about pretending you’re okay.
    It’s about letting God into the parts of you that aren’t—and trusting that He’s not going anywhere.

    Let’s keep walking this journey—together.

    With love,
    Your Sista Ritza

    Redemption & Recovery

  • Making Peace with My Parents

    Making Peace with My Parents

    When I first began my journey to come closer to God, I didn’t want to rely on any of the information I had learned about Him from my family or the world. I wanted to learn who God was on my own terms. Coming from a Catholic background, God was about punishment and sin. My family had all different beliefs about God—from Catholicism to Santería to New Age philosophy—and who can forget my grandma with her horoscopes. It caused so much confusion, and I didn’t want to lean on the knowledge I had been given by my upbringing or culture.

    So, I prayed. I asked God to erase all the false information I had learned and to help me know Him. As I meditated on this prayer, something unexpected happened—the Ten Commandments came to mind. I had to look them up because I didn’t know them offhand. As I went down the list, one commandment stopped me in my tracks:

    Honor your father and mother.

    Honor my what?! I was flabbergasted. I looked up at the sky and thought, Why, God? Why would You make me do this?

    A Broken Family

    Up until that moment, my relationship with my parents was contentious at best. I barely had a relationship with either of them.

    When I was twelve, my parents went through a nasty divorce filled with hate, betrayal, and bitterness. According to my dad, my mom was unfaithful and chose “the streets” over her family. My dad won full custody of my younger sister and me. I can only assume it was because my mom didn’t have the means to care for us—or maybe it was my dad’s way of spiting her. Either way, after my mom left, we weren’t allowed to speak with her. And when we did, it was for awkward, brief visits to Baskin-Robbins before heading straight back to my dad’s house.

    I had to be careful what I said to my mom for fear of my dad’s reaction. Looking back, I don’t remember much about my relationship with her in my younger years. I was a daddy’s girl, and my memories of my mom were distant—her beauty, her stylish outfits, her dancing, her smoking. But love? Affection? I couldn’t recall many moments of that.

    Between the ages of 12 to 18, my mom and I barely had a relationship. I felt abandoned and bitter that I wasn’t allowed to miss her or want her in my life. Angry because I thought she didn’t want me in hers.

    The Burden of My Father’s Love

    At the beginning of my parents’ divorce, my dad was wrecked by the breakdown of our family. Worse, he was enraged by my mom’s betrayal, and it felt like he used my sister and me as pawns to hurt her. He brainwashed us into believing she was the enemy.

    I remember asking him once, Where’s Mom? His response? He almost threw me out because he thought my question meant I was choosing her over him. Mind you I was twelve.

    That’s when my codependency was born. I felt like I had to keep my dad happy, to be the “good girl”, to think the way he wanted me to think—so he wouldn’t turn on me like he had on my mom.

    At 16, my younger sister got pregnant. My dad was so angry that she had to emancipate herself just to have control over her life. In his rage, he completely ignored her.

    At 17, my dad caught me with a boy in my room. He was so furious that he stopped speaking to me and refused to attend my high school graduation. That crushed me. I had done everything I could to make him happy, but the one time I disappointed him, he shut me out completely. I didn’t even walk in my cap and gown because I thought, What’s the point?

    At 18, I moved out. I couldn’t live my life obeying my dad’s controlling rules. It was his way or the highway—so I chose the highway.

    Wrestling with God’s Command

    Honoring my parents seemed impossible. I was angry. I was bitter.

    Why couldn’t I have normal parents?
    Why did God give me parents who I couldn’t trust to love me and not leave me?

    As I wrestled with these questions, I looked at my own children. I realized that one day, they might be angry with me. They might not understand the decisions I made. They might struggle to love me, too.

    That thought softened my heart.

    The Healing Begins

    Step 5 We admitted to God, to ourselves, and to another human being, the exact nature of our hurts, hang-ups and habits.

    Step 5 gave me the chance to confess my burdens—the ones I had carried for years. It forced me to open my heart to feelings I had buried and denied.

    Through prayer, I learned to pray for my parents. In time, I learned to forgive them. Jesus’ words became my mantra:

    “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.” – Luke 23:34

    This helped me see my parents through a different lens—not as villains, but as broken people who made mistakes, just like me.

    A Work in Progress

    I can’t say that my relationship with my parents is fully healed. I still struggle to trust their words and actions. But I no longer hold resentment in my heart.

    Now, I actively work on showing them compassion and building a relationship with them.

    More importantly, this journey has helped me build a solid relationship with my own children—one based on honesty, respect, and unconditional love.


    If you’ve ever struggled with forgiving your parents, I want you to know you’re not alone. Healing takes time, but with God, nothing is impossible.

    Next week, I’ll share more about how Celebrate Recovery helped me work through my anger and embrace true freedom. Stay tuned! 💜

    With love & grace,
    Your Sista Ritza

    🙏 Thank you in advance for liking and sharing this blog post. The more people that get to read, the more people we can help. My intention is to help others through sharing my experiences. 🙌