Because it means I still believe someone’s f*cking listening.
I don’t fold my hands anymore.
I don’t quote scripture like a safety net.
But I still whisper into the dark
with a cracked voice and a few four-letter words—
because somewhere inside me,
hope hasn’t bled out yet.
🙏 Prayer in a Post-Tidy-Faith World
I don’t pray with praise hands.
I pray like a feral animal
with survival in one hand
and sarcasm in the other.
Sometimes I say, “God, seriously? Are You even real?”
Sometimes I scream,
“Do something. Say something. Be something.”
And sometimes—
I just swear.
Because swearing means I’m still speaking.
Still trying.
Still refusing to be silent,
even if my voice shakes
and my theology is duct-taped together with trauma.
🧠 Psychological + Spiritual Insight:
- Swearing in prayer isn’t disrespect—it’s regulation.
It’s the nervous system saying, “I need to feel this to survive this.” - For survivors, prayer is rarely polite.
It’s panicked. Primal. And profoundly human. - Faith after trauma doesn’t always kneel.
Sometimes it collapses.
Sometimes it curses.
Sometimes it crawls toward heaven with middle fingers raised
and a pulse that proves you’re still in the fight.