End To Darkness Book In English
I asked myself a question that most broken men avoid “Is it worth fighting for”? Not just life, but my soul, my marriage, my family and my future, the truth hit me like a bullet. Yes, it was worth it,but wanting it wasn’t enough. I had to fight for it. That fight would demand everything I had left and everything I didn’t know I still carried inside me. Rehab wasn’t just a decision; it was a declaration of war. Not against the world, but against the darkness inside me. “The LORD is my strength and my shield; my heart trusts in him, and he helps me.” — Psalm 28:7 I knew stepping into rehab would be an uphill battle, the kind of battle that leaves scars not on the body, but on the soul. Detox wasn’t just about flushing poison from my body; it was about watching every lie I ever believed come to the surface; the lies that told me I was worthless, that I was too far gone and that God had given up on me. I had to confront the man I had become in addiction, the man who lied, the man who ran, the man who hurt people he loved. But that wasn’t the only face staring back at me in the mirror, behind broken eyes, there was also a boy trapped in old wounds, a child who had never healed from the violence, the fear, the frustration. The pain, the addiction, the war inside my soul it was all shaping me for something greater. “And I will refine them as silver is refined and will try them as gold is tried.” — Zechariah 13:9From heartache to relapse, from hope to despair, I have walked through hell and lived to speak of Heaven. If my story does anything, I pray it does this, it makes you believe again. Believe that you are not alone. Believe that you are not beyond mercy. Believe that we do not fight alone. There is a hand reaching for you right now—steady, sacred, and strong. All we must do is reach back. Impossible is a lie.
Visit Us - https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0G4F3LCDQ
I asked myself a question that most broken men avoid “Is it worth fighting for”? Not just life, but my soul, my marriage, my family and my future, the truth hit me like a bullet. Yes, it was worth it,but wanting it wasn’t enough. I had to fight for it. That fight would demand everything I had left and everything I didn’t know I still carried inside me. Rehab wasn’t just a decision; it was a declaration of war. Not against the world, but against the darkness inside me. “The LORD is my strength and my shield; my heart trusts in him, and he helps me.” — Psalm 28:7 I knew stepping into rehab would be an uphill battle, the kind of battle that leaves scars not on the body, but on the soul. Detox wasn’t just about flushing poison from my body; it was about watching every lie I ever believed come to the surface; the lies that told me I was worthless, that I was too far gone and that God had given up on me. I had to confront the man I had become in addiction, the man who lied, the man who ran, the man who hurt people he loved. But that wasn’t the only face staring back at me in the mirror, behind broken eyes, there was also a boy trapped in old wounds, a child who had never healed from the violence, the fear, the frustration. The pain, the addiction, the war inside my soul it was all shaping me for something greater. “And I will refine them as silver is refined and will try them as gold is tried.” — Zechariah 13:9From heartache to relapse, from hope to despair, I have walked through hell and lived to speak of Heaven. If my story does anything, I pray it does this, it makes you believe again. Believe that you are not alone. Believe that you are not beyond mercy. Believe that we do not fight alone. There is a hand reaching for you right now—steady, sacred, and strong. All we must do is reach back. Impossible is a lie.
Visit Us - https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0G4F3LCDQ
End To Darkness Book In English
I asked myself a question that most broken men avoid “Is it worth fighting for”? Not just life, but my soul, my marriage, my family and my future, the truth hit me like a bullet. Yes, it was worth it,but wanting it wasn’t enough. I had to fight for it. That fight would demand everything I had left and everything I didn’t know I still carried inside me. Rehab wasn’t just a decision; it was a declaration of war. Not against the world, but against the darkness inside me. “The LORD is my strength and my shield; my heart trusts in him, and he helps me.” — Psalm 28:7 I knew stepping into rehab would be an uphill battle, the kind of battle that leaves scars not on the body, but on the soul. Detox wasn’t just about flushing poison from my body; it was about watching every lie I ever believed come to the surface; the lies that told me I was worthless, that I was too far gone and that God had given up on me. I had to confront the man I had become in addiction, the man who lied, the man who ran, the man who hurt people he loved. But that wasn’t the only face staring back at me in the mirror, behind broken eyes, there was also a boy trapped in old wounds, a child who had never healed from the violence, the fear, the frustration. The pain, the addiction, the war inside my soul it was all shaping me for something greater. “And I will refine them as silver is refined and will try them as gold is tried.” — Zechariah 13:9From heartache to relapse, from hope to despair, I have walked through hell and lived to speak of Heaven. If my story does anything, I pray it does this, it makes you believe again. Believe that you are not alone. Believe that you are not beyond mercy. Believe that we do not fight alone. There is a hand reaching for you right now—steady, sacred, and strong. All we must do is reach back. Impossible is a lie.
Visit Us - https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0G4F3LCDQ
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