When Someone Tries to Hold the Gavel Over Your Life

A reflection on judgment, clarity, and returning to your own truth.

There are moments in life when someone’s words don’t just land — they echo. They linger in the air long after the conversation ends, asking to be examined, understood, and released. Recently, I found myself in one of those moments. And as the echo settled, something inside me rose with unmistakable clarity.

Sometimes you meet someone who speaks to you not with curiosity, but with certainty — as if they’ve been appointed judge over your life. Their tone carries the weight of old teachings, old hierarchies, old fears. They speak as though they know the path you should be on, the choices you should make, the God you should answer to.

And for a moment, it can shake you. It can stir old wounds. It can remind you of the systems you once belonged to — the ones that taught you to measure your worth by someone else’s approval.

But then something deeper speaks. Something quieter. Something truer.

It says: I didn’t leave God. I left the judgment. I left the fear. I left the smallness. I left the idea that someone else gets to hold the gavel over my life.

I left so I could finally breathe.

There is a particular kind of pain that comes from being talked at instead of talked to. From being told what your life means instead of being asked how it feels. From being treated as a topic rather than a human being. But there is also a particular kind of power that rises when you recognize it for what it is — a projection, not a truth.

And here is what I know now:

My life is not worthless. My joy is not counterfeit. My peace is not pretend. My relationship with God is not broken. My worth is not up for debate.

You don’t have to understand someone’s path for it to be valid. You don’t have to agree with their choices for them to be right for them. And you don’t have to approve of their life for it to be meaningful.

There comes a moment in every woman’s evolution when she stops standing in front of metaphorical courtrooms, waiting for verdicts that were never anyone’s to give. She steps out of the old narratives. She steps out of the old fears. She steps out of the old definitions of “truth.”

She steps into her own.

And in that space — that quiet, sacred space — she discovers a God who was never confined to the walls she left behind. A God who meets her in the openness. A God who speaks in the language of freedom, not fear.

I am living a life that feels honest, expansive, grounded, and deeply connected to the God I know in my bones.

And that, to me, is enough.

Evolving in grace,
Dawna‑Rae
🦋 may your heart return to itself again and again

Author’s Note: This reflection is for anyone who has ever been judged for evolving, for choosing themselves, or for stepping outside the lines someone else drew for them. If these words find you, may they remind you that your worth is not determined by anyone’s approval, and your path is allowed to change as you grow.

The Quiet Remembering: Becoming Someone, You’ve Been Before

Part 4 — The Moment of Recognition

Hello friends,

Thank you for coming back. Truly.

This series has unfolded in ways I didn’t expect — not outwardly, but inwardly. Each part has felt like a small door opening, not into something new, but into something ancient. Something familiar. Something I didn’t realize I had forgotten.

Today, I want to talk about the moment you recognize yourself again.

Not the self you perform. Not the self you protect. Not the self you’ve been conditioned to be.

I mean the self beneath all of that — the one who existed before the world told you who you should become.

There comes a moment in every woman’s evolution when she stops trying to explain her becoming and simply lets herself feel it.

It’s quiet. Subtle. Almost unremarkable from the outside.

But inside, something shifts.

It’s the moment you realize you’re not reinventing yourself. You’re remembering yourself.

A version of you who once moved through the world with sincerity instead of caution. A version of you who trusted her instincts without needing permission. A version of you who didn’t apologize for her softness or her strength. A version of you who knew what she loved — and wasn’t afraid to claim it.

She returns slowly, almost shyly, in small, unmistakable ways:

A boundary you honor without guilt. A desire you stop dismissing. A truth you finally speak aloud. A softness you stop hiding. A fire you stop dimming.

You catch yourself laughing differently. Breathing differently. Choosing differently.

And you think,

Oh… I know her.

This is the reincarnation no one talks about — the one that doesn’t require a dramatic ending or a grand beginning.

Just a gentle remembering.
A quiet return.

You are not becoming someone new.
You are becoming someone true.

And that is the most sacred evolution of all.

Our Reflection Corner

When was the last time you recognized a part of yourself you thought you had lost — and what did it feel like to welcome her back?

A Little Sanctuary Whisper For You

If a version of you rose to the surface while reading this, trust her.
She’s not new.
She’s returning.

My Personal Invitation For You to Return

When you’re ready, come back for Part 5: The Soul Agreements — where we’ll explore the promises, the bonds, and the unseen threads that follow us from one lifetime to the next.

Your evolution is welcome here.
Your remembering is welcome here.
Your soul is welcome here.

P.S.

If something inside you softened while reading this, that’s your soul recognizing itself.

Let her speak.
Let her rise.
Let her return.

Evolving in grace,
Dawna‑Rae
🦋 may your heart return to itself again and again

The Returning: A Soul’s Journey Through Many Lives

The Returning: A Soul’s Journey Through Many Lives

Part 1 — The Soul That Remembers

Hello friends,

How is your Wednesday unfolding? I hope there is something gentle in your day, something steady. All is well here, and I wanted to share something that has taken me years — truly, years — to understand.

I was raised one of Jehovah’s Witnesses. For nearly five decades, I was taught that reincarnation wasn’t real. When you die, you die. You become a memory to God, and if you are among the fortunate, you may be resurrected in a future no one can predict. Until then, you return to dust. Final. Silent. Done.

John, my other half, has always believed something different. He believes we return — that we come back to finish the lessons we didn’t learn the first time. He says life is a classroom and our souls are eternal students. For a long time, I listened with a mix of curiosity and discomfort. Not because I rejected the idea, but because something in me recognized it… and that recognition scared me.

Over time, though, I began to understand reincarnation in a way that felt less like contradiction and more like expansion. To me, it isn’t about becoming someone else — it’s about continuing. We leave this body, but the soul keeps moving, keeps learning, keeps becoming.

And then my daddy passed.

That’s when everything shifted. I see him in butterflies now — not metaphorically, but spiritually. As if the veil thinned just enough for me to feel him, not as memory, but as presence.

Around that same time, I discovered Laura Lynne Jackson.

Listening to her felt like someone opening a window in a room I didn’t realize had grown dim. She didn’t argue or persuade. She simply spoke from a place so full of love that fear had nowhere to stand. Her words didn’t challenge my upbringing — they soothed the parts of me that had been afraid to ask questions.

What struck me most was her relationship with timing. How she trusts it. How she listens. How she follows the nudge.

She once shared a story about being guided to change a dinner reservation — not for convenience, but because spirit was orchestrating a meeting she didn’t yet know she needed. And she went. She listened. She arrived at the exact moment she was meant to meet someone whose life would be changed by that encounter.

That story stayed with me.

Because it made me wonder how many times spirit has tried to guide me too — but I was too conditioned, too obedient to old beliefs, too afraid of being wrong to hear it.

Now, in midlife, I feel a calling rising in me. A calling to help others feel what I’m beginning to feel: that death is not an ending, that love does not disappear, and that our souls are far older, wiser, and more connected than we were ever taught.

Maybe that’s Laura’s purpose. Maybe it’s becoming part of mine too.

Because if even one person reads these words and feels their fear soften — even a little — then this series will have done what my soul came here to do.

Reflection Corner

What belief about death or the afterlife have you carried your whole life — and is it still true for the person you’re becoming now?

A Sanctuary Whisper

If you’re reading this with a little ache in your chest, a little curiosity, a little remembering… trust that. Some truths don’t arrive on time. They arrive when you do.

An Invitation to Return

When you’re ready, come back for Part 2: The Purpose of Returning — where we’ll explore why souls choose to come back, what they’re learning, and how this long arc of becoming stretches far beyond a single lifetime.

Your evolution is welcome here. Your questions are welcome here. Your soul is welcome here.

Evolving in grace,
Dawna‑Rae
🦋 may your heart return to itself again and again

Finding My Way Back to This Sacred Space

A quiet return to presence

Happy Wednesday, dear souls.

It feels good to be back here in this little corner of the internet — a space I created to explore what it means to evolve, to heal, and to grow closer to God in a way that feels personal and real. I stepped away for a while, not out of disinterest, but because life was teaching me quietly behind the scenes.

Tonight, I’m returning with a gentler heart, a clearer spirit, and a deeper understanding of what “evolving” truly means. It isn’t loud. It isn’t rushed. It’s the small moments, the quiet shifts, the soft awakenings that happen when we’re honest with ourselves.

I’m not here to grow fast. I’m here to grow faithfully.

So here’s to showing up again — consistently, simply, and with intention. Here’s to little reflections, small reminders, and spiritual do‑dabs that meet you exactly where you are.

I’m grateful to be back. I’m grateful you’re here. And I’m excited to see where this next chapter leads.

Evolving in grace,

Dawna‑Rae 🦋

may your heart return to itself again and again