
βWhere there is great love, there is always great loss.β
There are days that donβt fit neatly into words.
Days that split you open and fill you at the same time.
Days that hold both grief and gratitude in the very same breath.
Yesterday was one of those days.
And maybe this isnβt polished for approval.
Maybe it isnβt meant to be.
Maybe itβs simply lived.
Raw.
Faith under pressure⦠not faith in theory.
Our Bellaβour sweet dachshund girlβwent into labor, and like so many moments in life, it began with hope. Quiet anticipation. The kind that feels soft and full of promise.
But sometimesβ¦ things donβt go the way we expect.
Our first puppy, a beautiful little girl we named Dream, was stillborn. We did everything we couldβworked her for twenty-five minutes, praying, hoping, asking God for a miracle like Lazarus. But she had already slipped away before she ever made it into our arms.
And nothing prepares you for that.
Not the stillness.
Not the silence.
Not the way your heart tries to make sense of something that simply doesnβt.

Bella, sweet Bella, didnβt understand. She stayed with her baby for hoursβcleaning her, nudging her, trying in every way she knew how to call her back.
And there was a momentβone I know will stay with me forever.
I know thatβ¦ because Iβve stood in a moment like that before.
When your heart is breakingβ¦
when your spirit feels cracked openβ¦
when you are quietly questioning your faithβ¦
but someone you love more than yourself is lying there, needing youβ
your presence,
your strength,
your steadinessβ¦
you donβt get to fall apart the way you feel inside.
I remember standing with my daughter⦠supporting her through her own moment of pain and uncertainty with our grandbaby, Jude.
I didnβt have all the answers.
I didnβt always know what to do.
But I was there.
And I learned something thenβ
Presence is everything.
Because when your heart is breaking and your spirit is crackedβ¦
and everything in you wants to collapseβ¦
but someone you love more than yourself is depending on youβ
something happens.
You rise anyway.
I saw it in my daughterβs eyesβ¦
that place where fear, love, surrender, and strength all meet at once.
I held it then.
And I still do.
Very tenderly.
And in that moment with Bella and Dreamβ¦
I felt it again.
That same ache.
That same helpless love.
That same desperate desire to make it betterβ¦ even when you canβt.
And I knewβ¦
This was one of those moments.
The kind that doesnβt leave you.
Not loud. Not overwhelming.
But like a quiet whisper of grief that lingersβ¦
the kind that gently holds on⦠and never quite lets go.
Maybe I carry it because I donβt want her to be forgotten.
Maybe some grief isnβt meant to be releasedβ¦
but remembered.
Because she mattered.
βWhat we have once enjoyed deeply, we can never lose. All that we love deeply becomes a part of us.β β Helen Keller
βThe Lord is close to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit.β β Psalm 34:18
There was something else that happened in those momentsβsomething I didnβt fully understand until I looked back.
In the middle of the griefβ¦ the brokennessβ¦ the sheer anxiety of those twenty-five minutesβ¦
There were waves.
I could hear people talking around me.
I could see Bella scramblingβconfused, desperate.
And there were moments⦠where I wanted to give up.
But something wouldnβt let me.
Like a lionβs last breathβ¦
like natureβs final roarβ¦
something kept rising up inside of me.
Something deeper than emotion.
Something stronger than fear.
Something I didnβt even feel fully in control of.
Justβkeep going.
So I did.
I kept working that tiny bodyβtrying to revive her, stimulate her, clear her airway, breathe for her, press life back into her with everything I had.
And when it would hit meβ¦ when the emotion would just take over and Iβd start bawlingβ¦
Iβd hand her to Alan.
And heβd pick right up where I left off.
Doing the same thing.
Trying everything he could.
Not giving up.
And then when it became too much for himβ¦
heβd hand her back to me.
And we just kept going like thatβ¦ back and forthβ¦
for twenty-five minutes.
We dropped to our knees and prayed.
We called family, asking them to pray.
We anointed her with oil.
We spoke Godβs Word.
We believedβfullyβ
that she would rise like Lazarus.

But God⦠saw what we could not.
And hindsightβclear, honest hindsightβhas a way of revealing what we could never see in the moment.
We didnβt know it yetβ¦ but something far more serious was already unfolding beneath the surface.
All we knew was what was in front of us.
Loss.
Confusion.
Urgency.
And so we moved.
We rushed Bella to the vetβonly knowing something wasnβt right.
An emergency C-section followed.
And it wasnβt until the surgeon came out afterwardβ¦
and explained everythingβ¦
that the full picture was finally revealed.
That the first puppy had already been lost before she ever arrived.
That her placenta had rupturedβ
robbing her of oxygen before she ever entered the birth canal⦠before we ever had the chance to hold her.
She had already been gone.
And what we didnβt knowβwhat we couldnβt have known in that momentβ
was that part of that ruptured placenta remained attached inside Bella.
Something that, left unseen, would have turned septic.
We would have thought she was resting.
Recovering.
Grieving the loss of her litter.
We would have comforted herβ¦
stayed closeβ¦
tried to give her peaceβ¦
never realizing that something far more dangerous was unfolding beneath the surface.
And we could have lost her too.
And the second puppyβ
already compromisedβ
already at riskβ
would have continued to be deprived of the oxygen she needed
had we allowed Bella to continue laboring at home.
She would not have made it.
None of it would have ended the way it did.
And thatβs when it became clearβ
that what had happenedβ¦
had already been done.
And suddenlyβ¦ everything we had just walked through made sense in a way it couldnβt before.
And thatβs when something deeper settled into me.
Because just like on the crossβ¦
when Jesus had already given everything,
and those who loved Him were still pleading for a different outcomeβ
not yet understanding the fullness of what had already taken placeβ
that was us.
We were praying for restoration.
For reversal.
For life to return in the way we hoped for.
Not yet realizingβ¦
that what had happened could not be undone.
Not because God wasnβt ableβ
but because there was a greater picture we couldnβt yet see.
And in that realizationβ¦
something shifted.
Because faith, in that moment, wasnβt about changing the outcome anymore.
It was about trusting the One
who already saw it from beginning to end.
And it brought me back to Scriptureβ
βThough a thousand may fall at your side, and ten thousand at your right handβ¦β β Psalm 91
But I understand it differently now.
Because itβs not about everything staying far away from you.
Sometimes⦠it comes very near.
Sometimes it unfolds right in front of you.
Sometimesβ¦
it drops right into your hands.
And it did.
But Psalm 91 was never just about what happens around youβ
itβs about where you dwell in the middle of it.
And maybe this is just the way it has always spoken to meβ¦
As if, in those moments, you are called to put blinders on.
Not just to the words on the pageβ
but to everything around you.
To what you see.
To what you hear.
To what you feel.
Even to the chaos rising within you.
Because thatβs what I had to doβ¦
when I stood with my daughterβ¦
and helped carry her through her own trench.
And it was what I had to do here.
To steady myself not in my emotionsβ¦
but in my faith.
To keep my focus on Godβ¦
even when everything around me was pulling for my attention.
Because in those momentsβ
thatβs what carries you through.
Not the clarity.
Not the outcome.
But the focus.
And it was that same focusβ¦ that same faithβ¦
that rose up in me again.
Standing there with Bella.
Holding Dream.
Fighting for what I could not control.
It was the same callβ
to stay anchored.
to stay present.
to keep goingβ¦
even when my heart was breaking in my hands.
But⦠God.
When we reached the edge of what we could doβ¦
God had the final say.
And in His grace, what could have been lost entirelyβ¦
was held.
βThe righteous person may have many troubles, but the Lord delivers him from them all.β β Psalm 34:19
βAnd we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love Himβ¦β β Romans 8:28
And thenβ¦
there was her.


Our little doveβcarrying peace, spirit, and promise.
The second babyβborn alive, healthy, full of hope and life.
The surgeon told us she had made itβstrong, breathing, wigglingβ¦ everything we had just fought so hard for, standing right there in front of us.
And I do know how to explain what that felt like.
When the surgeon came in and assured us that Bella was okayβtruly okayβand that our little dove had been born healthy, sweet, wiggly, and full of promiseβ¦
I let go.
All of it.
Every emotion I had been holding backβevery ounce of fear, grief, hope, and exhaustionβcame rushing to the surface all at once, as if each one was trying to be felt first.
And I couldnβt stop crying.
I didnβt want to.
I just⦠let it come.
And the tearsβthe way they poured out of meβ
I had to hide my face.
I pulled my knees up⦠wrapped my arms around myself⦠and just let it all out.
And somehowβ¦ in the middle of that releaseβ¦
it cleansed me.
Like everything I had been carrying, everything I had been holding together in those moments of urgency and focusβ¦
finally had a place to go.
And I realizedβ¦
I had been there before.
When I knew Alyssa was going to be okayβ¦
that she was coming homeβ¦
my body did the very same thing.
I didnβt even think about it.
I just folded into myselfβ
wrapped my arms around my face,
braced against my kneesβ¦
and let everything break loose inside of me.
Like something in me knewβ
this is where itβs safe to fall apart now.
This is where you can finally release
what you had to hold together to get through it.
The surgeon encouraged us to get Bella home as soon as possibleβback into what was familiar, what was safeβso that nature could take its course.
So we did.
We brought her homeβ¦
back to her spaceβ¦
back to what she knew.
And we hopedβ¦
At first, we had to help her latch.
Those first hours were tense. We knew what was at stakeβif she couldnβt nurse, we could lose her too.
Three times, we helped her latch. We even had to express Bellaβs milk ourselvesβwhich, on a lighter note, felt a little like that awkward βCan you milk me?β momentβ¦ except this wasnβt funny in the moment.
It was scary.
Because underneath it allβ¦ we knew what it meant if she didnβt figure it out.
And thenβ¦
About six hours laterβ
She finally latched on her own.
Not because we guided her.
Not because we placed her there.
But on her own⦠of her own doing.
And then again.
And again.
And suddenly⦠she knew exactly what to do.
And Bella?
Bella became a mother.
Not a broken one.
Not a confused one.
But a present, attentive, deeply nurturing mother.
She coos to her baby when she criesβsoft, delicate sounds. She gently tucks her in with her nose, pulling her close. She wonβt leave her side.
It is one of the most beautiful things Iβve ever witnessed.

This⦠is what love does.
It grieves.
It breaks.
It questions.
It aches.
But it alsoβ¦
Continues.
Even after loss.
Even after confusion.
Even after the moment that feels like it might undo you.
Bella came full circle.
Not because nothing happenedβ¦
but because something in her chose to keep going.
And maybe thatβs the lesson Iβm sitting with today:
We donβt always get the outcome we prayed for.
We donβt always understand the moments that undo us.
But sometimesβ¦ in the very same space where something endsβ¦
something else begins.
Dream was real. She mattered. She was held, named, and loved.
And this little life beside Bella now?
She is proof that not everything was lost.
βOut of suffering have emerged the strongest soulsβ¦β β Khalil Gibran
So if you ever find yourself thereβ
face down in the muck and the mireβ¦
barely able to breatheβ¦
feeling like giving upβ
hold on.
Even if itβs by a thread.
Even if your faith feels quieter than your fear.
Put your blinders on.
Fix your focus.
And just⦠keep going.
You may not see it yet.
But God does.
And He is not absent in it.
Hugs, Love, and Grace,
Tina N. Campbell
Scribed in Light
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