Last activity on 12/24/2025
By the end of this lesson, participants will be able to:
“If you never heal from what hurt you, youโll bleed on people who didnโt cut you.”
โ Unknown
โHe has sent me to bind up the brokenhearted, to proclaim freedom for the captivesโฆ to comfort all who mournโฆ to give them a crown of beauty instead of ashes.โ
โ Isaiah 61:1โ3 (NIV)
Maya never thought she had trauma. However, when her counselor asked about her childhood, the silence was louder than words. Her father left when she was 10. Her mom worked nights. She felt invisibleโand started escaping into daydreams, then spending, then online gambling. Loss didnโt hit all at once. It stacked, silently. Gambling gave her a feeling of power she didnโt have growing up. But it was all an illusionโand the cost was real.
Many people associate trauma with physical abuse or dramatic loss. But trauma can also look like:
Gambling can become an unconscious coping mechanismโan escape from the pain we never correctly named.
The rush becomes a way to feel alive.
The risk becomes a way to feel in control.
The loss becomes familiarโand weirdly comforting.
Spend time writing about the following:
Create a โLoss Timelineโ in your journal. Start from childhood and move to the present. Mark:
Donโt rush. You may cry. Thatโs okay. This is sacred ground.
โLord, You know every moment that broke meโeven the ones I tried to forget. Iโve buried my pain in gambling, but it only made the ache worse. Help me face my grief. Please show me how to heal whatโs been hidden. Hold my heart in the places where I feel most abandoned. You are close to the brokenhearted. Be close to me now. Amen.โ
Take one gentle action this week to honor a loss youโve avoided. It could be:
Let this be the beginningโnot of escapeโbut of restoration.