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The Water Was Cold

A testimony of a vow, a frightened little girl, and the healing that came when tears were finally allowed to flow

The water was cold. That is where the memory always begins. A little girl standing somewhere she never should have had to be, shivering not only because of the chill that wrapped itself around her skin, but because fear had already wrapped itself around her heart.

 

I was three, maybe four, when I learned to stop crying. I remember standing there — small, tearful, longing for my mother’s attention. All I wanted was some time with her, to be held, to be seen, but instead she shoved my head under cold water, and the shock stole my breath. I gasped, covered my mouth, and decided in that moment: I will never cry again.

 

She stood there small, feeling unseen, unheard, and deeply unwanted. Arguments filled the house behind her, voices rising like crashing waves she could never outrun. Tears threatened to spill, yet there was no safe place for them to fall. No arms to gather her. No voice to tell her she mattered.

 

The shock of that cold water marked the beginning of an inner vow that wrapped itself around her heart like armour. She made a vow — not with words spoken out loud, but with a whisper carved into the tender places of her soul. A vow that felt like safety to a terrified child: “Do not cry. Crying makes it worse. Crying makes you weak. Crying makes you visible, and visibility is dangerous.”

 

The vow settled like frost over her heart. It hardened what was soft. It silenced what was honest. It numbed more than just emotion; it numbed her body’s natural responses. The tears went inward, and the weight of all she could not release settled into her chest, her breath, her sinuses — the hidden places where the body carries what the heart cannot bear.

 

I told myself I would not need hugs, comfort, softness or affirmations. I would not ask for love. I would be strong — or at least appear to be. I grew up being F.I.N.E. — Fractured, Insecure, Numb, and Exhausted.

 

For decades, that word became my survival code. "I'm fine" meant I was holding everything together by a thread. It became the language of control, the mask of a little girl who had learned early that her needs were too much. Beneath that silence lived a river of uncried tears — tears that my body would one day reveal through pain, pressure, and inflammation.

📖 "The Lord is near to those who have a broken heart, and saves such as have a contrite spirit." — Psalm 34:18 (NKJV)

 

Years later, my mother told me she once found me in the living room — quiet, still, unmoving. I had fallen off the TV unit and split my lip open. Blood streamed through my fingers, yet not a single tear fell. I just stood there, hand pressed over my mouth, frozen.

 

That image pierced me the first time I heard it. The little girl who had learned that tears were dangerous now stood silently bleeding, unwilling to cry even in pain. My body remembered the vow even when my mind had forgotten.

 

During my first prayer ministry with Sandra in June 2021, she shared something that revealed just how closely the Holy Spirit had been guiding the entire journey. She told me that during the "Navigating the Times and Seasons" seminar earlier that year, she had received a word of knowledge about someone being held under water. She had written it down, yet did not release it publicly. She said she was not sure if sharing it in the seminar would have been wise, because the image of being held underwater carried a weight of trauma too deep for a general setting. She knew it was significant, she knew it was painful, and she sensed that the Holy Spirit was asking her to wait.

 

She explained that the severity of the memory I shared in my history form was one of the reasons she agreed to the individual prayer session. While praying, she spoke directly to the truth of what happened: "That little girl being held underwater, Lord, that's traumatic. That's scary, Father, that's awful." Her words affirmed what my heart had carried in silence for decades.

 

That little girl was still frozen. Yet even in that frozen moment, Jesus was there. I believe He knelt beside that trembling child, whispering, "You do not have to hide your pain anymore. I can hold it. I can hold you." 

 

Sandra later said she understood why the word had not been released earlier — because the Holy Spirit had reserved it for the moment I would recognise it, remember it, and let Jesus into it. God's timing wove it all together so the revelation would not wound me, but free me.

 

When I finally repented of that vow and laid it at the Cross, my body began to heal. My sinuses cleared substantially. My chest loosened. My tears — once imprisoned — became prayers. Each one felt like a baptism, washing away years of self‑protection. I was no longer drowning in grief; I was being freed by grace.

 

The water from her childhood memory was still cold in her mind, yet the presence of Jesus brought warmth into the places where fear once froze her.

She was no longer standing there alone.

Jesus was with her.

She was no longer alone.

 

💡Reflection

  • Where in your story did you learn to hide your tears? 🤔

  • What inner vows have you made to protect yourself that may now be holding you back? 🤔

  • How might your body be carrying emotions that were once silenced? 🤔

  • What would it look like to invite Jesus into that memory, that vow, that moment of fear? 🤔

 

🎺Affirmation

You are no longer the child standing in the cold. You are beloved, seen, and safely held. Your tears are not a threat; they are a gift. Your body is allowed to release what it once carried alone, and Jesus meets you in every trembling breath.

 

🙌 Prayer

Jesus, thank You for meeting me in the places where fear once wrote my story. Thank You for revealing the vows I made in moments of deep pain and for breaking them with Your perfect love. Heal the memories, restore the places where tears were silenced, and teach me to feel free again. Let my body experience the fullness of the release You offer. Hold me gently as I learn to cry in Your presence.

In Jesus’ Name, Amen.

Vrydag 28 November 2025

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