Reframe It
A key milestone in your personal growth journey is when you begin to reframe your life experiences. Reframing is the ability to shift your perspective—to change the way you interpret or view what has happened to you. It’s when you stop seeing failure as a dead end and start recognising it as a stepping stone to success. It’s when rejection begins to look like divine protection. It’s when your greatest challenges reveal themselves as hidden opportunities for growth.
Of course, we’re human. Some experiences hit hard and leave a mark. Pain, disappointment, heartbreak, and setbacks are real—and they deserve to be acknowledged. It’s important to allow yourself to feel, grieve, and process what you’ve been through. But don’t stay there. As you do the inner work to raise your vibration to a higher level, you begin to see from a higher perspective. Growth happens when you rise again, stronger than before. When you decide that this won’t be the end of your story. When you recover from the setback and come back with deeper determination, sharper wisdom, and a more grounded faith.
Reframing doesn’t erase the past—it redeems it. That failure? It taught you resilience. That loss? It gave you compassion. That disappointment? It prepared you for something greater. Because you went through the fire, you now carry wisdom you couldn’t have gained any other way. Because you endured the struggle, you can now minister healing and hope to someone else. Because you survived that season, your faith is no longer theoretical—it’s been tested, and it’s unshakeable.
One powerful example of this is Joseph. Betrayed by his brothers, sold into slavery, and falsely imprisoned—his life was full of what could easily be seen as injustice and setbacks. But these stepping stones eventually led to his elevation, becoming a ruler in Egypt, which positioned him to save many lives. In Genesis 50:20, Joseph reinterprets his story with a renewed perspective, telling his brothers: “You intended to harm me, but God intended it all for good.” That’s reframing. That’s redemption.
And that’s your invitation—to look again, and perhaps see things differently.