In this episode of Dear Jordan, I write a letter about love—the kind we hope for, the kind we misunderstand, and the kind we often learn the hard way.
I reflect on how early experiences shape our understanding of love, how grief and loss can change what we reach for, and how feelings that look like love can sometimes be chemistry, familiarity, or survival instincts in disguise. Through personal reflection, psychological insight, and biblical grounding, this letter explores the difference between attention and affection, intensity and devotion, sacrifice and self-abandonment.
This episode isn’t about giving rules or telling anyone what to do. It’s about slowing down long enough to recognize patterns, to understand why certain relationships feel powerful but unsafe, and to learn how discernment protects both the heart and the spirit.
At its core, this letter is about learning that healthy love doesn’t confuse, rush, or destabilize. It brings clarity, safety, and peace. And it begins—not with another person—but with knowing yourself.
Written for my daughter, Jordan, and shared with anyone who has ever questioned what love is supposed to feel like, this episode is an invitation to choose love that feels like safety, not survival.