Meeting the Woman in the Mirror

God- I just want to feel like myself again. 

That was the quiet prayer in my heart as I sat in the back row at church this morning. 

Short. Honest. And something He has heard at least 152 times over the last few months.

It’s been a little over four months since my hysterectomy.

Four months of hanging on.
Four months of learning.
Four months of being reminded that healing is rarely instant — it is layered, sacred, and slow.

And if I’m being honest? I’m just tired of the waiting. 

I’ve had good days, yes. Days where I remember that I’m not living in chronic pain. Days when the voices of my closest people remind me that I am not alone and this season will not last forever. Days where I am thanking every person on my team 100x over for everything they are doing to help me figure it all out, hormones, eating disorder, and otherwise. Days when friends send worship songs at just the right moment while I’m driving to work in the morning or getting ready for bed at night.

And there have been hard days.

Days when I wake up and wrestle with God. When I question myself. When I wonder if I will ever sleep eight hours again, if my hormones will ever get their life together, if I’ll ever fully recover from my eating disorder & if I will ever feel steady in my own skin.

Will I ever feel like myself again?

Maybe the answer isn’t about going back.

Because the woman I was before surgery was surviving — clinging to hope and a heating pad, pushing through pain I had normalized for far too long. 

I don’t want to go back to her.

She was brave.

But she was exhausted.

This kind of journey changes you. It marks you. It reshapes you.

And maybe that isn’t all a loss — maybe it’s transformation – into who God is calling me to be. 

My friends still see me. My team still sees me. They don’t measure my worth by what my body has lost. They see my heart. My strength. My laughter. My presence. And if they can see me that clearly, maybe God does too — maybe even more clearly than I ever could.

When I look in the mirror, I don’t see someone broken. I see a woman who has faced fear and walked through it. A woman who has endured pain and chosen hope anyway. A woman who is still here — still believing, still healing, still fighting.

& Maybe “feeling like myself again” isn’t about reclaiming who I was before my eating disorder battles and hysterectomy. 

Maybe it’s about meeting the new woman God is forming in me — steadier, softer, stronger in ways that don’t shout, but quietly endure. 

After all, God does know exactly what He’s doing here. He doesn’t make mistakes. He calls us into the things that He knows only He can get us through & surrounds us with people who aren’t afraid to walk the hard road with us. 

Healing is not ever going to be linear.

But faith is a solid foundation for the very things that feels not so solid. Like healing.

This season may be stretching me, but it is not destroying me. Although sometimes it absolutely feels like this season is trying to take me out. 

The same God who saw every tear sees every small victory. And the big ones too.

He knows every desire of my heart. And even when I can’t see the whole picture, I can trust that He is writing a story that will one day make me look back at this season and question why I ever doubted Him.

I may not feel like myself yet….

But I am slowing becoming someone even stronger, even freer, and even more anchored in faith than ever before.

I didn’t lose myself in this — God is introducing me to who I was always meant to be.

  • Taylor Kate 

Healing is Coming.

Two weeks.

14 days.

That’s how long it’s been since my world changed forever.

On October 7th, I showed up to Mayo again, for another endometriosis excision surgery, but also a hysterectomy. The pre op nerves were all the same, but the emotions were a lot heavier this time around. I wasn’t only getting my endometriosis removed for the 4th time, but I was also about to lose the organs that were supposed to make me a mom one day.

As I saw my surgeon before my surgery she asked me one last time “are you sure you want the hysterectomy?”

No. I don’t want a hysterectomy. I need a hysterectomy. There’s a difference.

My body was using those very organs to attack me. I lived in pain for years, thinking it was just something I was going to have to get used to.

But as I was rolled into the operating room, I was reminded that everything about to change.

I woke up from my surgery, spent a few hours in recovery, and after my vitals stabilized, I got to leave.

Yay! No sleepovers at the hospital.

That night as I was sitting in the care hotel, I looked at the pictures, and read the post op note from my surgeon just to find out that my endometriosis had returned to all the usual places… no surprise there… and that my uterus was covered in adenomyosis and fibroids…this was surprising.

It was equally heartbreaking and reassuring to know that there was something actually wrong with my uterus. It helped me to feel less crazy, but also broke me down.

My first week of recovery was hard. I was tired. I was having an allergic reaction. I was purely just surviving, and eating a lot of ice cream.

Once I got home, after week one, that’s when reality started to really set in.

I had a hysterectomy.

My uterus is gone.

Did I actually make the right decision? This is a thought that I did not expect to have, but that has come up time and time again. Deep down, I know I did. I prayed about it. My friends prayed for me. And God led me to this. He wouldn’t have let it happen if it wasn’t in His plan. But that doesn’t make it any easier.

God doesn’t always make sense but I just have to trust Him even in the pain.

But it’s in these moments that I remember the phrase that my friend told me back at the beginning of this journey: “healing is coming.”

She repeated this to me in every moment that I was doubting, questioning, or losing my faith.

For weeks I heard this phrase, and I clung to it.

God was speaking through her and I just didn’t know it at the time. All I knew was that my heart was being encouraged, and I was being supported during my hardest moments.

I’m learning to take it one day at a time as I recover. My emotions are fragile, and I feel nothing like myself. But I know God isn’t done with the story yet.

2 weeks down. A long time to go.

But nonetheless: Healing. Is. Coming.

And it’s coming without the uterus in tow.

-Taylor Kate

Trust in God.

Do you want to know the phrase that’s been following me around the last few weeks?

I’m going to say it anyways.

Trust in God.

I’ve heard it in conversations, sermons, and just yesterday I sat through a whole women’s conference – and guess what the theme was? That’s right. It was Trust In Jesus. And in that very conference a friend gifted me a sticker for my car that says… Trust in God… It’s almost like He’s trying to get His point across or something.

And I hear it. And I’m wrestling through my mess to get there.

To get to the point where I can say, okay, I do trust you in this.

9 days after my 27th birthday I had an appointment with my surgeon because of some pain I’ve been in and a weird MRI result that I got back.

And let me be honest, I’m so used to weird MRI’s & pain that I almost didn’t even want to go in about it.

But I was a responsible adult and I went anyways.

It’s been about a year since I’ve seen her last so I updated her on all the ways that endometriosis is still wreaking havoc on my life, and brought to her attention the heaviness I’ve been feeling in my uterus, along with showing her the MRI.

It was quiet in the room as she studied the picture and compared it to the scan I had two years ago. My mind was racing in those moments.

Quietness isn’t fun.

She looked at me, then looked back at the scan, and then started talking, and showing me the pictures.

My mind, trying to keep up as I hear the words coming out of her mouth: “ your uterus is enlarged, and showing signs of adenomyosis.”

Sorry, what did you say?

I sunk in my chair because I knew what was coming next.

Having endo has led me to research adenomyosis extensively. I prayed that I would never develop it. But here we were anyways.

We went over everything I’ve tried treatment wise in the last 8 years and realized there’s nothing new to try. In the end she said the words no one ever wants to hear, “we’ve done everything we can to help these things, the only cure for adenomyosis is a hysterectomy.”

I felt myself running circles in my mind. What did she just say? I’m only 27. There’s no way this is actually happening.

We discussed adoption and surrogacy, as she told me I can’t carry my own kids. And even though I know that as fact, hearing it out loud makes it a lot more real.

Since that appointment 3 weeks ago, it’s been anything but easy around here.

So many thoughts. So many feelings. So many questions.

But the one thing that I’ve seen in the midst of all the chaos is how God has still provided for me.

He didn’t answer my prayers regarding not having this hysterectomy. And I’m a littttttle mad about it.

But, He provided the support I need to get through it. Support I didn’t even know I needed, because I had no idea what was going to happen in this appointment. Shocking right? That I can’t see the future.

It’s so cool how God puts people in the right places at the right times. And I’m so grateful He did that for me. This lady showed up 4 days before my doctor’s appointment, and we talked for a bit but I had no idea what God was doing until I left my appointment on the 31st and got in my car and went “Oh, that’s why you put her there.” He knew all along that the end result was going to be a hysterectomy, He was just waiting for me to catch up and find out for myself.

And I suppose that little story, proves to me, that I can trust in God – because clearly He still knows what He’s doing.

He didn’t leave me alone to walk this new, quite bumpy road.

I don’t really know what I’m doing. I’m just here finding my way through my corner of the wilderness.

One day at a time. One minute at a time. And with a lot of tears.

-Taylor Kate

Question of the Day

What are you thinking about right now?

The question my physical therapist asked me today as I was lying on the table, quiet. It was one of those days where she could probably see the wheels spinning in my mind. I looked back at her, smiled, and reiterated the question. 

What am I thinking about right now? 

More like what am I not thinking right now? 

I’m thinking about how much I hate having endometriosis. How sad I am that it made me so sick last night. How much guilt I feel for having to take a day off of work today. How worried I am about having to have another surgery. Wondering what I can do to avoid it. How I don’t want to relapse in my eating disorder because of pain. How much I wish the Lord would do something about all of this. 

I’m thinking about how grateful I am for a team of people who cares for me so well. Who let me lay on the table quiet, only opening my mouth to acknowledge pain when my organs get pushed on. Who let me show up to PT as I am, and still get excited to see me. Who encourage me to keep going. Who give me a banana and a water because I’m a little pale, and a hug because I’m a little frustrated and feeling alone in this. 

I’m thinking about how grateful I am for the friends who I can text “please pray for me” knowing that they will. For reminders to pray to God, and to trust in Him. And for the ones who drop medicine off at my door at 10pm after they get off of work. 

I have to keep reminding myself, if it’s not good then God’s not done. Every single day. He isn’t finished with me and I am grateful that He doesn’t give up on me even when I am ready to give up on myself.

He knows. He sees. He cares.

I know that He can heal me and I am standing here, surrendered, waiting to see how He is going to move these mountains. 

It may not be easy. It may not be quick. But it is all for His glory. 

  • Taylor Kate