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My Babies Died, My Faith Didn't
Episode 5621st May 2024 • What's the Story? • CROWD Church
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In this moving episode of the "What's The Story Podcast," Julie Sunne shares her heart-wrenching yet inspiring journey through the darkest valleys of grief and loss to finding unwavering faith and strength. Julie's candid discussion about her experiences with multiple miscarriages, raising a child with special needs, and navigating the emotional complexities of having a dependent adult daughter offers a raw and real perspective on the transformative power of faith in adversity.

Episode Highlights:

  1. From Loss to Faith: Julie opens up about the painful reality of losing her unborn children and how these profound losses reshaped her understanding of God and faith.
  2. Raising a Child with Disabilities: Discover how Julie's journey with her firstborn, who faced physical disabilities, and her youngest daughter, who requires lifelong care, has been filled with challenges that have deepened her reliance on spiritual strength.
  3. The Dream That Changed Everything: Julie shares a pivotal moment when a dream provided comfort during her grief, reaffirming her faith and setting her on a path of healing and purpose.
  4. Life Lessons in Surrender and Trust: Explore the essential lessons Julie learned about surrendering control and trusting in a higher plan, insights that have granted her peace amidst ongoing trials.
  5. Authoring Faith: Learn about Julie’s motivation to write her book, "Sometimes I Forget," which focuses on remembering God’s attributes in daily life to sustain faith through any hardship.

Join us for this episode of "What's The Story" as Julie Sunne invites us into her life’s trials and triumphs, demonstrating that even in the face of immense sorrow, faith can survive and thrive. This episode is not just a testament to Julie's strength but an invitation to anyone facing their own battles to find hope and renewal in their faith.

Transcripts

Matt Edmundson:

Hello and welcome to What's The Story.

Matt Edmundson:

We're an inquisitive bunch of hosts from the What's The Story team on a

Matt Edmundson:

mission to uncover stories about faith and courage from everyday people.

Matt Edmundson:

And to help us do just that, we get the privilege to chat with amazing guests

Matt Edmundson:

And delve into their faith journey, the hurdles they've overcome and the life

Matt Edmundson:

lessons they have learned along the way.

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What's the Story is brought to you by Crowd Church.

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We understand that stepping into a traditional church might not be

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everybody's cup of tea, and that's where Crowd Church steps in, providing

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a digital sanctuary, a safe space to explore the Christian faith where you

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can engage in meaningful conversations rather than just simply spectating.

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So whether you are new to the Christian faith or are in search of a new church

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family, we invite you to visit us at www.

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church.

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We're here to help and would genuinely love to connect with you.

Matt Edmundson:

And now, without further ado, Let's meet your host and our

Matt Edmundson:

very special guest for today.

Sadaf Beynon:

Hey everyone.

Sadaf Beynon:

Welcome to another episode of What's The Story Podcast.

Sadaf Beynon:

I'm your host Sadaf Beynon and today we have another inspiring

Sadaf Beynon:

guest with us, Julie Sunne.

Sadaf Beynon:

Julie has been through some incredibly challenging times and she's here to share

Sadaf Beynon:

her journey of resilience, faith, and the lessons that she's learned along the way.

Sadaf Beynon:

Julie, it's so great to have you here.

Sadaf Beynon:

How are you doing today?

Julie Sunne:

I'm doing well, Sadaf.

Julie Sunne:

Thank you for having me.

Julie Sunne:

Appreciate it.

Sadaf Beynon:

Oh, it's our pleasure.

Sadaf Beynon:

It's our pleasure.

Sadaf Beynon:

So where are you calling in from today?

Julie Sunne:

I live in Northeast Iowa in the States.

Sadaf Beynon:

Okay.

Sadaf Beynon:

And what's that like?

Sadaf Beynon:

What's life in Iowa like?

Julie Sunne:

Life in Iowa is getting really pretty.

Julie Sunne:

It's very, it's greening up.

Julie Sunne:

We're probably in the 60s today, I think, low 60s.

Julie Sunne:

And right now it's foggy and overcast.

Julie Sunne:

So I think it's going to be one of those days, which we need those too.

Julie Sunne:

We've been getting a decent amount of rain.

Julie Sunne:

We were in a drought and now we're getting a decent amount of rain again.

Julie Sunne:

So the farmers are happy.

Julie Sunne:

It's a kind of a rural farming community.

Sadaf Beynon:

Yeah.

Julie Sunne:

Mostly.

Sadaf Beynon:

Cool.

Julie Sunne:

Yeah.

Sadaf Beynon:

So should we jump in?

Julie Sunne:

Please.

Julie Sunne:

Yes, let's do.

Sadaf Beynon:

All right.

Sadaf Beynon:

Julie, why don't you start by telling us a bit about your early life

Sadaf Beynon:

and how your faith journey began?

Julie Sunne:

Yeah, I've actually spent most of my life, all of my life in Iowa,

Julie Sunne:

living in Iowa, and I grew up one of six children in, on a dairy farm in northeast

Julie Sunne:

Iowa, and it was a wonderful upbringing.

Julie Sunne:

I really enjoyed it.

Julie Sunne:

We had a built in family, built in ball team, so we could, we played together.

Julie Sunne:

We didn't, we just really enjoyed, of course, we fought together as

Julie Sunne:

siblings do, but my parents were loving parents, very hardworking.

Julie Sunne:

They really instilled in us a hardworking ethic.

Julie Sunne:

I grew up in the church.

Julie Sunne:

I was baptized and raised in the Catholic faith, and as we were in church every

Julie Sunne:

Sunday, but I would say now looking back as I grew up, I didn't, I knew the

Julie Sunne:

Lord in a very authoritative, sovereign creator way, but I didn't really walk.

Julie Sunne:

It wasn't a faith where I was walking very close with him.

Julie Sunne:

I was going to church every Sunday.

Julie Sunne:

But, in the church that I went to, it wasn't, you didn't read the Bible for

Julie Sunne:

yourself, you didn't really understand, you didn't really, I didn't anyway, I

Julie Sunne:

should just speak to me, for me, I did not grow real close to the Lord during

Julie Sunne:

that time, or walk daily with him, it was more of a Sunday faith, I would say.

Julie Sunne:

But I did love and revere the Lord and respect and worship Him.

Julie Sunne:

I would say it's more of, I didn't feel Him on a daily, I didn't

Julie Sunne:

think of Him on a daily basis.

Julie Sunne:

I didn't live my life in obedience to Him on a daily basis.

Sadaf Beynon:

So would you say it wasn't really a relationship

Sadaf Beynon:

with the Lord, it was more just knowing that he was sovereign?

Julie Sunne:

Yeah.

Julie Sunne:

Would you say That's exactly what I'd say.

Julie Sunne:

I knew he was sovereign.

Julie Sunne:

I knew respected the fact that, he was in control of everything,

Julie Sunne:

that he had created everything.

Julie Sunne:

There was a healthy, I think a healthy fear of him, which I think

Julie Sunne:

a fear of the Lord is definitely biblical and a very good thing.

Julie Sunne:

But there wasn't the intimacy, I would say the realization that he

Julie Sunne:

was walking in my daily moments, that he was with me in my daily moments.

Julie Sunne:

It felt like he was in church and I was.

Julie Sunne:

And when I was in church, we were together and then, but when I was in

Julie Sunne:

my daily life, there wasn't a whole lot of thought to spiritual things.

Julie Sunne:

and to the Lord.

Sadaf Beynon:

So how did that evolve?

Sadaf Beynon:

How did that change into a place where you had a strong ongoing

Sadaf Beynon:

relationship with the Lord?

Julie Sunne:

Yeah, it really didn't change until my life was turned upside down

Julie Sunne:

and I was thrown into a deep depression.

Julie Sunne:

Pit of depression.

Julie Sunne:

I think that as the Lord is sovereign, he knew what I needed and he provided that.

Julie Sunne:

And so that I was, like I said, I had a good childhood.

Julie Sunne:

I went to college.

Julie Sunne:

And met my husband, we got married and we decided after a few years we were going

Julie Sunne:

to have our, start a family and we were just elated when I got pregnant and, but

Julie Sunne:

that was quickly turned to great sorrow.

Julie Sunne:

It wasn't, I was probably about 10 weeks along when I found out the baby,

Julie Sunne:

we were losing the baby, they couldn't find a heartbeat and it was like in a,

Julie Sunne:

I had this immediate flip from elation to having, everything's going right and

Julie Sunne:

I'm going to have this beautiful baby.

Julie Sunne:

And then just devastation when I found out that she was not going to live.

Julie Sunne:

And I went into a deep depression and I did not want to really function anymore.

Julie Sunne:

My husband and I were on different pages in our grief,

Julie Sunne:

and so I felt very alone in that.

Julie Sunne:

I have very supportive family on both sides.

Julie Sunne:

Both my husband's family and my family are very supportive, but they had

Julie Sunne:

not really experienced miscarriage and nobody we knew at that time had a

Julie Sunne:

miscarriage in either of our families.

Julie Sunne:

And so it was, they didn't know how to relate.

Julie Sunne:

And I was very, it was thrown into a deep depression.

Julie Sunne:

My world, I describe it as my world, turned colorless and

Julie Sunne:

the color washed out of it.

Julie Sunne:

And I didn't even want to get up.

Julie Sunne:

And the Lord knew that I needed to be out of control, that I needed to

Julie Sunne:

realize I had no control in order to get my attention, I think, and to

Julie Sunne:

help me start figuring out who he was.

Julie Sunne:

Out of this deep depression, he met me in a dream, and he started to pull me

Julie Sunne:

out of my, at that point, I was probably in a self pity, and in my grief, and

Julie Sunne:

he started pulling me out of that.

Julie Sunne:

And yeah, so I can go into a little bit more of the dream, if you want me to.

Julie Sunne:

It was just a kind of a very special time.

Julie Sunne:

And like I said, I was in bed.

Julie Sunne:

I didn't want to move on.

Julie Sunne:

And the Lord in a dream gave me an image of my little girl and it was.

Julie Sunne:

It was just, it was absolutely beautiful.

Julie Sunne:

He held her.

Julie Sunne:

He didn't say it was him, but the hands that were holding her, it was just so

Julie Sunne:

beautiful, and she was held up for me to see, probably about three months old,

Julie Sunne:

and I had the words impressed on me.

Julie Sunne:

Now, I didn't hear this audibly, but the words were impressed that here she is.

Julie Sunne:

She's beautiful.

Julie Sunne:

She's with me.

Julie Sunne:

Sarah is right here with me, and she's fine.

Julie Sunne:

Now you need to get up and live.

Julie Sunne:

And

Julie Sunne:

I had said, I had not even told anybody that her name was gonna be Sarah.

Julie Sunne:

We hadn't talked about names.

Julie Sunne:

It was so early.

Julie Sunne:

We didn't know she was a girl.

Julie Sunne:

But in my spirit, I just a sense that she was a girl.

Julie Sunne:

And the Lord confirmed that in the dream.

Julie Sunne:

And it wasn't like all of a sudden everything was better.

Julie Sunne:

And my life was all going well.

Julie Sunne:

It was just that he was there, he was present, and he made himself known to

Julie Sunne:

me in the way that I needed to know him.

Julie Sunne:

I needed, I don't think any other way would have helped.

Julie Sunne:

I needed to know that she was safe, and I probably, I knew that, I guess I

Julie Sunne:

really hadn't even thought of that up to that time, but at that point, it was

Julie Sunne:

like, I knew she was safe, I knew she was with him, and I knew he was with me.

Julie Sunne:

Even though I was so angry and just had really pushed him away.

Julie Sunne:

He wasn't leaving me.

Julie Sunne:

He wasn't turning away and running away because I was so angry.

Julie Sunne:

He was just lovingly there.

Julie Sunne:

He was present.

Julie Sunne:

It was like when you're sick and as a child and you're not, you

Julie Sunne:

just count, your mom is right there or your dad is right there.

Julie Sunne:

You can count on them being there.

Julie Sunne:

And as much as I pushed the Lord away, he didn't go.

Julie Sunne:

He felt I was worth staying.

Julie Sunne:

And that was such a pivotal time in my faith, I would say.

Julie Sunne:

And had me reconsider everything I thought about the Lord because

Julie Sunne:

at that time, everything I thought of the Lord was very controlling.

Julie Sunne:

And I don't mean that in a bad way, just

Julie Sunne:

sovereign.

Julie Sunne:

That's the only creator and sovereign were probably the only

Julie Sunne:

attributes of Lord, of the Lord I really thought about until then.

Julie Sunne:

And then it was like, this is an imminent God, a God who's near.

Julie Sunne:

This Lord is a compassionate Lord.

Julie Sunne:

He didn't have to give me this vision of my daughter.

Julie Sunne:

He could have left me where I was, but he didn't.

Julie Sunne:

And he's a very compassionate Lord.

Julie Sunne:

So I saw some completely different aspects of the Lord.

Julie Sunne:

And he knew that's what I needed.

Julie Sunne:

And so that started a journey over an eight year span, I had

Julie Sunne:

five total miscarriages, and I gave birth to four babies.

Julie Sunne:

So at that time, it was a very up and down roller coaster existence, I would say.

Julie Sunne:

And it was still a very, I had a very transactional idea of faith still,

Julie Sunne:

and I had to really grow through that.

Julie Sunne:

And the Lord did take me through that through those trials of

Julie Sunne:

those eight years and beyond.

Julie Sunne:

I thought, I was very misguided and I thought if I put in the right

Julie Sunne:

coins, and do the right things, the Lord is going to bless me in the way

Julie Sunne:

that I thought I should be blessed.

Julie Sunne:

That's I think what was so devastating about the first miscarriage was I thought

Julie Sunne:

I was a good person and I thought I was doing the good, the right things and he

Julie Sunne:

didn't hold up on his bargain in my mind.

Julie Sunne:

And so I had to relearn who the Lord was and have different

Julie Sunne:

expectations of who he was for me.

Julie Sunne:

And that was profound and it's been a long journey to really get to understand who

Julie Sunne:

he was and to be able to trust them that

Julie Sunne:

whether it was miscarriage, whether I had loss or whether I had experienced

Julie Sunne:

the birth of a beautiful little boy or my little girl, that he was good,

Julie Sunne:

regardless of which one happened.

Julie Sunne:

His goodness doesn't change based on what my circumstances looked like.

Julie Sunne:

And that was a totally different concept.

Julie Sunne:

And an important one for me to learn.

Sadaf Beynon:

Thanks for sharing that.

Sadaf Beynon:

It's evident how you as you've gone through all these incredibly tough

Sadaf Beynon:

times, how the Lord's been with, there with you each step of the

Sadaf Beynon:

way, and you're getting stronger and stronger in your understanding of

Sadaf Beynon:

the Lord and in your faith in him.

Sadaf Beynon:

Yeah.

Julie Sunne:

Yeah.

Julie Sunne:

Yeah.

Julie Sunne:

It's a journey.

Julie Sunne:

I think we all have different faith journeys and we all, the

Julie Sunne:

Lord is so individual and he knows exactly what each of us needs.

Julie Sunne:

And so that's what he provides.

Julie Sunne:

That's

Julie Sunne:

why none of our walks are the same.

Julie Sunne:

You can talk to a million Christians and everybody's faith journey is different

Julie Sunne:

and the Lord meets them individually.

Julie Sunne:

And that's such a gracious Lord.

Julie Sunne:

To be able to do that for us, to meet us in the way that we need him to meet us.

Sadaf Beynon:

Absolutely.

Sadaf Beynon:

Julie, you shared about your dream and it was a profound dream

Sadaf Beynon:

in one of your darkest times.

Sadaf Beynon:

Can you share maybe how it changed your perspective.

Sadaf Beynon:

You made that clear, but

Sadaf Beynon:

how do you think it prepared you as well for what was coming?

Julie Sunne:

Yeah, I think it softened me and opened me to the possibility

Julie Sunne:

of experiencing God in a new way, of knowing God in a different way.

Julie Sunne:

And that was big.

Julie Sunne:

I needed to expand my understanding of who he was.

Julie Sunne:

I had a very little God and he was only one little aspect of life.

Julie Sunne:

And God is so much bigger than that.

Julie Sunne:

And so I really needed to understand that.

Julie Sunne:

And he prepared me for dealing with the unexpected in a healthy manner with faith.

Julie Sunne:

And with patience and kind of a an attitude of endurance,

Julie Sunne:

perseverance, because I needed that.

Julie Sunne:

I would need that to come and he knew it.

Julie Sunne:

And again, that's the beauty of it because every live birth would

Julie Sunne:

be up of course a high in my life.

Julie Sunne:

And then I would experience a couple of miscarriages and that would just

Julie Sunne:

have me questioning all over again.

Julie Sunne:

I don't get it.

Julie Sunne:

Why?

Julie Sunne:

Why would you allow such beauty to be born into this world and the birth of

Julie Sunne:

my children and then such ashes and just devastation when my next two were

Julie Sunne:

taken before I could even hold them.

Julie Sunne:

I didn't understand it and I felt I should, which is silly because now

Julie Sunne:

through all this walking with him and getting to know him, why should I

Julie Sunne:

think I could really understand him?

Julie Sunne:

He wouldn't be a very big God if I could understand him because

Julie Sunne:

I don't have a very big mind.

Julie Sunne:

I shouldn't be able to understand the God of the universe.

Julie Sunne:

Now that doesn't mean we can't understand some of who he is and he

Julie Sunne:

reveals enough, he gives us just enough.

Julie Sunne:

And so in the words of scripture his character is revealed in a profound

Julie Sunne:

manner in the way that the scripture describes him as loving and compassionate

Julie Sunne:

and kind but also as wrathful and holy and righteous and sovereign and

Julie Sunne:

omniscient and omnipresent and omnipotent and all of those so we can understand

Julie Sunne:

bits of his character, but we can't expect to grasp the wholeness of who,

Julie Sunne:

of the fullness of who the Lord is.

Julie Sunne:

And so it seems awful presumptuous to me now looking back, but most of

Julie Sunne:

us, I think, go through that phase.

Julie Sunne:

And that's a faith that's part of our faith journey as well.

Sadaf Beynon:

Yeah, as you were talking I was thinking of the scripture in Isaiah,

Sadaf Beynon:

where it talks about his thoughts and his ways are so much higher than ours.

Sadaf Beynon:

And for us to think that we can somehow grasp the things that he's thinking

Sadaf Beynon:

and doing almost feels entitled.

Julie Sunne:

Exactly.

Julie Sunne:

Exactly.

Julie Sunne:

And, we are very, I would say, we're very proud people and that's that pride.

Julie Sunne:

And that was that control in attitude that I had, personality that I have.

Julie Sunne:

I pride myself, I guess I'm being a strong woman and being able to

Julie Sunne:

handle things that come my way and being able to figure it out.

Julie Sunne:

And when it doesn't go that way, I don't like it, but it's good for me

Julie Sunne:

and that's what the Lord has done.

Julie Sunne:

So as he continued to take me through the lows of miscarriages and

Julie Sunne:

disability, we had disability early on with the birth of my son did not go,

Julie Sunne:

my firstborn did not go as expected and he was born with an arm that was

Julie Sunne:

disabled and still is to this day.

Julie Sunne:

And that was a year, more than just a year, but the first year was a

Julie Sunne:

very traumatic year of adjusting to what that might look like and having

Julie Sunne:

a child who did have a disability.

Julie Sunne:

But the Lord knew I needed to be prepared in that manner as well,

Julie Sunne:

because our third live birth and our only daughter was born with we didn't

Julie Sunne:

know it at the time, but she had a genetic, has a genetic condition.

Julie Sunne:

And is intellectually delayed to the point where she will

Julie Sunne:

always need to be cared for.

Julie Sunne:

And it was a slow revelation of that.

Julie Sunne:

When she was born, she seemed, she was born at the kind of on

Julie Sunne:

the backside of experiencing another couple of miscarriages.

Julie Sunne:

So we were just thrilled to get to full term and have our little girl

Julie Sunne:

and to have the girl too was just an added, of course we would have loved

Julie Sunne:

to have It's a wonderful podcast.

Julie Sunne:

We're so grateful for your support.

Julie Sunne:

We'll see you next time.

Julie Sunne:

And hers was just in the soft palate, so it was in the very back of her throat.

Julie Sunne:

So you couldn't see it, she had no cleft lip or anything,

Julie Sunne:

you couldn't see it externally.

Julie Sunne:

And so it took the doctor a little while to find it, but basically that

Julie Sunne:

caused the nursing and feeding for her was very difficult because she

Julie Sunne:

couldn't create suction because she had that extra hole in her mouth.

Julie Sunne:

But that's all we knew.

Julie Sunne:

So I remember, I distinctly remember talking to my mom, calling her

Julie Sunne:

on the phone and just saying, yeah, she's born, she's healthy.

Julie Sunne:

We have this little girl and she's perfect, except for just a little

Julie Sunne:

hole in the roof of her mouth.

Julie Sunne:

But that can be repaired at about 11 months.

Julie Sunne:

And so she's just perfect.

Julie Sunne:

And those words are interesting because She is perfect in the way

Julie Sunne:

that God made her, but she certainly wasn't perfect in the eyes of what

Julie Sunne:

we were expecting or in the eyes of what the world would call perfect.

Julie Sunne:

And her disabilities were revealed over years actually.

Julie Sunne:

And we still aren't quite sure what that is going to be.

Julie Sunne:

Looks like in the future and we'll get into where she's at right now, but she

Julie Sunne:

was so at six weeks she quit breathing on us and so we had gone through the

Julie Sunne:

whole route then of ambulance drive and figuring out what that looked like

Julie Sunne:

And after a bunch of tests, it was basically found out that she had a

Julie Sunne:

really severe case of Gastroesophageal reflux disorder, which is, some people

Julie Sunne:

call it gerd and it's not that uncommon, but hers was a very severe case.

Julie Sunne:

So as the acid would come back up, it would scorch her throat

Julie Sunne:

and make her throat clamp down, and so she would quit breathing.

Julie Sunne:

So we were sent home with medicine and a monitor and just said, you

Julie Sunne:

don't need to worry because if she quits breathing and passes out.

Julie Sunne:

When she passes out, she'll start breathing again.

Julie Sunne:

It'll be okay.

Julie Sunne:

It wasn't, I suppose it's comforting in some ways, but in other ways,

Julie Sunne:

you don't, I couldn't sit there and let my daughter pass out.

Julie Sunne:

That wasn't something that was yeah.

Julie Sunne:

And then we also found out that she did have some heart anomalies.

Julie Sunne:

She had a couple holes in her heart that did not close.

Julie Sunne:

And that they usually close at birth or prior to birth

Julie Sunne:

and hers did not but that too.

Julie Sunne:

They figured that they would close that it wasn't really a cause for great

Julie Sunne:

concern but it was all we were starting to see a pattern of all things midline

Julie Sunne:

everything that seemed to be wrong with her was midline, which seemed to

Julie Sunne:

indicate some sort of a genetic thing and

Julie Sunne:

I already had two boys.

Julie Sunne:

I knew what the developmental milestones should look like and we

Julie Sunne:

realized that Oh, probably about four or five months that she really

Julie Sunne:

wasn't meeting those milestones.

Julie Sunne:

And so we started having her evaluated and that gave her the

Julie Sunne:

label of developmental delay.

Julie Sunne:

That's about as far as we got for quite, for a number of years.

Julie Sunne:

And we just kept, she wasn't sitting up when she should have.

Julie Sunne:

She wasn't rolling up when she should have.

Julie Sunne:

She wasn't talking when she should have.

Julie Sunne:

So the whole kind of gamut of stuff continued to roll out.

Julie Sunne:

And we finally, I don't know if it was maybe, she was probably two,

Julie Sunne:

maybe,

Julie Sunne:

two and a half when we got a diagnosis of Velocardial Facial Syndrome.

Julie Sunne:

Yeah.

Julie Sunne:

Yeah.

Julie Sunne:

For instance, Syndrome, which a doctor in New York had discovered

Julie Sunne:

and given his name to this set of anomalies or some symptoms that would

Julie Sunne:

that would give us this genetic condition.

Julie Sunne:

And I just didn't have a good feeling of that set up.

Julie Sunne:

I did not think that she had that syndrome.

Julie Sunne:

So I started doing my own research.

Julie Sunne:

I told you I'm a little bit stubborn and controlling.

Julie Sunne:

I wanted to know what it was.

Julie Sunne:

I wanted to know what to do about it and then we could fix it.

Julie Sunne:

So I did my own research and realized I just don't think she has this.

Julie Sunne:

So I sent all of her records and her pictures to that doctor in New

Julie Sunne:

York who had named the syndrome.

Julie Sunne:

And to his credit, he responded very quickly.

Julie Sunne:

I really wasn't sure I'd ever get a response from him because doctors are busy

Julie Sunne:

and they don't have time for everything.

Julie Sunne:

Yes, he responded immediately and said no she doesn't have that.

Julie Sunne:

So again, we're left without a diagnosis.

Julie Sunne:

Besides developmental delay, we didn't know what was causing it and that

Julie Sunne:

was a real concern, a real stumbling block for me for a while because I

Julie Sunne:

really, I felt I needed this roadmap of what was going to happen so I could

Julie Sunne:

prepare myself and so I could find ways to fix it, to make it better.

Julie Sunne:

So that was a difficult time and I had to, again, learn to surrender that why

Julie Sunne:

in that that map of where I was going.

Sadaf Beynon:

Yeah Julie raising children, especially those with health challenges

Sadaf Beynon:

can be incredibly demanding, right?

Sadaf Beynon:

Yeah.

Sadaf Beynon:

So what has what has that been like and how has your faith helped

Sadaf Beynon:

you navigate these obstacles?

Julie Sunne:

Oh faith has been everything, faith has been everything.

Julie Sunne:

If the Lord hadn't brought me through what he did, the miscarriages, the way he

Julie Sunne:

did, the loss of my first baby, the way he did, I don't know that I could be the

Julie Sunne:

mom that I needed to be for Rachel and probably for the other the boys as well.

Julie Sunne:

We did have a boy after a couple of miscarriages, we had another little

Julie Sunne:

boy which rounded out our family.

Julie Sunne:

And I needed to know that I could trust him with each, that's one of the reasons.

Julie Sunne:

I was, besides maybe stubbornness again, but that's one of the reasons

Julie Sunne:

I continued to try, that I wanted to continue to try to have children

Julie Sunne:

And I was growing in to trust the Lord and I thought whether we have

Julie Sunne:

another child with disabilities, since we didn't know what caused it, we

Julie Sunne:

didn't know, it was a genetic thing.

Julie Sunne:

We didn't know if we, and nothing was conclusive in our genetic testing.

Julie Sunne:

So we didn't know if we could pass something on or not, but I just felt like

Julie Sunne:

the Lord was going to be with us in those.

Julie Sunne:

And that was a huge face step for me to even get to that point, Sadaf.

Julie Sunne:

I was so lost early on that I would not, I maybe would have still continued

Julie Sunne:

forward under my own strength.

Julie Sunne:

But I really, that gave me so much peace when our last son was born, to know

Julie Sunne:

that the Lord was would not abandon me, would not leave me, and wherever we were

Julie Sunne:

at with him, he would meet us there.

Julie Sunne:

So that was incredibly important for me and I was a very, oh, I

Julie Sunne:

would say I was a good person, but I was also very self centered and

Julie Sunne:

I'm set in such a different way.

Julie Sunne:

The Lord brought me to such a stronger faith and to such a nicer person,

Julie Sunne:

more beautiful person with a faith that, that can bend without breaking.

Julie Sunne:

And so I needed that with our children.

Julie Sunne:

My oldest son went through several different surgeries

Julie Sunne:

and experiences with his arm.

Julie Sunne:

And so that was a journey of faith there that we had to really trust him.

Julie Sunne:

The doctors weren't always

Julie Sunne:

nice.

Julie Sunne:

Sometimes they were the one, one doctor in particular was very

Julie Sunne:

dismissive of our son's disabilities.

Julie Sunne:

And so we really had to persevere.

Julie Sunne:

So I needed to be strong.

Julie Sunne:

And advocate for him and for our daughter and for our sons, just even that are

Julie Sunne:

normally developing children, as a parent, we have to be advocating for our children.

Julie Sunne:

And I think it's more, even more critical now in today's world

Julie Sunne:

that we have to be strong in that.

Julie Sunne:

And the Lord strengthened me to do that.

Julie Sunne:

And we also have to let go of our expectations because anybody who's

Julie Sunne:

a mother knows that our children don't go the way we expect them to.

Julie Sunne:

They don't do the things we expect.

Julie Sunne:

Parenthood is nothing like you expect it to be, and I thought I was, could be this

Julie Sunne:

awesome mom, and our children would just respond to that, and you quickly realize,

Julie Sunne:

I think, as a mom that there's, that they're going to do a lot of things that

Julie Sunne:

you said your children would never do.

Julie Sunne:

And so that is also part of the faith journey and part of what the Lord does

Julie Sunne:

in your life is prepared for that.

Julie Sunne:

And to hold on to certain things like where he tells us that, raise them in

Julie Sunne:

the faith and they will not depart.

Julie Sunne:

They'll come back to that.

Julie Sunne:

And holding on to being able to hold on to that and knowing that

Julie Sunne:

whatever we face, the Lord is with us.

Julie Sunne:

Right now it's so critical.

Julie Sunne:

My daughter is 26 years old, still lives with us and will for as long as we can

Julie Sunne:

see anyway into the foreseeable future.

Julie Sunne:

And so that requires, I'm not a young mom anymore.

Julie Sunne:

And that can be pretty draining for me to care, to be a caregiver now.

Julie Sunne:

And that was quite a transition from, to transition from mother to caregiver.

Julie Sunne:

Yes, I'm still mother, but my role has changed.

Julie Sunne:

And now she's an adult.

Julie Sunne:

And

Julie Sunne:

so it was it's, yeah.

Julie Sunne:

It's a very different process, I think, to get to that.

Julie Sunne:

And it was incredibly important that I could and can continue to surrender

Julie Sunne:

a lot of that to the Lord, which I would not have been able to do had the

Julie Sunne:

Lord not taken me on my faith journey.

Julie Sunne:

One of the things that haunts me a lot, and I have to be very careful.

Julie Sunne:

About is Rachel's future to dwell on that too much because she'll

Julie Sunne:

always have to live with someone.

Julie Sunne:

And that doesn't, that's not always pretty.

Julie Sunne:

And we hear the stories of especially a child who is she

Julie Sunne:

is nonverbal functionally.

Julie Sunne:

She has some words that we can understand, but people from the outside

Julie Sunne:

would not, would only understand a handful of words that she has.

Julie Sunne:

And so the real possibility of her being taken advantage of is.

Julie Sunne:

is there.

Julie Sunne:

And so I can become very panicked and have become very panicked when I start thinking

Julie Sunne:

about her future and what will happen when my husband and I are no longer here.

Julie Sunne:

I couldn't, I don't know that I could have handled that.

Julie Sunne:

If Rach would have been plopped into our lives as our first child, if I

Julie Sunne:

hadn't gone through the suffering of the miscarriages and Daniel's disabilities.

Julie Sunne:

And another one of our children had learning disabilities

Julie Sunne:

that we had to navigate.

Julie Sunne:

And if those would not have been in my life and I wouldn't have had to

Julie Sunne:

learn how to lean on the Lord and how to surrender my strength for his

Julie Sunne:

strength, because my strength is nothing.

Julie Sunne:

It's a drop compared to the Lord's and my knowledge is nothing.

Julie Sunne:

It's a thimble full, not even a thimble full.

Julie Sunne:

But he knows it all and he has her future before we're ever in that future.

Julie Sunne:

And I've had to learn how to surrender that.

Julie Sunne:

And it's not an easy thing.

Julie Sunne:

It's not a clean break.

Julie Sunne:

I struggle with that a lot,

Julie Sunne:

but I know he'll meet her in that.

Julie Sunne:

When we're gone, he's the father to the fatherless, right?

Julie Sunne:

He's promised to be there and our children are his.

Julie Sunne:

They're only to us on loan.

Julie Sunne:

And so he loves her more than I do.

Julie Sunne:

And that's where I really had to get to that acceptance of that and to set aside.

Julie Sunne:

So I think it's really important for the wise to really hold on to what's he

Julie Sunne:

doing in this and what's he preparing me for, what's he preparing other people

Julie Sunne:

for, what's he have that in this for us.

Julie Sunne:

And when I changed my mindset to that.

Julie Sunne:

It was a lot easier, to surrender her to him.

Julie Sunne:

And as I started digging into knowing him better because I needed to, I needed that

Julie Sunne:

reminder of who he was, that reminder that he was imminent, he's near, but he's

Julie Sunne:

also transcendent, otherworldly, and that was incredibly important to me because

Julie Sunne:

he had to be above my circumstances or he couldn't handle the circumstances

Julie Sunne:

because I certainly can't handle him and if that's, if he's on the same

Julie Sunne:

plane and the same level as me, then

Julie Sunne:

I don't have faith, I can't trust that he can handle it either.

Julie Sunne:

But knowing that he's transcendent, that he's omniscient, that he's

Julie Sunne:

all powerful, that's pivotal in order for me to surrender her future

Julie Sunne:

to him and to her present even.

Julie Sunne:

He has her, we don't know what's coming.

Julie Sunne:

We don't know if there could be some major health issue popping up.

Julie Sunne:

Thankfully, he's spared us from some of the health issues that so many deal with,

Julie Sunne:

which my heart goes out to, because some of the daily challenges, we don't have

Julie Sunne:

as much of the daily challenges, at least health wise, as so many do that have,

Julie Sunne:

that are in the throes of caregiving and raising children with special needs.

Julie Sunne:

So I'm grateful for that.

Julie Sunne:

There's so many blessings.

Julie Sunne:

Yeah.

Julie Sunne:

Just learning to embrace her for who she is, disabilities and all,

Julie Sunne:

was another huge mindset change.

Julie Sunne:

The whole world of disability, I would not have stepped into.

Julie Sunne:

I know some people do willingly.

Julie Sunne:

I would have not, I needed to go kicking and screaming and the

Julie Sunne:

Lord knew that and he wanted me.

Julie Sunne:

To be there and to be in that world, obviously.

Sadaf Beynon:

Wow, Julie, you've been on some road, haven't you?

Julie Sunne:

It's been a journey, you have to look back and see that everything

Julie Sunne:

the Lord allows he has a purpose in it.

Sadaf Beynon:

Absolutely.

Sadaf Beynon:

And I think what's evident is your surrendered heart and your grateful heart.

Sadaf Beynon:

And I think that comes from, like you're saying, how the Lord's been teaching you.

Sadaf Beynon:

Yeah.

Sadaf Beynon:

And honing you to be more like him.

Julie Sunne:

Yeah.

Julie Sunne:

It usually doesn't come from the easy times, does it?

Sadaf Beynon:

No, it doesn't.

Sadaf Beynon:

No.

Julie Sunne:

And look at.

Julie Sunne:

Oh, go ahead.

Julie Sunne:

I'm sorry.

Sadaf Beynon:

No.

Sadaf Beynon:

I'm sorry.

Sadaf Beynon:

Carry on.

Julie Sunne:

I'm just saying it takes getting to the

Julie Sunne:

other side and looking back.

Julie Sunne:

And of course, we're not on the other side, but we're

Julie Sunne:

far enough along the journey.

Julie Sunne:

I can look back and I can see his fingerprints on that journey.

Sadaf Beynon:

Yeah.

Julie Sunne:

And you can't see that in the moment.

Julie Sunne:

And that's why I'm telling my story.

Julie Sunne:

That's why I need to share because when you're in the throes of it, you

Julie Sunne:

can't see it, and you need to hold on to, sometimes you just need to hold on

Julie Sunne:

to the faith of someone else and see that you can just wait long enough.

Julie Sunne:

You can get to that point where you can look back and see his faith

Julie Sunne:

or his faithfulness, I guess I

Julie Sunne:

should say.

Sadaf Beynon:

Yeah.

Sadaf Beynon:

So I guess going on from what you've just said, what are some of the biggest lessons

Sadaf Beynon:

you've learned then about God's nature?

Julie Sunne:

I have learned that we have victory, and he is the victor, and so

Julie Sunne:

just because life looks broken here, is broken here, it won't stay that way.

Julie Sunne:

And so we can trust that our circumstances are redeemed.

Julie Sunne:

The Lord is the Savior, He is the Redeemer.

Julie Sunne:

And I've learned that it doesn't matter how angry we get at Him, He continues

Julie Sunne:

to love with an everlasting love.

Julie Sunne:

And one of the most important things I've learned is that His

Julie Sunne:

grace, yes, His grace is sufficient.

Julie Sunne:

He's a very gracious Lord.

Julie Sunne:

But he's not going to give us the grace for tomorrow, He's going to

Julie Sunne:

give us a grace for this moment.

Julie Sunne:

Yeah.

Julie Sunne:

And we so often want I want to look in the future and I want him to tell me.

Julie Sunne:

I want to know exactly how he's going to provide and I want to

Julie Sunne:

experience that grace for them.

Julie Sunne:

And that's not how the Lord operates.

Julie Sunne:

He says no, Julie, you need to trust me.

Julie Sunne:

I have, I'm going to give you the grace for this moment.

Julie Sunne:

I'm going to help you through this moment.

Julie Sunne:

To see this next step.

Julie Sunne:

I'm gonna illuminate that.

Julie Sunne:

But you need to trust me for the rest because if I show it to you all for

Julie Sunne:

one thing I couldn't even understand it because I can't understand that.

Julie Sunne:

We don't have the minds.

Julie Sunne:

We have very finite minds.

Julie Sunne:

We can't understand the ways of the Lord, but also where's the faith in that?

Julie Sunne:

And the Lord wants our surrendered heart.

Julie Sunne:

He wants us to be able to trust Him as our Father, as our sustainer.

Julie Sunne:

So those were some very important things that I've learned about the Lord.

Julie Sunne:

I've learned that He can handle it all, and He can handle my

Julie Sunne:

anger as well, our feelings.

Julie Sunne:

Now He's going to do things to, I think, pull us out of our depression

Julie Sunne:

and our dependence on ourselves.

Julie Sunne:

He's gonna allow things in our lives.

Julie Sunne:

And that perhaps is one, is another one of the more important things I've

Julie Sunne:

learned is that everything that I've experienced, God has allowed or ordained.

Julie Sunne:

He's sovereign.

Julie Sunne:

He has allowed or ordained it.

Julie Sunne:

Oh, I may not like it, but I don't have to like it.

Julie Sunne:

He's not asking for my permission and he's not as much after my happiness

Julie Sunne:

as he is after my surrendered life and my heart, and my salvation.

Julie Sunne:

That's what he's most concerned about is what does eternity look like for me

Julie Sunne:

and for my daughter and for my children.

Julie Sunne:

And I don't think, since he's a loving God and a gracious God, he doesn't love

Julie Sunne:

the things that the hard things in our lives, the things that are so difficult,

Julie Sunne:

but he knows better to then to keep us from those things, honestly, he knows

Julie Sunne:

we need those things and he provides or allows those things to those hard seasons

Julie Sunne:

to prepare us to surrender to him and to be able to trust him and to be willing to

Julie Sunne:

walk with him and let him in our lives.

Sadaf Beynon:

Absolutely, and you're right, like when we go through

Sadaf Beynon:

the hard times, that's when we let him into our lives, don't we?

Sadaf Beynon:

And that's when his promises that at sometimes might feel distant, they, we

Sadaf Beynon:

come to see them as they're meant for us.

Julie Sunne:

Yeah.

Julie Sunne:

Yeah.

Julie Sunne:

There's a time I did not, I doubted, I knew his promises.

Julie Sunne:

I was raised in the church.

Julie Sunne:

I knew that the Lord promised us all kinds of things, abundance and shelter and all

Julie Sunne:

kinds of stuff, his love and his presence, but I didn't always feel those for me.

Julie Sunne:

I, they seem like they were promises for everybody else.

Julie Sunne:

And not for me.

Julie Sunne:

But I needed to learn Sadaf who this Lord was.

Julie Sunne:

I needed to know who he was, what his character was that he

Julie Sunne:

could not fail me, honestly.

Julie Sunne:

Because he is all of his attributes perfectly, is perfectly loving,

Julie Sunne:

but he's also perfectly holy.

Julie Sunne:

He's perfectly sovereign, but he's also perfectly kind and perfectly gracious

Julie Sunne:

and near, even though he's also perfectly

Julie Sunne:

otherworldly and far, I needed to know that I could trust him without a doubt.

Julie Sunne:

Because then I knew I could trust his promises even when I didn't

Julie Sunne:

see their fulfillment in my life.

Julie Sunne:

Again, it comes back to expectations.

Julie Sunne:

We expect them to look a certain way.

Julie Sunne:

And the Lord knows better, so they don't always look that way.

Julie Sunne:

But when we know who the Lord is and that's why I ended up writing

Julie Sunne:

a book that I wrote because it's called Sometimes I Forget because I

Julie Sunne:

forget that his promises are for me.

Julie Sunne:

I forget who the Lord is and I need that reminder of who he is because

Julie Sunne:

then I know his promises are for me.

Julie Sunne:

But if we don't know the one who makes the promises, how can we trust those promises?

Sadaf Beynon:

Yeah, absolutely.

Sadaf Beynon:

So about this book that you've mentioned Sometimes I Forget.

Sadaf Beynon:

What inspired you to write it?

Julie Sunne:

I was, again, which tends to be my default, I was lamenting and

Julie Sunne:

concerned about Rachel's future and was really in a season of what's going

Julie Sunne:

to happen and I have to have it all figured out and so I was writing, I

Julie Sunne:

have a blog and I was writing a post for that blog and I just, that's what

Julie Sunne:

the whole thing was just pouring out.

Julie Sunne:

How is the future going to unfold?

Julie Sunne:

I'm so concerned about Rachel's future and I'm just, panicked

Julie Sunne:

about it and then I regrouped and I always want to give my readers hope.

Julie Sunne:

So I needed to turn this blog post around and find hope in there.

Julie Sunne:

And so I started reminding myself that all these attributes of the Lord.

Julie Sunne:

I just started pouring them out but I need to remember, Lord, that you are sovereign.

Julie Sunne:

You weren't surprised when she was born with that hole in the roof of her mouth.

Julie Sunne:

You weren't surprised when she quit breathing.

Julie Sunne:

None of that surprised him because he was sovereign.

Julie Sunne:

And he's loving and he loves her more than I do.

Julie Sunne:

So he's going to plan for her.

Julie Sunne:

He's going to provide for her.

Julie Sunne:

So I started pouring all that out.

Julie Sunne:

And then I was and my literary agent and I were just discussing book ideas

Julie Sunne:

and I just kept, the Lord kept bringing that post to mind and just said, and I

Julie Sunne:

realized how important that post was for me and that, that idea to just because

Julie Sunne:

I knew the Lord, I could trust him.

Julie Sunne:

That idea was so important to me in my faith journey.

Julie Sunne:

And so we just came up with that.

Julie Sunne:

I just said I think this is so important.

Julie Sunne:

I think other people need it.

Julie Sunne:

And at the time I was only going to do 30 attributes of God and my

Julie Sunne:

publisher said we would really like.

Julie Sunne:

to experience more.

Julie Sunne:

So could you do 60 attributes?

Julie Sunne:

And I said, of course I could.

Julie Sunne:

And that was my strength talking.

Julie Sunne:

I quickly realized I did not have the capability of doing that.

Julie Sunne:

So it was the Lord graciously provided.

Julie Sunne:

Insight into who you was enough for me to write my story.

Julie Sunne:

And there's a few other pieces.

Julie Sunne:

Each chapter is a store, is a snippet of my story, or there's a few others that

Julie Sunne:

are other people's, but most of it has to do with the things that I've learned

Julie Sunne:

and then they relate to each attribute.

Julie Sunne:

There's 60, 60 chapters probably 61 because there's a conclusion as well.

Julie Sunne:

And then it quickly goes into the Lord's that attribute and how that

Julie Sunne:

attribute helped me through the situation or comforted me in the

Julie Sunne:

situation and a takeaway and a prayer around each prairie start.

Julie Sunne:

Sometimes I forget, Lord, that you are.

Julie Sunne:

Fill it in, sovereign, loving, gracious, kind, imminent, immutable.

Julie Sunne:

His unchanging nature, is just critical, I think to everything that

Julie Sunne:

he doesn't change so we can trust him.

Julie Sunne:

He's not going to ever become different than what he already is,

Julie Sunne:

so we can count, we can stand on him.

Julie Sunne:

He's that, that, that firm foundation that we need to have.

Julie Sunne:

And yeah, so the book was born and my faith was again stretched and

Julie Sunne:

strengthened as I tried to get this little pea brain of mine to understand

Julie Sunne:

this immense incomprehensible Lord.

Julie Sunne:

And it, so yeah, so it was good.

Julie Sunne:

It was a wonderful journey for me and I think it'll be very encouraging

Julie Sunne:

to people walking through all kinds of, whether you're in the deep

Julie Sunne:

throes of a very difficult season, or you're in the everyday, hard

Julie Sunne:

mundane ness of young motherhood.

Julie Sunne:

I think knowing the Lord is instrumental, is crucial for any

Julie Sunne:

part of our journey to know him and know that his promises are for us.

Julie Sunne:

They're not just for you, they're also for me.

Julie Sunne:

They're not just for us, but they're for our listeners, that his promises,

Julie Sunne:

we can trust because we can trust the one who made those promises.

Sadaf Beynon:

Yeah.

Sadaf Beynon:

And we can

Julie Sunne:

rest with that.

Sadaf Beynon:

And listening to your story today it just highlights everything

Sadaf Beynon:

that you're saying that he's with us in the ups, the downs, and yeah,

Sadaf Beynon:

no, thanks so much for sharing that.

Julie Sunne:

Oh, absolutely.

Sadaf Beynon:

Julie, you may have already touched on this, so reiterate

Sadaf Beynon:

it if you need to, but we do to ask our guests, what is Your one message.

Julie Sunne:

I would say my one message, my one overall message

Julie Sunne:

is the Lord is trustworthy.

Julie Sunne:

He is trustworthy and he will be with you in your circumstances

Julie Sunne:

and he will see you through them.

Julie Sunne:

It doesn't look that way often it doesn't look that way at all.

Julie Sunne:

It looks like a complete disaster and an impossibility but the Lord is a God

Julie Sunne:

of impossibility in our impossibility.

Julie Sunne:

Since when we know the Lord who is above all and with all and all.

Julie Sunne:

When we really get to know Him and who He is, then we can rest on those

Julie Sunne:

promises, and we can trust that He will be there, even if it doesn't look

Julie Sunne:

like it, even when we can't understand.

Julie Sunne:

And one day we'll be able to look back and see that.

Julie Sunne:

Or we'll know for certainty when we get to heaven with Him,

Julie Sunne:

because it'll all be revealed.

Sadaf Beynon:

Yeah, he is absolutely trustworthy.

Sadaf Beynon:

Yeah.

Sadaf Beynon:

Julie, thank you so much for sharing your incredible story with us today.

Sadaf Beynon:

Your journey is just inspiring, and I'm sure that our listeners will take

Sadaf Beynon:

a lot of hope and strength from it.

Julie Sunne:

And that, that is my prayer, that's exactly why I speak

Julie Sunne:

out, is we need to know that we need to sometimes lean on other people's faith

Julie Sunne:

as

Julie Sunne:

we walk through ours and grow in ours.

Sadaf Beynon:

Absolutely.

Sadaf Beynon:

And for everyone listening, be sure to check out Julie's new book, Sometimes

Sadaf Beynon:

I Forget, which is available now.

Sadaf Beynon:

And as always, thanks for tuning in to What's the Story.

Sadaf Beynon:

If you enjoyed this episode, don't forget to subscribe and leave a review.

Sadaf Beynon:

And remember, no matter the challenge, there's always a way forward.

Sadaf Beynon:

Until next time, bye for now.

Julie Sunne:

Bye bye.

Matt Edmundson:

And just like that, we have reached the end of

Matt Edmundson:

another fascinating conversation.

Matt Edmundson:

Now remember to check out Crowd Church at www.

Matt Edmundson:

crowd.

Matt Edmundson:

church, even if you might not see the point of church.

Matt Edmundson:

We are a digital church on a quest to discover how Jesus can help

Matt Edmundson:

us live a more meaningful life.

Matt Edmundson:

We are a community, a space to explore the Christian faith, and a place

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where you can contribute and grow.

Matt Edmundson:

And you are welcome at Crowd Church.

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Don't forget to subscribe to the What's The Story Podcast on your favourite

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podcast app, because we've got a treasure trove of inspiring stories

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coming your way, and we would basically hate for you to miss any of them.

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And just in case no one has told you yet today, remember you are awesome.

Matt Edmundson:

Yes, you are.

Matt Edmundson:

Created awesome.

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It's just a burden you have to bear.

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What's the Story is a production of Crowd Church.

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Our fantastic team, including Anna Kettle, Sadaf Beynon, and me, Matt

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Edmundson and Tanya Hutsuliak, work behind the scenes tirelessly to

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bring you all these fabulous stories.

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Our theme song is a creative work of Josh Edmundson.

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And if you're interested in the transcript or show notes, head over

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to our website, whatsthestorypodcast.

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com.

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And whilst you're there, sign up for our free weekly newsletter to get all of this

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goodness delivered straight to your inbox.

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So that's it from all of us this week here at What's The Story.

Matt Edmundson:

Thank you so much for joining us.

Matt Edmundson:

Have a fantastic week wherever you are in the world.

Matt Edmundson:

We'll catch you next time.

Matt Edmundson:

Bye for now.

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