Real Talk…Divorce Isn’t for Everyone

By: Chauna-Kaye Pottinger

The Fortress Builder Series has come to an end. Many of you have reached out to ask what we will discuss next. I’ve decided to touch on a hot topic crucial for married couples. Let’s have a real heart-to-heart. Not a heavy, gloom-and-doom chat. It’s the kind of conversation that feels like sitting on a front porch swing. You’re sipping something warm while talking about life, love, and all the messy in-betweens. We’re talking about divorce today—and let’s just say, it’s not for the faint of heart.

And truthfully? It’s not for everyone.

The Grass Isn’t Always Greener on the Other Side

There’s a popular myth that divorce is an instant reset button. People believe that once the papers are signed, peace will magically descend. They think everyone will move on gracefully into their happily ever after. But let’s tell the truth in love. Divorce may offer an escape from some pain. However, it brings its own brand of heartbreak too. The way I always describe it is this. It’s like choosing a more toxic version of marriage.

Especially when children are involved.

Kids are resilient, yes, but they’re also intuitive. They can sense tension before words are ever spoken. When divorce happens, they often feel like referees in a match they never signed up for. They are torn between loyalty to two people they love deeply. “Whose side am I supposed to be on?” becomes the silent question they carry from house to house, weekend to weekend.

And let’s not forget how former soulmates can suddenly become sworn enemies.

Once the vows are broken, it’s easy for love to turn into loathing. The person you once celebrated anniversaries with may now be reduced to “my ex.” This is often spoken with an eye roll, a sigh, or outright contempt. Respect erodes, empathy disappears, and the children—caught in the crossfire—often witness their parents dehumanizing each other like strangers at war.

Jesus Knew the Weight of It

When Jesus was asked about divorce in Matthew 19, He didn’t shrug it off or condone it casually. He said: “Therefore what God has joined together, let no one separate.” — Matthew 19:6 (NIV)

That wasn’t about control, it was about compassion. Jesus understood the ripple effects of separation. He wasn’t trying to shame the broken, He was trying to protect something sacred.

Because He knew that breaking a covenant breaks more than a contract. It breaks trust, rhythms, dreams and yes, sometimes even people.

Let’s Talk Real Life

Divorce doesn’t just split the bed, it splits the budget too. Suddenly, two incomes become one. A shared mortgage turns into rent checks and custody calendars. Date nights get replaced by court dates. And the emotional toll? It can leave you exhausted—navigating co-parenting boundaries, starting over, and trying to rebuild a life that doesn’t feel so fragmented.

Then come the blended family dynamics. That can be a beautiful story of redemption. It can also be a complicated maze of step-parenting tensions. There may be unresolved baggage and “you’re not my real mom” moments. And if one spouse still carries feelings for the other? Whew. That’s a whole emotional plot twist no one prepared you for.

And let’s not gloss over the loneliness.

Dating again after divorce can feel like jumping into a pool without knowing how deep the water is—or if there’s even water at all. For some, it’s energizing. For others, it’s terrifying. Especially when your heart still beats in time with old memories and familiar routines.

So Why Isn’t Divorce for Everyone?

Because while some marriages genuinely need a safe, loving exit—most are just stuck.

Stuck in poor communication.
Stuck in unhealed wounds.
Stuck in unmet expectations.

But not necessarily beyond repair.

Jesus didn’t discourage divorce to be harsh—He discouraged it because He knew that rebuilding is often better than starting over. That healing, though painful, can lead to deeper love. That with humility, therapy, grace, and a whole lot of prayer, even the most bruised marriages can bloom again.

Final Thought: Stay if You Can, Leave if You Must but Don’t Quit Without a Fight

Divorce may be common, but it was never meant to be easy. It’s not an exit ramp for every marital fender-bender. Jesus didn’t teach on marriage and divorce because He wanted us trapped—He did it because He wanted us whole.

So, if you’re standing on shaky ground today, don’t rush to sign the divorce papers. Pray. Breathe. Seek wise counsel. Ask the Holy Spirit for help. Pray for eyes to see your spouse not as the enemy. Remember that they are the one you once vowed to love, even when it’s hard.

Divorce isn’t for everyone. And maybe—just maybe—you’ve been called to rebuild the fortress, not walk away from it. The Love Fortress, my upcoming book, is a powerful resource. It is designed to help couples rebuild what was broken, brick by brick. This rebuilding is done with faith, grace, and intention. Make sure that you mark your calendars for September 1, 2025.

Remember this, your story’s not over. Not yet. Hang in there.

Chauna-Kaye Pottinger is a devoted Christian residing in sunny Orlando, Florida. As a loving wife and mother, she gracefully balances her roles with a fervent dedication to her faith. Chauna-Kaye’s heart is set on reaching Heaven, and she channels her passion into inspiring everyone she encounters to embark on the same spiritual journey. Through her blog, she shares insights, experiences, and unwavering enthusiasm for a life centered on faith and eternal purpose. Join Chauna-Kaye as she navigates the path to Heaven, encouraging others to walk alongside her in this transformative quest.

The S-Word That Gets a Bad Rap

By: Chauna-Kaye Pottinger

Last week, we got a little spicy as we talked about Enticement. Yes, it’s the fun part of marriage. It involves secret winks, playful texts, and surprise kisses. You might even make a little extra effort in the perfume department. If you missed that post, go back and catch up. We spilled some serious tea on keeping the spark alive in Christian marriages!

This week, though… we’re shifting gears. We’re leaning into a word that makes some folks want to duck and run for cover: Submission.

Yep. That S-word. Next week we will talk about the next one (wink).

Let’s take a moment to breathe. Before your inner independent woman starts rolling her eyes or your husband starts smiling a little too hard, let’s get into what biblical submission really means. Because, friend, it’s not what the world has made it out to be.

“Submission” is Not a Dirty Word

Let’s be honest: submission often gets a bad reputation. We’ve been given a version that looks more like hierarchy than harmony. For the modern spouse, the idea of “submitting” can feel like an attack on autonomy. This is especially true for those of us who’ve been holding things down at home. We’ve also maintained responsibilities at work, in ministry, and in our communities. It can also feel like a call to silence your voice. But biblical submission isn’t about erasing identity — it’s about embracing purpose.

Let’s rewind to the very beginning: Genesis 2:18. God said, “It is not good for man to be alone. I will make a helper suitable for him.”

That word helper in Hebrew is Ezer Kenegdo, and whew — it’s got some power behind it.

Ezer Kenegdo: The Helper with a Sword

The phrase Ezer Kenegdo doesn’t mean “maid” or “assistant” or “quiet little shadow.” It means a powerful aid — someone who comes alongside to protect, defend, and strengthen. In fact, the word Ezer is used to describe God Himself multiple times in the Old Testament — like in Psalm 33:20, where God is called our “help and our shield.”

Let that sink in.

The same word used to describe the role of the wife is the same one used for God when He shows up to rescue and defend His people.

That’s not weakness. That’s divine reinforcement.

So no, ladies — you were not created to be a footnote in your husband’s story. You were made to be the co-author. Your role is not about blind obedience or living in silence. It’s about partnership, covering, and helping your spouse walk boldly in their God-given purpose. And husbands, this submission conversation? It’s not one-sided.

Mutual Submission: It’s a Two-Way Street

Let’s flip over to Ephesians 5, where Paul gives us the submission speech. You know the one: “Wives, submit to your husbands…” (Cue the sighs and side-eyes.)

But hold on.

Just one verse before that, in Ephesians 5:21, Paul says:
“Submit to one another out of reverence for Christ.”

There it is — mutual submission. Before Paul ever addresses the wives, he speaks to both spouses and establishes the foundation: We are all called to submit to one another in Christ.

And then Paul goes even deeper — he tells husbands to love their wives as Christ loved the church. (Ephesians 5:25)

Now, if we’re really being honest, that’s the heavier lift. Christ’s love wasn’t passive. It was sacrificial. He served, washed feet, and laid down His life. That’s the model husbands are called to follow. Submission is not domination; it’s devotion.

When both spouses are submitted to God and to each other, it doesn’t feel like one person is dragging the other. Instead, it feels like two people dancing in rhythm. Each steps in time with grace and humility.

A Fortress Built on Unity

Submission, when lived out biblically, is not a cage — it’s a covering. It creates an atmosphere where both spouses feel safe, seen, and supported. It’s where we say, “I’ve got your back,” not “I’m above you.” And in a world that often pits couples against each other in power struggles, submission invites us to build a fortress where God is the cornerstone, and we’re each other’s fiercest allies.

Coming Up Next: Let’s Talk About Sex (Yes, Really!)

Now that we’ve cleared the air on submission, get ready — next week, we’re diving into the next brick in our Love Fortress: Sexual Satisfaction.

We’ll talk about why intimacy is more than just physical, how to reconnect when things feel distant, and why God actually smiles on married sex (yes, the Song of Solomon is in your Bible for a reason!).

So stay tuned, invite a friend to the Fortress Builder Series, and remember: when God is the architect of your marriage, every brick — even the tricky ones — leads to something beautiful.

Chauna-Kaye Pottinger is a devoted Christian residing in sunny Orlando, Florida. As a loving wife and mother, she gracefully balances her roles with a fervent dedication to her faith. Chauna-Kaye’s heart is set on reaching Heaven, and she channels her passion into inspiring everyone she encounters to embark on the same spiritual journey. Through her blog, she shares insights, experiences, and unwavering enthusiasm for a life centered on faith and eternal purpose. Join Chauna-Kaye as she navigates the path to Heaven, encouraging others to walk alongside her in this transformative quest.

Let’s Make Up: Turning Conflict Into Connection

Because peace is more than just the absence of noise.

Last week in our Love Fortress blog series, we tackled the topic of trust. It is the sacred glue that keeps our relationships strong, even in the face of storms. We talked about how trust takes years to build, seconds to break, and sometimes a lifetime to repair. But what happens when that trust is rattled? What happens when a heated argument leads to icy silence? You find yourself lying on opposite ends of the bed. Each of you is wrapped in your own pride and pain.

Let’s talk about reconciliation after a dispute; because let’s be honest, even the most “in love” couples have days when love feels more like a battlefield than a ballroom dance.

When Disputes Happen

Let’s paint the picture: You’ve just had a big argument. Words flew like daggers. One of you stormed out; or worse, stayed in but gave the silent treatment like it was an Olympic decathlon. Maybe you’re now withholding affection or intimacy, hoping your spouse will feel the sting of your frustration. We get it. When you’ve been wronged, there’s something satisfying, at least in the moment, about pulling back. It feels like justice.

But here’s the raw truth: weaponizing silence or sex creates more distance, not more clarity. The louder one spouse gets, the more right they feel; the quieter the other becomes, the more resentful they grow. And before you know it, the issue becomes less about what was said and more about how both of you reacted.

I remember early in my marriage with Jaymie, I had a bad habit of threatening divorce during heated arguments. I didn’t realize at the time how damaging those words were. In my mind, I was expressing just how hurt I felt; but to him, it sent the message that our marriage wasn’t meaningful or secure. One day, Jaymie looked at me and said, “It’s hard for me to have confidence and trust in our relationship when it feels like you’re ready to walk away at any moment.” That stopped me in my tracks. His vulnerability shook something inside of me. I realized that reconciliation doesn’t stand a chance when threats are sitting at the table.

The Pain of Being Wronged

Being wronged by your spouse stings in a way few things do. This is the person who vowed to love you. They promised to protect your heart. They said they would cover you emotionally. Now they feel like the very source of your ache. That pain can feel lonely—maddening even. In that space, it’s easy to rehearse your side of the argument. You build your case. You seek validation from friends or family. But here’s what often gets overlooked: sometimes, we’re reacting to the story we’ve told ourselves about what happened. It’s not necessarily the full truth. And when those stories aren’t filtered through the lens of grace, context, or clarity, they can distort reality. Yet because they feel true, we act on them as if they are.

Here’s a gentle warning: sharing every marital fight with your circle may win you sympathy. However, it can cost you trust. Your spouse can forgive you, but your mama will not. Your best friend will never look at them the same again. And reconciliation becomes even harder when too many spectators have a front-row seat to your private battles.

Don’t Let the Sun Go Down…

Ephesians 4:26 offers timeless wisdom: “Do not let the sun go down while you are still angry.” You don’t have to resolve every issue before bedtime. However, don’t go to sleep marinating in bitterness. Angry hearts harden overnight.

Here are some intuitive and light-hearted ways to pursue peace instead of prolonging pain:

  1. Break the Ice, Literally
    Hand your spouse a popsicle with a sticky note that says, “Let’s cool off and talk when you’re ready.” Humor heals.
  2. Initiate a Grace Truce
    Say, “I’m not ready to hash it all out, but I love you and want to get back to us.” It shows humility and gives space for resolution without demanding it immediately.
  3. Touch Before Talk
    A hand on the back, a gentle hug, or just sitting close can often soften a heart faster than an argument ever could.
  4. Pray Instead of Plot
    Instead of plotting your comeback, pray for your spouse and your own heart. Ask God to give you grace and a listening ear.
  5. Avoid the Blame Game
    Use “I feel” instead of “you always.” There’s no peace in pointing fingers; only more bruises.
  6. Choose Connection Over Control
    Don’t withhold sexual intimacy as a form of punishment. Sex isn’t a bargaining chip; it’s a gift, a healing space, and sometimes the doorway back to emotional unity.
  7. Write it Out
    If speaking feels too charged, write a heartfelt note. Sometimes the written word opens doors the spoken word can’t.

Grace and Humility: The Way Forward

Peace doesn’t mean pretending nothing happened; it means choosing grace when you could choose retaliation. It means humbling yourself, even if you weren’t “the one who started it.” Reconciliation occurs when flawed humans come together. They decide that we is more important than me.

So, take a breath. Be first to apologize. Or at least be first to reach out. Say the hard thing, but say it with love.

As you begin to patch the cracks with grace, remember this—you’re not just ending a fight. You’re building a fortress.

Next week, we’ll heat things up (in the best way). We will explore “Enticing Your Spouse.” Rebuilding intimacy after conflict is more than possible. It’s beautiful.

Until then, love hard, forgive quickly, and never stop fighting to keep your Love Fortress intact.

Chauna-Kaye Pottinger is a devoted Christian residing in sunny Orlando, Florida. As a loving wife and mother, she gracefully balances her roles with a fervent dedication to her faith. Chauna-Kaye’s heart is set on reaching Heaven, and she channels her passion into inspiring everyone she encounters to embark on the same spiritual journey. Through her blog, she shares insights, experiences, and unwavering enthusiasm for a life centered on faith and eternal purpose. Join Chauna-Kaye as she navigates the path to Heaven, encouraging others to walk alongside her in this transformative quest.

Starve the Distractions and Feed the Flame

By Chauna-Kaye Pottinger

Last week, in our post Building Marriages that Last, we introduced the idea of constructing a strong, fortified marriage, one that can weather storms, resist subtle attacks, and stand tall through every season. We talked about intentionality, spiritual alignment, and making God the architect of your relationship. This week, we’re diving into the very first brick that lays the foundation for a love that doesn’t just survive, but thrives. That brick? Fasting and prayer.

Let’s face it, modern marriages are under pressure. Life moves fast. Kids need things. Work demands our energy. Phones steal our attention. And before you know it, you’re in the same house, same bed, but miles apart.

Communication starts to break down. Passion starts to flicker. Resentment quietly builds. You begin to think, “Maybe we’re just in a rough patch,” but that rough patch turns into a dry season.

Here’s the spiritual truth: many of the challenges couples face are spiritual in nature; but we’re trying to fight them with natural tools. And that’s where fasting and prayer come in.

Jesus Made It Clear: Some Things Won’t Move Without It

In Mark 9:29, after the disciples tried and failed to deal with a spiritual issue, Jesus said something sobering: “This kind can come out by nothing but prayer and fasting.” Read that again: nothing but.

There are certain strongholds in your marriage, be it emotional disconnection, recurring conflict, unforgiveness, neglect, or even just complacency, that will not budge without spiritual power. Fasting isn’t a hunger strike to get God’s attention. It’s a spiritual accelerator that clears away distractions so you can focus your heart, your prayers, and your energy on inviting God to do what only He can.

Fasting Isn’t Just About Food (Thank God)

Look, if you know me, then you know I love me some good Jamaican food. I mean, don’t come between me and a lovely bowl of chicken soup unless you’re ready for a situation. (Shhh… don’t tell anyone, but I’ve had full worship sessions thanking God for good food)

But seriously, fasting these days doesn’t have to mean giving up your favorite meal—though if God calls you to surrender the mac and cheese, I won’t argue. The heart of fasting is about giving up anything that’s been feasting on your time or focus. Whether it’s food, social media, your favorite show, or even your need to be right (oof)—it’s about realigning your heart toward God and saying, “My marriage matters more than my distractions.”

Because sometimes, what really needs starving… isn’t your stomach—it’s your schedule.

Here are some creative ways couples and individuals are fasting today:

  • Social Media Fast: Unplug from the scroll and use that time to journal, reflect, or pray for your spouse.
  • TV/Streaming Fast: Give up your go-to show for a week and replace it with intentional time together or in devotion.
  • Phone-Free Evenings: No screens after 7 p.m. means more time to talk, touch, or pray together.
  • Complaining Fast: Challenge yourself to go seven days without criticizing or complaining about your spouse. (It’s harder than you think… but so worth it.)
  • Coffee or Sugar Fast: If you’re a daily indulger, giving that up becomes a physical reminder to intercede for your marriage every time you crave it.

Remember, fasting is not about perfection—it’s about priority. You don’t need to fast flawlessly to see results. This isn’t a spiritual performance or a “holier than thou” competition. You’re not earning God’s love; you’re creating space for His presence.

The goal isn’t to check all the religious boxes or to make it through a 24-hour fast without a single hunger pang or mental slip-up. The goal is to say, “God, I’m putting You—and my marriage—at the top of my list.” It’s about intentionally pushing aside the noise, the habits, and the distractions to focus on what truly matters.

Even if you stumble, even if you start with small steps, God honors the effort. He sees the heart. And when you prioritize His presence over your preferences, He shows up in powerful ways. So don’t worry about getting it perfect. Just make it intentional.

The Love Ripple Effect

Here’s something you might not expect: when you fast and pray for your spouse, they feel it. Even if they don’t know exactly what you’re doing, the spiritual shift begins to affect the atmosphere in your home.

Imagine how it feels for your spouse to find out you’re skipping your favorite show, coffee, or even meals just to pray for them. That kind of love: sacrificial, spiritual, intentional, can spark a new level of intimacy and admiration. It tells them, “You matter to me. Our marriage matters to God. And I’m fighting for us.”

That’s how emotional walls begin to fall. That’s how broken communication starts to heal. That’s how great marriages stay great, and struggling ones begin to turn the corner.

Your Challenge This Week

Let’s build that first brick. Try this:

  1. Pick one day this week to fast.
  2. Choose one thing to give up that will help you focus.
  3. Use that time to pray specifically for your spouse and your marriage.
  4. Journal what you sense God is saying to you about your role in strengthening your love fortress.

Now that we’ve laid the foundation, we’re going to move into another powerful building block: Openness and Honesty. No fortress can stand without trust—and trust can’t grow where truth is absent. We’ll explore how to create safe spaces in your marriage where both partners can be real, vulnerable, and fully known.

Until then—skip the snack, seek the Savior, and keep building.

Because your love fortress is worth fighting for.

Chauna-Kaye Pottinger a devoted Christian residing in sunny Orlando, Florida. As a loving wife and mother, she gracefully balances her roles with a fervent dedication to her faith. Chauna-Kaye’s heart is set on reaching Heaven, and she channels her passion into inspiring everyone she encounters to embark on the same spiritual journey. Through her blog, she shares insights, experiences, and unwavering enthusiasm for a life centered on faith and eternal purpose. Join Chauna-Kaye as she navigates the path to Heaven, encouraging others to walk alongside her in this transformative quest.

Why Women Need to Quit Shrinking and Start Shining

By: Chauna-Kaye Pottinger

Let’s just call it what it is: far too many brilliant, bold, and beautiful women are dimming their light to make their husbands shine brighter. And not because they lack talent, ambition, clarity or (most importantly) faith; but because somewhere along the line, someone convinced them that their strength was a threat. That confidence is masculine, brilliance in a woman is something to be “toned down” and living out their God-ordained purpose is tethered to the way in which they support their men.

And so, the performance begins.

It’s subtle. It’s sophisticated. And at times, it’s even unconscious. But it’s happening—in kitchens, boardrooms, Bible studies, and dinner parties.

The Art of Playing Small (a.k.a. Strategic Cluelessness)

It usually starts with a smile. A deferential nod. A too-loud laugh at a not-that-funny joke. Suddenly, she’s asking how to reset the Wi-Fi, even though she’s the one who set it up in the first place. It’s not that she doesn’t know. It’s that she’s learned to make him feel like he knows best.

So she leans into performance:
“Oh honey, can you help me with this? You’re just so much better at it than I.” Translation: “I could’ve done it in 4 minutes, but I’m trying to keep you from spiraling into a confidence crisis.”

Career Acrobatics: The Backflip Into the Background

Let’s talk about ambition. She’s been offered a promotion, a big one. More money, more leadership, more visibility. But it comes with power. And with power comes tension.

So she starts to weigh it:
“If I take this, will he feel insecure?”
“Will I out-earn him? Outgrow him?”
“Will people say I wear the pants?”

Rather than risk unsettling the fragile balance, she politely steps aside. “Now’s not the right time,” she says. But it is. The problem isn’t timing—it’s social conditioning wrapped with a bow of guilt.

Emotional Labor: Where She Becomes His Life Coach

This woman isn’t just a wife—she’s a full-time ego management consultant. She doesn’t just support; she curates his reality. She minimizes her accomplishments so his seem larger. She edits her ideas so he feels smarter. She celebrates his mediocre while keeping her excellence under wraps.

Why? Because she’s been taught that protecting his pride is her job.

But here’s a question: When did marriage become a space where one must shrink for the other to feel tall?

Self-Deprecation as a Defense Mechanism

You’ve seen it—and maybe done it. “I’m so bad at math—he handles all the finances.” Or, “I don’t understand politics—I let him explain it.”
Even though she’s got the degree, the budget spreadsheet, and a folder full of receipts. But instead of owning her brilliance, she makes herself the punchline so he can be the professor.

It’s not humility—it’s survival wrapped in humor.

Faith-Based Shrinking: When Theology Becomes a Gag Order

In some religious circles, the message is even louder: He’s the head. You’re the neck. Which often gets twisted into: Speak only when spoken to. Lead only when no man is available. So even the spiritually gifted woman, the one with fire in her bones and revelation in her spirit, will sit on her hands during Bible study—while Brother John fumbles through Leviticus like it’s a Rubik’s Cube.

But while she’s busy dimming her voice, the whole room misses out. The insight she carries? The revelation she’s been sitting on? It stays locked inside—while the atmosphere stays the same. And deep down, she knows the Holy Spirit has been tugging at her heart, nudging her to speak, to share, to pour out. But she swallows it—for the sake of keeping the spotlight on him. And in doing so, she quiets not just herself, but the very move of God within her.

Performing Helplessness: The Cute Confused Act

You know the move:
“Can you open this jar for me?”
“Can you fix the printer?”
“Can you drive? I’m just not good with directions.”

Some of it is legit. But often, it’s theater. The goal? To appear soft, sweet, and dependent enough not to threaten the man she loves.

Because heaven forbid he realize… she’s actually unstoppable.

The Tragic Truth?

When a woman dims her God-given light, everyone loses.

She loses the fullness of her calling.
He loses the strength of her partnership.
The marriage loses its divine balance and power.

Because love that demands silence isn’t love—it’s a performance. And God never called His daughters to audition for acceptance. He called them to purpose.

Ephesians 2:10 reminds us, “For we are God’s masterpiece. He has created us anew in Christ Jesus, so we can do the good things He planned for us long ago.”
That includes her voice, her vision, her leadership, and her light.

And Proverbs 31? It doesn’t describe a hidden, hushed woman. It describes a woman who “opens her mouth with wisdom, and the teaching of kindness is on her tongue” (Proverbs 31:26). A woman who rises, builds, trades, teaches, and fears the Lord. That kind of woman is meant to shine.

So no, she wasn’t made to shrink behind a man. She was made to stand beside him—with power, with purpose, with divine clarity.

Because when both lights shine—hers and his—the whole house is filled with glory.

So here’s to the women who are done performing.

Who are tired of pretending they don’t know how to fix the TV.
Tired of trading dreams for domestic approval.
Tired of silencing their voice in the name of submission.

Let this be the year you stop dimming your light and start living in the full wattage of your calling.

Because a woman who shines doesn’t cast a shadow on her husband—she helps him see better.

Shine, sis. Shine so bright you light up the whole house and ultimately the world!

Chauna-Kaye Pottinger a devoted Christian residing in sunny Orlando, Florida. As a loving wife and mother, she gracefully balances her roles with a fervent dedication to her faith. Chauna-Kaye’s heart is set on reaching Heaven, and she channels her passion into inspiring everyone she encounters to embark on the same spiritual journey. Through her blog, she shares insights, experiences, and unwavering enthusiasm for a life centered on faith and eternal purpose. Join Chauna-Kaye as she navigates the path to Heaven, encouraging others to walk alongside her in this transformative quest.