When I Don't Know How to Keep Going
A 7-Day Real-Time Devotion by Christian Daily Living
When the weight of life makes it hard to keep going, this 7-day devotional meets you in the exhaustion — without asking you to minimize it. Each day walks you through Scripture, honest reflection, guided prayer, and one practical step forward. God sees where you are. He invites you to come.
You are still here.
That might not feel like much — but it matters. Showing up when life is heavy is its own kind of faithfulness.
Whether you are exhausted, grieving, overwhelmed, or just running on empty after a long hard season, this devotional meets you where you are. Not where you think you should be. Where you actually are.
When I Don't Know How to Keep Going is a seven-day devotional journey that takes your exhaustion seriously — and points you toward the God who said, “Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.”
This is not a pep talk. It is not a list of things to do to feel better. It is seven days of honest Scripture, real reflection, and prayer that meets you in the hardest parts of the human experience — including the part that wonders if it will ever get easier.
Each day includes:
- Scripture from the King James Version
- Honest devotional teaching
- Personal reflection questions
- Guided prayer shaped by your denomination
- A daily pulse check — where are you with God today?
- A journal prompt
- One practical next step
- A midday check-in
- An evening reflection
- A 988 safety resource on Day 1 for those in crisis
You don't have to have it together. You just have to come.
Seven days. One honest step each day.
What You'll Experience
- Adaptive content that responds to where you are each day
- Scripture, reflection questions, and prayer — guided daily
- Takes about 10–15 minutes a day
- Instant access after purchase — start today
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“Real-Time Devotion is built for where you actually are — not where a generic devotional assumes you are. Every day responds to your honest check-in. No repetitive content, no guilt, no pressure.”