Books that heal, uplift, and empower- by Anuri Mabel
“Get your copy of Mercy – The Book That Speaks to the Soul” https://payhip.com/b/rHsRI
Mercy – The Book That Speaks to the Soul
What Mercy Really Means
Discover the healing power behind true mercy and grace.
The Day It All Broke
A personal moment when everything changed—how pain entered the journey.
Silent Tears, Loud Prayers
Finding your voice in the silence and strength in surrender.
Scars That Testify
Learning to see your scars as beautiful proof of survival.
When Mercy Found Me
A divine turning point when grace met brokenness.
The Woman in the Mirror
Embracing your identity and the woman you’ve become.
Restored, Not Replaced
How God restores what life tried to destroy.
Walking Again After the Fall
Taking bold steps after failure, heartbreak, or loss.
Lessons from the Pit
Wisdom from the lowest places that shaped your strength.
The Sound of Freedom
Reclaiming your voice and living unapologetically free.
No More Guilt, No More Shame
Letting go of the past and walking boldly into healing.
Anointed for the Aftermath
Understanding your purpose after the pain.
Mercy Is Still Enough
Holding on when your soul feels empty.
A Soul That Still Believes
Unshakable faith even in the fire.
Dear Daughter, Keep Walking
A heartfelt letter to the woman rising within you.
https://anurimabel.blogspot.com/2025/05/mercy-book-that-speaks-to-soul.html
📅 June 20, 2025
**🌿 How Mercy Heals the Soul**
Mercy isn’t just kindness—it’s power wrapped in softness...
https://anurimabel.blogspot.com/search?updated-max=2025-05-27T22:43:00%2B03:00&max-results=300&start=9&by-date=false&m=1#google_vignette
📅 June 13, 2025
**💪 When Women Walk in Power**
Strength isn’t always loud. Sometimes it’s a silent march around your Jericho...
https://anurimabel.blogspot.com/2025/05/introduction-mercy.html
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Mercy is not just a story. It’s a journey—a journey that seeks to remind us all of our inherent worth, no matter the scars we carry. It’s a tale that explores the intersection of vulnerability and strength, of healing and imperfection. It’s for every woman who has ever felt too broken to heal or too flawed to be worthy of love.
In the pages of this book, you will meet a woman who, like many of us, has struggled to embrace the full complexity of who she is. She has felt the weight of her mistakes, the sting of rejection, and the silence that comes with believing she is not enough. She has walked through pain, thinking it would define her forever, only to find that healing is a process—and it begins with mercy.
But what is mercy, truly? It is not about overlooking the past, nor is it about dismissing the hurt that has shaped us. It is about granting ourselves compassion, even when we feel least deserving of it. It is about learning that healing comes from the inside out, and that true strength lies in vulnerability, in being seen, and in accepting ourselves as we are—imperfections and all.
This story is for you—the woman who needs to know that she is not alone in her struggle, the woman who longs to feel worthy of love and healing. Mercy is a reminder that you are not broken beyond repair. You are not defined by your failures. You are defined by your resilience, your courage, and the grace you grant yourself along the way.
So, as you turn the pages of this book, I invite you to look deeply at your own life. Allow the story of this woman to inspire you to embrace your own vulnerability, to offer yourself the mercy you deserve, and to step into your healing journey, knowing you are enough.
Welcome to Mercy. May you find the strength to heal, to forgive, and to love yourself along the way.
Read chapter 1.
https://anurimabel.blogspot.com/2025/05/mercy-book-that-speaks-to-soul.html
want to read the full storynow? get the complete book "MERCY" on payhip.
buy now on payhip.
https://anurimabel.blogspot.com/2025/05/mercy-book-that-speaks-to-soul.html
“God’s mercy rewrites your story.”
CHAPER 1
🌿 What Mercy Really Means: Forgiveness, Healing, and Strength:
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Discover the deeper meaning of mercy and how it can transform your healing journey. Learn why offering compassion to yourself is the first step toward emotional freedom.
We hear the word mercy often—in songs, sermons, prayers, and sometimes even in moments of raw desperation. But what does mercy really mean? Beyond its poetic feel and biblical roots, mercy is a living, breathing choice. It is a force that softens hardened hearts, heals invisible wounds, and gives us the strength to keep moving forward. In my book, Mercy, I explore not just the concept, but the experience of mercy. It’s something that changes you—and once you taste it, you’re never the same. By Anuri Mabel
💭 The True Meaning of mercy.
At its core, mercy is compassion in action. The dictionary might define it as “compassion or forgiveness shown toward someone whom it is within one’s power to punish or harm.” But it’s much more than that. Mercy is what steps in when justice says, “No.” Mercy is the quiet voice that whispers, “You are still worthy.” It is both divine and deeply human—a grace we receive and one we must learn to give, especially to ourselves.
❤️🩹 Mercy as Healing
When we withhold mercy from others or from ourselves, we stay trapped in pain. The longer we carry resentment, guilt, or shame, the heavier our spirit becomes. Healing begins when mercy is given space to work. In Mercy, my protagonist is a woman who has lived through deep regret. Her story isn’t about being perfect—it’s about being honest, broken, and eventually, healed. Her journey mirrors so many of ours: trying to be strong while silently suffering. ✨ Mercy says: “You can be wounded and still be worthy .
💪 Mercy as Strength
Many think mercy is weakness. That forgiving means surrendering. That compassion means losing control. But true mercy is one of the bravest acts we can choose. It takes strength to: Forgive someone who hurt you Apologize when you’ve done wrong Let go of a grudge that kept you warm at night See yourself through a lens of love, not punishment In my life, offering mercy has been harder than staying angry. But every time I chose mercy, I became lighter, stronger, and more free.
📘 Where the Book Comes In
Mercy is a story, yes—but more than that, it’s a mirror. If you’ve ever struggled to forgive, to let go, or to believe that you’re still deserving of joy... this book was written for you. Inside, you’ll find a story that reflects your own quiet battles—and, I hope, the courage to win them. 🌟
💬 Final Thoughts:
read chapter 2
https://anurimabel.blogspot.com/2025/05/chapter-2.html
Mercy is not just something we talk about in church or read about in devotionals. It is something we must choose, every single day. To live with mercy is to live with open hands—ready to release pain and receive healing. Whether you find mercy in a moment of prayer, in a conversation with a loved one, or in the pages of a book like mine, I hope you allow it to change you. Because mercy doesn’t just forgive the past. It frees your future.
📖 Excerpt from Mercy Chapter 3
“The Mirror” "She stood in front of the mirror longer than usual that morning. Not to admire herself—she hadn’t done that in years—but to look for something. A spark. A reason. A sign that she was still in there, somewhere, beneath the tired eyes and the weight of what she didn’t say aloud. The truth was, she didn’t know how to forgive him. But worse—she didn’t know how to forgive herself." "That’s when the whisper came—not from the room, but from within: ‘You can lay it down now.’”
🧩 Chapter Preview Summary
Chapter Title: The Mirror Theme: Self-forgiveness and inner dialogue What Happens: In this early chapter, the main character is wrestling with guilt over choices that changed the course of her life. She's not ready to speak it aloud, but she begins to crack open the door to grace. It’s the first moment she considers that maybe, mercy could include her too.
🌟 Reader Testimonial
“Reading Mercy felt like having a conversation with someone who had lived through my pain. It didn’t sugarcoat anything—but somehow, it still left me feeling hopeful. This book helped me forgive myself for things I didn’t even know I was still carrying.”
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Next Chapter: Chapter 2
Why I Wrote Mercy
https://anurimabel.blogspot.com/2025/05/chapter-2.html
CHAPTER2
✍️ Why I Wrote Mercy: The Story Behind the Story:
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Feeling broken is not the end—it's the beginning of healing. Read this heartfelt blog about finding hope in the darkest seasons of your life.
How To Heal From Emotional Trauma
Some books are written from imagination. Mercy was written from my soul. When people ask me, “Why did you write this book?” I pause—not because I don’t know the answer, but because the answer is layered. It's about heartbreak, healing, silence, faith, and the quiet courage it takes to begin again. Today, I want to share the heart behind Mercy, because this book wasn’t just written for bookshelves—it was written for women like you.
💔 It Started with a Scar
Years ago, I went through a season that cracked me wide open. Not in a dramatic, public way—but in that quiet kind of suffering that no one sees. I carried guilt for choices I couldn’t undo. I wore shame like a second skin. And worse—I didn’t believe I had the right to feel better. I thought strength meant hiding pain and staying silent. But silence was stealing me. That’s when I started writing—not because I had answers, but because I needed to breathe.
✨ Writing Was My Healing
Mercy began as a journal entry. One sentence turned into a paragraph. The paragraph became a chapter. Before I knew it, I had created a woman who was wrestling with everything I couldn’t say out loud. She wasn’t perfect. She made mistakes. She loved deeply and suffered quietly. But most of all—she learned how to forgive. As I wrote her story, I realized I was also writing my own. Mercy isn’t just the name of a book. It’s what saved me from the pain I didn’t think I could escape.
📘 Why I Knew This Story Needed to Be Shared
I almost didn’t publish Mercy. I was afraid it was too honest, too raw. But the moment I let a close friend read it, she cried. Not because the story was sad—but because it felt like someone had finally put her feelings into words. That’s when I realized this story wasn’t just mine. It belonged to every woman who: Has forgiven others but not herself Has smiled while secretly feeling broken Has held her breath through hard seasons Needs to know she is still worthy of love
💡 What Mercy Offers You
I didn’t write Mercy to preach or to teach. I wrote it to sit beside you, like a friend. Inside, you’ll find: A relatable story of redemption and renewal A reminder that mercy isn’t weakness—it’s strength A mirror to help you see yourself with more compassion The courage to believe healing is possible—even for you
🌿 If you're carrying guilt, shame, or fear—Mercy might just be the message you've been waiting for.
📖 Ready to Begin Your Own Healing?
Whether you read it all in one night or a few pages at a time, I hope Mercy speaks to your heart the way writing it spoke to mine.
👉 Click here to read a free excerpt from Mercy
https://anurimabel.blogspot.com/2025/05/free-excerpt-from-mercy.html
👉 Buy the full book here; https://www.google.com/url?q=https%3A%2F%2Fpayhip.com%2Fb%2F8zWyX&sa=D&sntz=1&usg=AOvVaw0WWiuUTiuG4AM8HxqacFmo] And if you’ve already read it—thank you. Your courage to feel and heal gives Mercy its meaning.
💬 Final Thoughts
We all have chapters we’d rather not read aloud. But what if those pages—the messy, painful, unpolished ones—are the most important part of our story? That’s what Mercy is really about. Not perfection. Not pretending. But finding the beauty in what we’ve survived. So if you’re wondering why I wrote Mercy—it’s because I knew someone else needed it, too. Maybe that someone is you.
"I didn’t expect a book to break me open and put me back together, but Mercy did that. I saw myself in every chapter."
— Danielle T.
"It was like the author was writing directly to my heart. Mercy reminded me that I'm allowed to begin again."
— Rebecca A.
"Raw. Real. Redemptive. If you’ve ever felt lost, Mercy will help you find your way back to yourself."
— Anonymous Reviewer
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Next Chapter: Chapter 3
5 Life Lessons From Mercy Every Woman Needs To Hear
https://anurimabel.blogspot.com/2025/05/chapter-3.html
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Books About Women Finding Strength
We all carry silent stories—some of heartbreak, some of healing. Mabel's book, Mercy, was born from one of those quiet places. But through its pages, something unexpected happened: clarity. Courage. Closure.
Mercy is not just a story—it’s a reflection of what so many women go through and rise from. Today, I want to share 5 powerful lessons from the book that every woman should hold close.
Because if no one has told you lately—you are allowed to grow, heal, and start over.
So many women carry shame like it's part of their identity.
But let me remind you: your mistakes are not your name.
In Mercy, the main character wrestles with regret—but what she learns is that starting over is not weakness. It’s wisdom.
✨ You are allowed to begin again—at any moment, in any chapter.
We often extend grace to others but punish ourselves privately.
Why do we believe others deserve forgiveness, but not us?
One of the most important themes in Mercy is self-compassion. You can’t fully heal if you’re still holding yourself hostage. The journey back to joy starts with treating yourself like someone worth saving—because you are.
✨ You don’t have to be perfect to be worthy.
Perfection isn’t required for love or healing. Learn how embracing your flaws can help you reclaim your worth and live authentically.
Forgiveness doesn’t mean forgetting.
It means choosing peace over poison.
There’s a moment in the book when forgiveness isn’t deserved—but it’s given anyway. Not because the other person earned it, but because the woman holding the pain couldn’t carry it anymore.
✨ Forgiveness isn’t about them. It’s about freeing you.
Too many of us have been taught to “stay strong” by staying silent.
But strength is not suffering in silence—it’s speaking your truth with love.
In Mercy, voice is power. The character finds herself not by becoming louder, but by becoming more honest. You don’t have to scream to be heard—you just have to be real.
✨ Your voice is sacred. Use it.
Fear fractures us.
Faith, even the tiniest flicker of it, begins the rebuilding.
This book isn’t preachy—but it is rooted in spiritual restoration. It gently asks: What would happen if you believed you could be whole again? That’s the question that turned my own story around—and it might turn yours, too.
✨You don’t need all the answers. Just a little faith to take the next step.
Mercy is fiction—but the truth inside it is very real.
These 5 lessons are not just pages in a book.
They’re lived, felt, and fought for by women everywhere.
If you’ve ever needed permission to heal, to rest, to try again—this is it.
This is your sign.
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Next Chapter: Chapter 4
How To Give Yourself Mercy
https://anurimabel.blogspot.com/2025/05/chapter-4-how-to-give-yourself-mercy.html
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Learning Self Worth After HeartBreak
Some mornings, you wake up with a weight you can’t name.
A heaviness in your chest. A tightness in your thoughts.
You smile for the world, but inside? You feel broken.
If that’s you—this post is for you.
You don’t need to fix everything today.
You just need to know: you are still worthy of mercy.
There are seasons when everything feels fragile.
You try to hold it together for your kids, your partner, your job—but inside, you’re unraveling.
We often tell ourselves:
“I should be over this by now.”
“I have no right to feel this way.”
“Other people have it worse.”
But that doesn’t make your pain any less real.
In Mercy, the main character carries a quiet kind of suffering—the kind we hide. Her healing didn’t begin with solutions. It began with permission:
To feel. To fall apart. To begin again.
Self-mercy is the opposite of self-punishment.
It’s not pretending you’re okay. It’s being gentle with yourself when you’re not.
It looks like:
Letting yourself rest without guilt
Releasing old shame that no longer serves you
Speaking to yourself the way you’d speak to a friend in pain
Admitting: “I’m not okay right now—and that’s okay.”
✨ You don’t have to earn your right to rest. You already deserve it.
Catch the voice in your head that says “I’m a failure” or “I’m too emotional.”
Take a breath and ask: Would I say this to someone I love?
Mercy begins with interrupting the self-criticism.
Take a walk. Put on music. Write something. Cry without shame.
You don’t need to fix your whole life today—just do one loving thing for your soul.
“I am allowed to be a work in progress.
I am still worthy of love.
I give myself mercy.”
Say it again. Write it down. Put it on your mirror if you have to.
✨ Mercy is not a reward. It’s your right.
In Mercy, I created a woman who had every reason to give up—but she didn’t.
Not because she was strong—but because she was honest.
Her healing began the moment she told the truth about her pain.
And that’s when she discovered: broken does not mean beyond repair.
If you’ve ever felt like you’ve failed too much, hurt too long, or lost too deeply—this story was written for you.
👉 Click here to read a free excerpt https://anurimabel.blogspot.com/2025/05/free-excerpt-from-mercy.html
👉 Get your copy of Mercy here https://anurimabel.blogspot.com/2025/05/mercy-book-that-speaks-to-soul.html
Giving yourself mercy doesn’t mean lowering your standards.
It means raising your compassion.
Even in the messiest, most uncertain parts of your journey—
you are still enough.
So be soft with yourself.
Speak kindly to your wounds.
And remember: You can begin again, as many times as you need to.
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Next Chapter: Chapter 5
The Power Of Telling Your Story
https://anurimabel.blogspot.com/2025/05/power-of-telling-your-story-what-mercy.html
Honest self-reflection is where healing begins. Explore how telling your truth—no matter how messy—can set you free and lead to lasting change.
We all have a story.
Some parts we tell freely.
Others we bury deep, hoping no one ever finds them.
But here’s what I’ve learned—especially through writing my book Mercy:
The parts we hide often hold the most healing power.
Telling your story isn’t always easy. It’s raw, vulnerable, and sometimes messy.
But it’s also one of the most courageous things you can do.
For so many of us, silence becomes survival.
We stay quiet because:
We fear judgment.
We don’t want to seem weak.
We were taught that “strong women don’t talk about pain.”
But strength isn’t silence. Strength is truth.
And truth—when spoken with love—sets us free.
When I started writing Mercy, I didn’t intend to write about myself. But what poured out onto the page wasn’t just fiction. It was my own untold story, disguised in a character’s voice. And something incredible happened:
✨ The more I wrote, the more I healed.
Here’s what Mercy taught me—and what I hope it teaches you too:
Once I shared parts of the book with early readers, the most common response wasn’t about the plot or characters.
It was this:
“I felt like you were writing my story.”
That’s the power of honesty. It creates connection. It reminds us that what we go through—no matter how painful—is not just ours.
There’s a scene in Mercy where the main character finally says something she’s been holding in for years.
That moment was terrifying to write—but it was also liberating.
Telling your story is like lighting a match in the dark.
It doesn’t change everything instantly, but it shows you the way forward.
The story you’ve lived through—the one you thought disqualified you?
That might be exactly what someone else needs to hear.
When you tell the truth about your pain, you give others permission to do the same.
You become a mirror. A reminder. A spark of hope.
Telling your story doesn’t mean posting every detail on social media.
It might mean:
Writing it in a journal
Sharing it with a trusted friend
Turning it into a book or poem
Saying it aloud to yourself in the mirror
Start where you are.
Speak what you can.
Let mercy lead the rest.
Mercy isn’t just about second chances.
It’s about voice.
About a woman finding the strength to speak—not because it’s easy, but because it’s time.
If you’ve ever swallowed your truth just to survive…
If you’ve ever questioned whether your story matters…
Let Mercy be your reminder: it absolutely does.
👉 Read a free excerpt from Mercy; https://anurimabel.blogspot.com/2025/05/free-excerpt-from-mercy.html
👉 Buy the full book here; https://payhip.com/b/FXnDs
Your story is sacred.
It doesn’t have to be shiny, tied up in a bow, or perfectly told.
It just has to be yours.
And when you're ready to share it—in any way, on any scale—it becomes a bridge.
A balm.
A light for someone still in the dark.
Tell your story.
Someone is waiting to hear it.
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Next Chapter: Chapter 6
Healing Isn't Linear
https://anurimabel.blogspot.com/2025/05/healing-isnt-linear-real-truth-about.html
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We all want healing to be neat.
A clear timeline. A few deep talks.
Maybe a therapy session or two.
Then boom—closure. A fresh start. A new you.
But here’s the truth most people won’t say out loud:
Healing isn’t linear.
It’s not a straight line.
It’s a spiral. A loop. A quiet fight that repeats itself in waves.
And that’s okay.
Have you ever thought:
“I should be past this by now”?
“Why am I still crying over something from years ago?”
“I’ve moved on… haven’t I?”
These are the lies that shame tries to whisper when you feel stuck.
But healing doesn’t work on a clock.
It works on grace.
On patience.
On learning to sit with the mess long enough to understand it.
✨ You’re not behind. You’re not broken.
You’re simply healing at your own pace.
In Mercy, the main character tries to move forward, but she keeps finding herself pulled back—by memories, regrets, and things left unsaid.
She wants to believe she’s healed. But deep down, she knows she’s only been surviving.
Sound familiar?
Her journey reminded me that the goal isn’t to forget the past.
It’s to learn how to carry it without it crushing you.
“You don’t erase the pain—you outgrow its power.”
Healing means feeling the same thing more than once… and responding with more mercy each time.
Crying over something you thought you “dealt with”
Laughing one moment, grieving the next
Setting boundaries and then second-guessing yourself
Forgiving someone, then getting triggered again
This isn’t failure.
This is what growth actually looks like.
Healing is letting the waves come—and knowing they won’t drown you this time.
You’re allowed to feel hurt even after “moving on.”
You’re allowed to revisit old wounds.
Progress isn’t erased by a bad day.
Ask yourself: Am I responding differently than I used to?
Even small shifts count.
Healing is in the way you come back from the breakdown.
Say:
“This still hurts, but I’m still healing.”
“I’m allowed to take up space in my own recovery.”
“I’m not starting over—I’m continuing.”
If you're reading this and feeling like you're still "not over it"...
Let me be the one to tell you:
You are not late.
You are not weak.
You are not broken beyond repair.
You are human.
And you are healing.
One breath at a time.
One wave at a time.
One honest, merciful day at a time.
Mercy is a story about healing that doesn’t pretend to be easy.
It’s for the woman who’s still in process.
For the one who doesn’t have all the answers—but is learning to ask better questions.
If you’ve ever wondered if healing was really meant for you—
Let Mercy be your reminder: Yes. It is.
read my entire book "mercy" - the book that speaks to the soul. https://payhip.com/b/rHsRI
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Next Chapter: Chapter 7
Mercy And Self Worth
https://anurimabel.blogspot.com/2025/05/chapter-7-mercy-and-self-worth.html
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How To Love Yourself Again
There are days when you feel like you’ve failed yourself.
Like you’ve been too weak, too indecisive, or too broken.
You may even question if you deserve the healing you’ve been hoping for.
But here’s the truth I want you to hear:
You deserve mercy.
You deserve to heal.
And you are worthy of love and peace, no matter where you’ve been or what you’ve been through.
We live in a world that tells us we have to earn everything.
You have to work hard for success.
You have to prove yourself worthy of love.
You have to show strength, or you’ll be seen as weak.
But this mindset doesn’t allow for mercy.
And it doesn’t allow for grace.
When we carry the weight of “not enough,” we constantly question if we’re worthy of healing, joy, or rest.
When we’ve been hurt or broken, we feel as though we need to fix ourselves first before we can accept compassion.
The truth is: You don’t have to be perfect to be worthy of healing.
You don’t have to earn the right to love yourself.
You are already enough.
In Mercy, the main character learns that worth isn’t something that can be “earned.”
It’s something that simply is.
Just as you are, with your flaws, your imperfections, your struggles—you are worthy.
The process of healing isn’t about fixing yourself.
It’s about acknowledging the hurt and embracing yourself through it.
It’s about allowing yourself the space to heal, to grow, and to know that you are enough as you are.
Mercy is what allows us to see our value even when we feel broken.
Mercy is that soft, quiet voice that reminds us:
You are worthy of compassion, even when you can’t see it in yourself.
Here’s why mercy is crucial to building self-worth:
When you stop judging yourself so harshly, you give yourself room to breathe.
You give yourself permission to feel.
To be gentle with your own heart.
And you allow the healing process to unfold without the pressure of perfection.
Healing isn’t a race.
And self-worth isn’t something that can be “fixed” in a single moment.
Mercy teaches you patience with yourself.
It reminds you that every step, no matter how small, is still progress.
When you offer yourself mercy, you learn to accept yourself where you are.
Not where you think you should be.
Not where others expect you to be.
But right here, right now, in all your messy, wonderful imperfection.
You may not always feel worthy of mercy, but it’s something you can practice, over time.
Here’s how:
Instead of saying, “I’m not good enough,” try, “I am enough, even when I’m still growing.”
Shift from self-criticism to self-compassion.
You are not a machine. You are a human being.
Humans are allowed to feel pain, to make mistakes, to need rest, and to grow.
There are things you didn’t understand, things you regret, and mistakes you wish you could undo.
But healing starts with forgiving yourself for those moments.
Forgive the past version of you who didn’t know better.
She was doing the best she could.
Mercy isn’t just about emotional compassion.
It’s about giving your mind and body time to rest.
When you give yourself time to pause, you signal to your heart that you are worthy of peace.
The path to healing is never easy, and there will be moments where you doubt your worth.
But healing is possible for you, just as it is for everyone else.
If you’re struggling to believe you deserve mercy—remember: you do.
You don’t have to be perfect.
You don’t have to do it all on your own.
You just have to be willing to accept that you are already worthy of healing, right now.
In Mercy, I wanted to write a story that reminded women of their inherent worth—even when they couldn’t see it themselves.
It’s for the woman who’s been through it all and is still standing, still fighting, still deserving of compassion.
If you’ve ever questioned your worth or thought you weren’t worthy of healing, let Mercy be the reminder you need:
You are enough, right where you are.
👉 Read the first chapter of Mercy here: https://anurimabel.blogspot.com/2025/05/mercy-book-that-speaks-to-soul.html
👉 Get your copy of Mercy today: https://anurimabel.blogspot.com/2025/05/chapter-2.html
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Next Chapter: Chapter 8
The Strenght In Vulnerability
https://anurimabel.blogspot.com/2025/05/chapter-8-strength-in-vulnerability-by.html
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Vulnerability isn’t weakness—it’s power. Learn how showing up fully as yourself is the bravest thing you can do on your healing journey.
For so many of us, vulnerability feels like weakness.
We hide our scars, mask our pain, and avoid showing our true selves to the world.
But what if vulnerability is actually where our greatest strength lies?
What if embracing your imperfections, sharing your fears, and showing your true self could actually unlock the power you've been seeking all along?
This is the message Mercy tries to convey:
True strength isn’t in hiding your flaws—it’s in owning them.
From a young age, we’re taught to be strong.
We’re told to stand tall, to be independent, and to never let our weaknesses show.
And in a world that often rewards perfection, it’s no surprise that we’ve come to believe that vulnerability equals failure.
But the truth is, it’s not our strengths that make us relatable—it’s our vulnerabilities.
When we allow ourselves to be seen—flaws and all—we invite others to do the same. And in that shared space of honesty, real connections are born.
So why do we still run from vulnerability?
Because it’s terrifying.
Because it feels like exposing the parts of ourselves that are most at risk of being judged or hurt.
Because showing our scars means admitting we’ve been broken—and yet, that’s exactly what makes us whole.
In Mercy, the protagonist struggles with the idea of being seen. She’s been hurt in the past and believes that showing vulnerability will only lead to more pain.
But as she goes through her journey, she begins to realize something profound:
Vulnerability isn’t a sign of weakness—it’s a source of power.
She learns that by sharing her deepest fears, desires, and mistakes, she allows herself to be truly known. And in doing so, she discovers a strength she never thought possible.
The more vulnerable she became, the stronger she grew.
Vulnerability isn’t about showing weakness—it’s about showing humanity. It’s about being real, and that’s where true strength lies.
Here’s why embracing your imperfections is one of the most powerful things you can do for yourself:
When we hide behind a mask, we keep people at arm’s length.
But when we allow ourselves to be vulnerable, we give others permission to do the same.
This creates deeper, more authentic relationships, where people are able to truly see and support each other.
When we hide our pain, we bottle it up—and it festers.
But when we let our guard down, we begin the healing process.
By acknowledging our wounds, we make room for the healing light of mercy and compassion to enter.
It’s easy to criticize ourselves when we feel imperfect.
But when we embrace our flaws, we learn to love ourselves more fully.
Vulnerability helps us realize that we are worthy of love—not despite our imperfections, but because of them.
Showing our true selves is a radical act of bravery.
It takes courage to be vulnerable in a world that often values perfection over authenticity.
But every time we choose to be real, we take back our power.
If you’re ready to start embracing vulnerability in your own life, here are a few steps you can take:
You don’t have to share your deepest fears with the world overnight.
Start by sharing small truths with people you trust—perhaps a friend, family member, or even a journal.
Allow yourself to be open, one step at a time.
It’s okay to not have it all together.
Perfection is an illusion, and striving for it only leads to disappointment.
Instead of focusing on being perfect, focus on being honest.
The more honest you are, the more powerful you become.
Find people and environments where you can express yourself freely without fear of judgment.
A trusted friend, a supportive community, or even a creative outlet like writing or art can provide the space you need to explore your vulnerability.
There will be moments when you feel ashamed of your imperfections.
But the key to vulnerability is accepting yourself in spite of those moments—not waiting until you feel “fixed.”
Practice self-compassion and forgive yourself for being human.
Every time you allow yourself to be vulnerable, you grow stronger.
Celebrate the bravery it takes to show up as your true self.
Acknowledge the courage it takes to be vulnerable—and honor that strength.
When you allow yourself to be vulnerable, you give others the permission to do the same.
You create a ripple effect of authenticity, of truth, of connection.
And that’s where the real power lies.
You are not weak for showing your flaws—you are strong because you choose to be seen.
In Mercy, the journey to healing is one of embracing vulnerability.
It’s about a woman who learns that her imperfections don’t make her unworthy—they make her real.
And that’s where the power lies.
If you’re ready to let go of the illusion of perfection and step into your true strength, let Mercy guide you.
👉 Read a free chapter of Mercy here:
https://anurimabel.blogspot.com/2025/05/free-excerpt-from-mercy.html?m=1
👉 Buy Mercy today
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Next: Conclusion
By Anuri Mabel
https://anurimabel.blogspot.com/2025/05/conclusion-by-anuri-mabel.html
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As we come to the end of this journey, remember that Mercy is not simply a destination—it is a continual process. It is the understanding that healing takes time, that vulnerability is a path to power, and that you are worthy of every bit of grace, love, and healing that comes your way.
The character in this book may have walked through darkness, but so have you—and so have I. But what is most important is that we rise. We rise not because we are perfect, but because we have learned to embrace our flaws and the scars we carry with pride. The strength found in mercy is not one of might or force; it is the strength of tenderness, of self-compassion, and of knowing that we are worthy of the care we often offer to others but forget to offer ourselves.
You are enough. Even in your darkest moments. Even in the times you feel most vulnerable. You are worthy of mercy. And the moment you allow yourself to embrace that truth, you begin to heal.
Let this story be a reminder that you don’t have to walk alone. You are part of a sisterhood of women who are discovering their own strength, power, and worth. And just as the protagonist of this story finds peace in her vulnerability, so can you.
The journey of mercy doesn’t end with the last page. It continues in every act of kindness you show yourself, every moment you choose to heal, and every day you step forward with the courage to be seen.
You are worthy of all the mercy, grace, and love that you so freely give to others. Now, let it be yours.
Thank you for reading. May you walk forward with a heart full of mercy and a soul unburdened by shame, knowing that you are always enough, just as you are.