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A Wilder Eden

A Wilder Eden helps you reimagine your story when the pages of your life don’t mirror your dreams. It reminds us that God, the author of our stories and champion of our dreams, calls us to co-create with Him and keep dreaming despite our doubt and beckons us into his greater Kingdom dreams.

There are all wildernesses in our lives and long droughts of waiting; in this process, we feel our dreams have died, or that we don’t even know what our dreams are anymore. We wonder how to keep dreaming in a world of disappointments. Yet, there are certain things that can only bloom in the desert, chiefly the fruit of our hearts. God knows us intimately and we have to go into the desert to find Him, and rediscover ourselves. In this unconventional place, we discover that when viewed from the lens of faith, the wilderness is, in fact, a wilder Garden of Eden than the actual Eden in which we think we would be better off. Even in drought, we can bear fruit; only certain things can bloom in the desert.

God did not make us to wander, but rather wonder, in the wilderness. He is our faithful Father, and will not only lead us out, but also will lead us through. He doesn’t miss a single thing: a prayer, whisper or cry of our hearts. Be still, know that He is God, and dare to dream that the wilderness might just be the very place where you discover how loved and free you are - this book will precisely show you how to do that.

Too Much

Many women believe they are not enough. Some believe they are too much. These women are the dramatic dreamers, the hill-climbers, the radicals, the movers and shakers. They scale businesses, multi-task, have large networks, run marathons, and come across as intense to those they encounter. They are the women who don’t take no for an answer. And they are the women who defy odds and make history. These women say too much, ask too much, strive too much, dare too much, have feelings that are too much, and rock the boat … too much.


As these women navigate business, family, culture and society, it becomes increasingly the case that many of them discover later in their lives as seasoned, mature women that they are ADHD, an unwelcome label that is difficult to hold as title in a world that expects composure, calm, precision and the status quo. They are the women men can’t figure out, women can’t figure out and especially bosses can’t figure out. They’re like fire — and people don’t want to be burned by them.


Then there is the layer of faith. Women who love God, and often feel lost in a world where the practice of faith requires a balance between logic, wisdom, and emotions. We are the ones harnessing their emotions carefully and wisely, but often feeling like we give way to our whimsical feelings. How do these women harness and catalyze their emotions for eternal, productive good? How do we take our passions, dreams, longings, hopes and aspirations and focus them into a harmonized vision that is centered on truth and wisdom?


This new book isn’t so much about the science behind ADHD. It’s about the daily life experiences surrounding ADHD that women constantly navigate, and are learning (even in later ages) to move through with knowledge, poise and grace. The moments, experiences and stories that come with shame and sadness can be transformed through spirit, strength, support, and sacrifice. The superpower that is a double edged sword — the both/and, and the maturity of learning how to recognize a life lived both in emotional spirit and in logical truth.


Especially in professional settings women who are intense, emotional, visionary, or impulsive often wrestle with guilt and shame for not fitting the mold of composure, calm, and control. But what if the problem isn’t spiritual failure—it’s undiagnosed ADHD and a lack of a scientific framework?


Too Much is not going to be a clinical manual, but a transformational guidebook for women navigating the realities of life with ADHD. This book reframes common struggles—impulsivity, reactivity, emotional depth, and executive dysfunction—not as character flaws, but as neurological patterns with both challenges and strengths. It will offer readers life + spiritual tools and practical wisdom to rewire their self-perception, relationships, and daily lives.


From romantic relationships and conflict resolution, to career focus and money management, Too Much brings compassionate clarity to the chaos. Through real stories, scriptural truths, and science-backed frameworks, this book helps women connect the dots between their symptoms and their struggles—then walks them toward healing, purpose, and community.

Too Much Book Cover
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