Kristen LaValley
Author Sometimes being a mom is awesome. Sometimes it's not. And sometimes, you just have to rock a top knot and a spit up stain. I won't judge you.
I’m not doing this again. LOCK IN.
05/21/2026
Almost one week post-hysterectomy and I am feeling better than I have in years. It’s hard to wrap my head around how much my broken uterus was making me sick and affecting my life. Obviously I knew it was bad, but now that I’m existing in a body without pain, I have some perspective on just how bad it really was.
I am so excited to be a “normal” mom and wife and friend again. No more having to plan our lives around my pain and bleeding. Finally being physically able to cook and clean and manage our home again. I wish I’d gotten diagnosed a lot sooner. I wish I’d tossed the uterus a long time ago. So incredibly grateful to be on this side of it all. There was a long period of time when I wasn’t sure how much longer I could handle the physical suffering.
Grateful for modern medicine.
And for doctors who listen and believe you.
And for scary robots that make surgery easier.
And friends who feed us.
And strangers who pray.
Here’s to the next chapter of my life.
May it be a lot more fun than the last. 🥂
05/12/2026
A little over a year ago, my doctors thought I had a cancerous tumor on my o***y. A few months later, I was diagnosed with Adenomyosis - the most painful chronic illness a woman can develop.
Just when we were starting to come up for air after years of trauma, I developed a progressive, chronic disease, that has had me flat on my back for large parts of the last five years of my life.
Please send all your prayers, thoughts, and good energy up for me on Friday (May 15th) at around 7am eastern time. I’ll be headed into surgery to make sure I never have a red devil in my baby box ever again. 😆
So grateful for all the ways God has healed me and provided miracle after miracle for me to be a mother and now one last miracle through the hands of an all female medical team who listened to me, believed me, found what the boys refused to look for, and gave me a runway to healing.
For the ladies, we give thanks.
I’ll see you on the other side of surgery. ✌️
04/29/2026
I woke up this morning thinking about the past few years of my life when people have been concerned for my faith. The years of faith when I have finally started believing that God really does love us, that he’s really REALLY good, that he meant the things he said. Concern for my faith because of the company I keep, the books that I read, the choices I make.
But no one was ever concerned when I hated myself. Or when the company I kept was cruel and cold and mean. Or when the books I was reading told me not to get help for my depression and anxiety. When I wanted to die. When I woke up every day terrified to breathe wrong in case it made God angry. When I was living in constant panic and anxiety about how my faith was being perceived and recieved by the people I love and the people I don’t. That was acceptable. That showed earnesty and sincerity. If you’re miserable, you’re trying.
But when you relax into the love of God and actually believe that Jesus came for us to have LIFE and to have that life in abundance, people start to side eye a little.
Some people are a lot more comfortable when your faith makes you miserable. I will never ever understand why a faith that makes you feel alive, free, loved, and excited is less palatable than one that makes you afraid.
Freedom in Christ is a beautiful thing, my friends. And it doesn’t have to cost your joy, peace, and nervous system. You can be a faithful follower of Jesus without spiritual (and physical) misery.
___
04/25/2026
Spring break in Boston is just what the LaValley fam needed. 🌼
04/20/2026
When my mental health was at its worst, I lived inside two stories :
Only Zach could save me.
I was too much to care for.
He was the hero and I was the burden.
Those things were both true and not true at the same time, but they shaped the way we loved each other.
When I finally started getting real help (therapy, support, naming what was actually happening inside of my mind and body) I began to see how much those roles were costing us.
My healing was never supposed to hinge on someone else rescuing me. And my suffering never made me less worthy of being loved.
I’m not a project to fix or wait out. He’s not a savior whose purpose in life is to rescue me.
Relationships can’t survive on pedestals or shame. They need to stay down here were the humans are … where things are honest and messy and sometimes uneven.
Where one person says:
“I can’t carry all of this for you.”
And the other says:
“I won’t make you responsible for my wholeness.”
That’s where codependency and resentment started to lose their hold on us. I needed to get help and support outside of him and we both needed tell the truth. I had to be realistic about what my health has cost him without feeling ashamed. He had to stop feeling like he was a hero for taking care of me. We both had to face the reality that that there are inescapable, burdensome aspects of being in a relationship.
And that that is absolutely ok.
He doesn’t have to be a hero to love me well.
I don’t have to be “easy” to be worth staying for.
neither do you.
//
Wrote a whole chapter on this in 👉
04/13/2026
We packed into a cozy little bookstore in Lancaster, PA and I read from my book and answered questions and had conversations that don’t wrap up cleanly but matter SO deeply.
Growing Up Saved has had a complicated road to readers so far, so nights like this mean the world to me.
To everyone who came: thank you doesn’t cover it, but it’s what I have. You made the room feel like exactly what this book is about : the power of being seen, understood, and finding belonging exactly AS you are, WHERE you are.
And not for nothing, but to every bookstore that has ever taken a chance on an author event: you are doing something really, really important. I always say things like this put skin on the work that I do, and that’s important (crucial) for me, but it’s important for readers too.
Several of the women waiting in the signing line told me they’d been talking to each other while they waited and what they kept saying was how safe they felt. Just from being in a room full of people who had all found their way to the same book/person.
There is something so powerful about words that gather people. They’re a homing signal that lets people know they aren’t alone. The power of “hey same.” Authors need bookstores who make room for those connections, so I’m really grateful to for making that happen last night. 🥹
(Thank you for that last photo ! It’s a good representation of how last night felt.)
But really - how did you KNOW
The Growing Up Saved book launch was not what I planned. And as a neurodivergent woman … things not going as planned is like … physically painful.
No one really knows what happened, but books didn’t make it to warehouses, orders got bottlenecked, and a lot of you waited weeks for something that either never came or arrived looking like it had survived a hurricane.
I’ve been gutted about it. Obviously.
But I am Kathleen Kelly and yes I know she ends up losing in the end, but let’s just take some creative liberties here.
Here’s what the book actually is, for anyone who doesn’t know:
It’s for the anyone who grew up in church (or whose faith was nurtured at any point in their lives) feeling like you couldn’t get it right even though you were saying the right things, praying the right prayers, performing a faith your body could never quite hold. It’s about what happens when the thing you built your life on starts to crack — and what it looks like to rebuild something that actually fits. it’s about what spiritual abuse requires in us, the cost of unraveling beliefs that harmed you, and what happens to a child when neurodivergence is treated as sin, and it’s about the long, slow work of learning to trust yourself and to believe that God doesn’t hate you.
So here’s how you can help :
📖 Leave a review on Amazon or Goodreads.
📋 Add it to Goodreads lists
📙 host a book club
💬 share it in a group text
📲 Share this post or the reel to your stories.
💌 Think of someone who needs this book. Send it to them.
We’re going to the mattresses. 💻🥊
Click here to claim your Sponsored Listing.
Category
Contact the public figure
Website
Address
Springfield, MA
01101, 01103–01105, 01107–01109, 01118-01119, 01128–01129, 01151