Spiritual September - Why I'm Not Charlie Kirk ( No hate)

I'm willing to talk about taboo subject because some one needs to shed light on these things. That said I try to have a balanced approach when writing these articles.

I hope I have succeeded on this very sensitive post. 


๐ŸŒผ Why I’m Not Charlie Kirk




Every so often, someone asks me if I follow Charlie Kirk, or assume that because I’m a Christian, I must share his views. The short answer is: I don’t.  I was made to be Hayley not Charlie. 

This isn’t about disliking a person. Charlie Kirk is made in the image of God, just like all of us. This is about clarity — about what kind of Christian I want to be, and what kind of faith I want to reflect.

1. Christianity isn’t a political brand

When Christianity gets reduced to a political platform, it loses its heart. Jesus didn’t die for a party, a nation, or an ideology. He died to reconcile people to God. My faith can and should influence how I engage with the world — but it can never be reduced to slogans or voting blocs.

2. The gospel doesn’t fit neatly in culture wars

The way of Jesus is often at odds with the way of power. He told us to love our enemies, care for the poor, and lay down our lives for others. That doesn’t fit neatly into culture wars. When I hear Christianity reduced to winning arguments or “owning the other side,” I know something’s been lost.

3. Discipleship is about humility, not clout

So much of public-facing Christianity today is about platforms, influence, and soundbites. But Jesus washed feet. He sought out the forgotten. He lived without wealth or status. If my faith starts looking more like a brand strategy than the Beatitudes, I need to stop and re-center.

4. Faith is bigger than fear

Much of the rhetoric I hear in political Christianity is built on fear: fear of losing power, fear of outsiders, fear of change. But scripture reminds us:

“There is no fear in love. But perfect love drives out fear.” (1 John 4:18)

That’s the kind of faith I want to live by — one that builds bridges instead of barricades.


So why am I not Charlie Kirk?

Because I don’t want a faith that’s fueled by culture wars, outrage, or political gain. I want a faith that looks like Jesus: humble, sacrificial, rooted in love and truth.

And while I may stumble often, I know this much: the gospel is far too precious to be reduced to talking points.

— ๐ŸŒผHayley Esther 

Spiritual September - 'Why witchcraft is Dangerous

 Spiritual September: Why Witchcraft Is Dangerous

Around the world, witchcraft takes many forms. Sometimes it looks like old traditions passed down through families. Sometimes it’s dressed up as “harmless fun” — spells on TikTok, crystals, horoscopes, tarot cards. And in some places, it’s deeply tied to cultural practices and rituals.

It’s easy to dismiss it all as “just stories” or “just a vibe.” But scripture is very clear: God takes this seriously.

“Let no one be found among you… who practices divination or sorcery, interprets omens, engages in witchcraft, or casts spells… Anyone who does these things is detestable to the Lord.”
— Deuteronomy 18:10–12

Why is witchcraft dangerous?

  1. It promises control that belongs to God.
    At the heart of most witchcraft is the idea that we can bend reality — through rituals, symbols, or forces — to get what we want. But control belongs to God alone. Trying to seize it ourselves always leads us away from Him.

  2. It opens doors we can’t close.
    Even practices that seem harmless — “just lighting a candle,” “just trying a tarot card spread” — can open spiritual doors we don’t understand. Evil rarely shows up in full costume; it slips in quietly.

  3. It distracts us from the truth.
    Witchcraft often thrives on curiosity. But chasing “secret knowledge” keeps us from what God has already revealed plainly in His Word: His love, His promises, His guidance.

What’s the alternative?

The gospel doesn’t just say “don’t dabble in witchcraft.” It offers something infinitely better: the presence of the Holy Spirit. We don’t need spells, charms, or omens — we have direct access to God Himself through prayer. That’s not only safer, it’s more powerful than anything counterfeit.

Final thought

Witchcraft is dangerous not because it’s “spooky,” but because it pulls us away from God. And the further we drift from Him, the easier it is to lose sight of His truth and His protection.

In a world fascinated by the mystical, our call as Christians is simple:

“Submit yourselves, then, to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you.” (James 4:7)

So this September, let’s be watchful. Let’s stay curious about God, not counterfeit powers. And let’s remember that Christ’s light is stronger than any shadow.

— ๐ŸŒผHayls 

Daisy Change 5.0. New direction of this blog

 Hey there and a warm welcome to Daisy Change!

There's a lot more of you now so it's time to reintroduce myself and tell you the direction of this blog. 

So first up , hello! I'm Hayley and I'm so glad you're here! 

Over the years Daisy Change has been through changes. In the last season we were about fashion and mindset but let's be honest! 

This space had become more spiritual overtime. 

You guys seem to like that so we're running a series called 'spiritual September' I have a lot to say in the half month we have for that content. 

I'm not abandoning fashion though I just moved all the fashion content into its own blog.

You are welcome to follow me there if you want to

daisychangediaries.uk 

If you're more about my spiritual content you will be pleased to know mindset and spirituality is what I will be blogging about here.

Also, a Christmas sister site is coming soon! 

I think that's the house keeping done.

Catch you next post!

Love Hayley 

xXx

Blogging for the Glory of God - Writing with purpose

✨ Blogging for the Glory of God – Writing with Purpose

Hey loves,

Blogging is more than sharing thoughts, style tips, or stories. It can also be a way to honour God with our creativity, our words, and the communities we build. Whether you blog about fashion, lifestyle, faith, or everyday life, the heart behind it matters most. Today, let’s talk about what it means to blog for the glory of God.


๐ŸŒธ 1. Start with Your Why

Ask yourself: Why am I writing this? Is it to inspire, encourage, or point others toward something greater than ourselves? When your motivation begins with glorifying God, it shifts your tone from self-promotion to service and love.


๐ŸŒฟ 2. Create with Integrity

Honouring God through blogging means practicing honesty, kindness, and care in what you share.

  • Be transparent with your audience.

  • Avoid comparison or envy traps.

  • Remember: your worth isn’t in pageviews, but in living out your calling faithfully.


✨ 3. Use Your Gifts

God has given each of us unique talents and perspectives. Maybe you’re gifted at styling, storytelling, or teaching. Blogging becomes worship when we use those gifts joyfully, offering them back to Him through excellence and creativity.


๐ŸŒฟ 4. Build Community, Not Just Content

At the heart of every blog is a community of readers. Blogging for the glory of God means seeing them as more than clicks or numbers — they’re people with real lives and real needs. Show up with empathy, encouragement, and compassion.


๐ŸŒธ 5. Keep It Rooted in Faith

You don’t have to make every post a sermon, but weaving in faith-filled values like gratitude, stewardship, or hope brings depth to your writing. Even posts about fashion or lifestyle can reflect God’s beauty and truth when approached with humility and love.


๐Ÿ’ก Final Thought

Blogging for the glory of God isn’t about being perfect or preachy. It’s about writing with a heart of service, love, and intention, offering every post — big or small — as an act of worship. When we blog this way, we not only create beautiful content but also leave a legacy of encouragement and light in the digital world. 

Spiritual September - Mindful Dressing

๐ŸŒฟ Spiritual September: Mindful Dressing – Wearing Intention Every Day 



Hey loves,

Fashion isn’t just about trends — it’s about how our clothes make us feel, the energy they carry, and the message they send. In our Spiritual September journey, today we’re diving into Mindful Dressing: the art of making intentional wardrobe choices that bring peace, presence, and purpose into your daily life.


๐ŸŒธ What is Mindful Dressing?

Mindful dressing is about pausing before you get dressed and asking:

  • How do I want to feel today?

  • What message do I want to carry with me?

  • Which pieces truly align with who I am right now?

It’s not about perfection, minimalism, or rules — it’s about alignment.


๐ŸŒฟ How to Practice Mindful Dressing

1. Choose Colours with Purpose

  • Earth tones (beige, olive, grey) → grounding and calm

  • Blues → serenity and clarity

  • Whites and creams → renewal and peace

2. Embrace Comfort Without Compromise

When your clothes feel good, your mind and spirit feel lighter too. Choose breathable fabrics, relaxed fits, and textures that bring you comfort.

3. Keep What Sparks Connection

Your wardrobe doesn’t need to be endless — it needs to feel personal and meaningful. Hold on to pieces that carry a story, memory, or purpose.

4. Dress with Ritual

Turn getting dressed into a moment of stillness: light a candle, play soft music, or say an affirmation as you choose your outfit.


✨ Outfit Ideas for Mindful Dressing

  1. Grounded Morning

    • Olive wide-leg trousers

    • Cream knit top

    • Minimal sandals

  2. Calm Workday

    • Navy linen shirt

    • Beige chinos

    • Neutral loafers

  3. Evening Renewal

    • White flowy dress

    • Soft cardigan

    • Simple pendant necklace


๐Ÿ’ก Final Thought

Mindful dressing isn’t about adding pressure — it’s about finding peace in something you already do daily. Each outfit becomes a chance to express intention, honour your values, and carry calm into the world around you.


Next in Spiritual September, we could explore “Sacred Wardrobes”, a deeper look at how fashion connects to spirituality across cultures and traditions. 

Grieving the young



Holding the Unseen Hearts

There are some realities that feel too heavy to hold, and yet they exist—quiet, unavoidable, and profoundly heartbreaking. The loss of young lives is one of them. It is a grief that ripples through families, friends, communities, and even strangers who pause to witness the void left behind.

It is impossible to make sense of such loss, because often there is no sense to be made. Life, in its fragile beauty, can be unexpectedly brief, leaving memories that are bright but incomplete, like flowers that bloom too quickly and then vanish.

When young lives are taken, what remains is both the ache of absence and the reminder of how deeply life matters. The laughter, the curiosity, the tender moments that once seemed ordinary now shine with extraordinary significance. Every small gesture, every shared smile, becomes precious in retrospect.

Grief in the face of such loss is natural. It can feel like a shadow stretching across the heart, a quiet reminder that life is fragile. And yet, even within the sorrow, there is a call to tenderness—to hold each other more gently, to listen more fully, to be present with one another in ways that matter.

Though words can never fill the emptiness left behind, we can honor young lives by carrying their memory softly, by nurturing the connections we still have, and by letting their brief presence remind us of the beauty and fragility of being alive.

Life can be brief, but its imprint is lasting. And in remembering those who left too soon, we allow their light to continue, quietly, in the hearts of all who loved them and all who pause to reflect.



The seasons we carry



The Seasons We Carry

Change has often been compared to the seasons, and for good reason. Nature teaches us what it means to shift, to rest, to bloom, to let go. But what we don’t always notice is that we carry all the seasons within us—sometimes all in the same day.

There are mornings that feel like spring. Hopeful, fresh, full of possibility. A spark of energy returns, and the air around us seems to hum with beginnings. Then, there are summer afternoons, stretched wide with abundance—moments of laughter, warmth, and fullness that remind us how good it feels to be alive.

But inevitably, autumn arrives. Something asks to be released. A job, a belief, a version of ourselves that no longer fits. These are not easy changes, but they are necessary ones. The falling leaves remind us that letting go is not the end, but a preparation for what comes next.

And of course, winter has its place too. The stillness, the silence, the pause. It is tempting to see this season as emptiness, but winter is a deep kind of work—a quiet restoration we often overlook.

The truth is, change doesn’t move in a straight line. It circles, cycles, returns. We can be in the middle of a spring-like beginning while still carrying autumn’s grief. We can be basking in summer’s joy while winter waits patiently, reminding us that rest will be needed too.

This is what it means to be human: to hold all the seasons at once, to honor whichever one is asking for our attention in the moment.

Maybe today you feel yourself in bloom. Maybe you’re shedding. Maybe you’re waiting in the stillness, trusting that something unseen is taking root. Whatever season you’re in, know that it belongs. Each one is necessary. Each one has something to teach.

Change, like the seasons, is never final. It is always moving, always circling back, always reminding us that nothing is lost—only transformed.

So let’s carry the seasons gently, remembering that no matter where we stand, spring always comes again.  

When Authenticity Becomes a Performance ( Shocktober)

When Authenticity Becomes a Performance

For years, “authenticity” has been the holy grail of culture. Brands promised it, influencers preached it, friends posted about it. Authenticity meant honesty, vulnerability, truth. It was meant to cut through the noise of curation and give us something raw. But by 2025, authenticity itself has become an aesthetic, a strategy, and a performance. What began as rebellion has become routine.


The Rise of Realness

The demand for authenticity grew out of exhaustion. After years of filters, Photoshop, and staged perfection, audiences craved something different. They wanted to see stretch marks instead of retouching, breakdowns instead of highlights, mess instead of polish. Platforms rewarded it. Influencers leaned in. Brands swapped slogans for “we’re just like you” messaging.

Realness was no longer fringe — it was mainstream. And once something becomes mainstream, it becomes marketable.


Vulnerability for Sale

Scroll through feeds in 2025 and you’ll see carefully edited “messiness”:

  • The makeup-free selfie, still lit by a ring light.

  • The candid rant, rehearsed three times.

  • The “unfiltered” vlog, cut and spliced for maximum relatability.

Even grief and trauma have become content categories. We are encouraged not just to share our pain but to optimize it, to turn it into views, to grow followings through vulnerability. Authenticity stopped being a truth and became a tactic.


The Trap of Constant Honesty

There is a darker side to this. Audiences now expect constant access to the “real” self. Creators who don’t share enough are accused of being fake; public figures who withhold feel dishonest. The performance of authenticity is relentless: once you’ve built a brand on being raw, how do you ever get to heal privately?

The irony is sharp: authenticity, meant to free us from performance, has become the most exhausting performance of all.


Authenticity vs. Integrity

So where does that leave us? Maybe the answer is not in performing authenticity, but in practicing integrity. Integrity isn’t about constant exposure; it’s about alignment. It asks: Do my actions match my values, even when no one is watching? Integrity doesn’t need proof or posts. It doesn’t demand visibility. It just requires consistency.

In this way, integrity might be the antidote to the authenticity trap. While authenticity craves attention, integrity survives without it.


Beyond the Daisy Chain

The daisy chain of authenticity links one performance to the next. Each person shares, each post gets rewarded, each platform doubles down. But somewhere in the chain, someone has to ask: Who benefits from my performance? Am I sharing to connect, or am I sharing because I feel I must?

Breaking the chain might mean saying less, not more. It might mean stepping away from the demand to narrate every wound. It might mean saving pieces of yourself for yourself.


Final Statement

In 2025, authenticity is no longer raw — it’s curated. The shock isn’t in oversharing; it’s in resisting the pressure to turn your life into content. The boldest statement is not to perform authenticity, but to protect your integrity.

The Playfulness of faith (Joyful June)

The Playfulness of Faith ๐ŸŽจ

Faith isn’t only about solemn prayer or serious reflection—it’s also about joy, creativity, and play. God delights in our laughter, imagination, and moments of lighthearted wonder.

“A cheerful heart is good medicine, but a crushed spirit dries up the bones.”
— Proverbs 17:22


Embracing Play in Spiritual Life

Sometimes we take faith too seriously, forgetting that God created play, curiosity, and laughter as part of life. Embracing play in our spiritual walk allows us to:

  • Connect with God in fresh ways

  • Release stress and tension

  • Strengthen relationships with others

  • Recognize God’s joy in creation


Ways to Bring Play into Your Faith

  • Creative Prayer: Draw, doodle, or write your prayers.

  • Singing or Dancing: Lift your spirit in joyful movement or song.

  • Imaginative Reflection: Picture Bible stories in your mind, imagining yourself within them.

  • Fun Fellowship: Share laughter and lighthearted moments with friends and family as a form of worship.


Reflection for Today

๐ŸŒž How can you introduce a playful element into your spiritual routine today?
๐ŸŒž In what ways has laughter or creativity drawn you closer to God?


Joyful June reminds us that God’s presence isn’t only solemn—it’s vibrant, playful, and alive. Embrace the lightness and joy He offers!

Joyful June : Practicing joy daily

 Joy as a Spiritual Discipline ๐ŸŒž

Joy is more than a fleeting feeling—it’s a practice, a discipline, and a way of seeing the world through God’s eyes. In Joyful June, we are invited to cultivate joy intentionally, letting it flow from the inside out.

“Rejoice in the Lord always. I will say it again: Rejoice!”

— Philippians 4:4


The Nature of Joy


Unlike happiness, which often depends on circumstances, joy is rooted in God’s presence. It persists even in difficulty, offering a quiet, steady light in the storms of life. When we make joy a discipline, we train our hearts to notice God’s goodness in every moment.


---

Practicing Joy Daily


* **Gratitude Lists**: Begin or end your day naming three things you are thankful for.

* **Celebrate Small Wins**: Every act of kindness, every step forward, deserves recognition.

* **Lift Others Up**: Sharing joy multiplies it. A smile, encouraging word, or prayer for someone else spreads light.

* **Sing or Praise**: Music awakens the spirit; sing quietly, loudly, or in your heart.

 Reflection for Today

๐ŸŒž What small moments of joy can you intentionally notice today?

๐ŸŒž How can you share the joy God has given you with someone else this week?

✨ *Joyful June* reminds us that joy is not passive—it is a spiritual discipline. When we practice it, we align our hearts with God’s delight in us and the world around us.