Disclosure: Many thanks to He Calls Me Daughter for providing a sample of the product for this review. Opinions are 100% my own.
There are wounds many people carry quietly.
Sometimes they’ve been there so long that we don’t even realize they’re shaping the way we see ourselves, our relationships, and even our faith. Deep-seated hurts, especially those connected to family, can become such a normal part of our story that we stop recognizing them as wounds at all.
But something powerful happens when we finally name them.
Recently I learned about the new film He Calls Me Daughter, which will be in theaters for a limited time on March 17th-18th. The film explores a deeply personal topic that resonates with many women: the father wound.
Through intimate, first-person stories (and this is NOT a film bashing dads, or anyone), viewers walk alongside women who begin to identify the pain they’ve carried for years...feeling unseen, unsupported, or unsure of their worth.
As their stories unfold, the film gently invites audiences to reflect on their own experiences and consider the possibility of healing. One of the themes that stood out to me is the idea that true healing isn’t ultimately found in earthly relationships, but in a relationship with our Heavenly Father.
That truth is powerful.
It’s so easy to carry emotional wounds through life without realizing they’re there. We adapt. We cope. We move forward. But when we finally identify those places of pain and feel the desire to resolve them, something important begins to shift.
Healing begins.
And in my experience, that healing doesn’t happen through willpower alone. It happens with the help of God. He will find a way to open that door to healing for you, and it's going to be very important, that you walk through it.
When we allow God to meet us in those wounded places, we begin to see ourselves differently. The lies we’ve believed about our worth start to lose their power. We begin to understand what it really means to be loved by a Father who never withdraws, one who offers peace, belonging, and restoration.
That’s when real growth becomes possible.
He Calls Me Daughter is more than just a film, it’s an invitation. An invitation to reflect, to recognize the wounds we may be carrying, and to discover the healing that comes from knowing we are deeply loved by our Heavenly Father.
The movie will be in theaters for two days only: March 17-18.
If this message resonates with you, it is a film worth seeing. Tickets for sale HERE.
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