About me
I'm not a pastor. I don't have a ministry organization. I'm a regular person who prays a lot, and a few years ago I started doing it for strangers who needed it.
I grew up in a church-going family in central Ohio — the kind where attendance was assumed and faith was real, but nobody talked about it dramatically. I drifted some in my twenties. I came back more quietly than I left, and what I came back to was mostly just prayer. Sitting with things. Asking for help on behalf of people I cared about. Noticing, over time, that it seemed to matter even when I couldn't explain why.
The specific moment that started this was in the fall of 2021. My neighbor — a woman in her seventies I'd spoken to maybe a dozen times in three years — told me in passing that her husband was in the hospital and she was scared. I said I'd pray for him, meaning it the way most people mean it: sincerely, vaguely, probably forgetting by the next morning.
But I didn't forget. I wrote his name down on a piece of paper and I actually prayed for him that night, and the next morning, and a few more times that week. He came home from the hospital. I don't know if the two things are connected and I'm not going to claim they are. But what I noticed was the effect it had on me — the act of holding someone else's specific situation in prayer, taking it seriously, returning to it. It felt like something I was supposed to do more of.
So I started offering. First to people I knew, then more broadly. I put up this small website so that people I don't know could find it.
Most mornings look something like this.
Here's how it works, practically. You email me a prayer request. It can be as specific or as vague as you want — a name, a situation, a feeling, a sentence. I write it in a notebook I keep for this purpose. I pray for it that day, and I return to it for at least a few days after. If I have many requests at once, I work through them. I don't rush them.
I keep everything private. I don't share requests with anyone, I don't reference them online, and I won't add your email address to anything. If you want to let me know how things went, you're welcome to write back — but there's no expectation of that, and no follow-up from my end unless you ask for it.
I'm not affiliated with a church or religious organization in any official capacity. I'm a private individual. The prayer is the whole thing.
If you have a request, send it along. I'm glad to carry it.