Sips from the Fountain

Martha Gano

Learning to drink from Jesus, the Fountain of Living Water, isn’t as hard as I thought, especially when you just start with sips, and those will change everything. 

  1. DEC 9

    When Life Feels Too Much and Too Tough

    Send us a text What do you hold on to when the bottom drops out twice? We sit down with our friend Linda Blechinger to trace a path through two life-altering storms: a shocking cancer diagnosis that led to years of agony, and the sudden onset of her husband Dan’s stage four lymphoma during the first terrifying weeks of COVID. Linda kept leading as a mayor while navigating relentless pain, then walked with Dan through surgeries, chemo, and an experimental trial, only to face grief in a world where funerals moved outdoors and travel stopped. Linda’s candor is the heartbeat of this conversation. She talks about naming pain without feeding it, choosing honesty on days when prayer felt impossible, and the hard, scriptural work of “fighting to enter rest.” Along the way, Isaiah 54 reframed her daily life with the steady assurance of God’s nearness as husband and protector when loneliness, finances, and decisions pressed in. If you’re wrestling with grief, illness, or the aftershocks of loss, Linda offers more than inspiration—she offers tools. Magnify God over fear. Let the Psalms reset your scale. Stop performing long enough to be held. Take the next right step, then the next. There’s no rushed timeline for healing, and there’s no shame in needing quiet. Join us for a story that refuses clichés and shows how resilient faith forms, one honest moment at a time. If this conversation encouraged you, subscribe, share it with a friend who needs hope today, and leave a review so more people can find the show.

    31 min
  2. NOV 13

    A Road Map for Pain: Permission to Grieve and Courage to Heal

    Send us a text What does trust look like when the answer you begged for doesn’t come? We sit with Linda Blechinger as she walks us through the radiant, brief life of her son DJ, born with multiple heart defects, and the unflinching choices that shaped their family’s faith. From a quiet hospital room and a first reading of Psalm 91 to a living room filled with a holy hush, Linda shows how God’s presence can steady hands and soften fear, even when the path winds through surgery suites and sleepless nights. We trace the story from early motherhood in a new town to a diagnosis that changed everything. Linda shares how she learned to pray without demanding a specific outcome, how Scripture became a lifeline, and why “Do you trust Me?” turned into a daily practice rather than a single moment. There’s a tender fight to bring DJ home, a forbidden sip of Sprite that becomes a picture of living water, and a startling roar that reframes the battle between a prowling imitator and the Lion of Judah. Along the way we challenge bad theology—blame, shame, and the idea that God authors tragedy—and point to a better story rooted in Genesis, the reality of a broken world, and the victory of Christ. What follows is a map for real people in real pain: permission to grieve loudly, wisdom to study the Word for yourself, and courage to name God as good when life feels anything but. You’ll hear about funeral salvations, journaled prayers that came back as anchors, and the choice to see redemption where bitterness could have taken root. If you or someone you love is walking through loss, disappointment, or long uncertainty, this conversation offers language, comfort, and hope that holds. If this moved you, subscribe, share it with a friend who needs courage today, and leave a review so more people can find these stories.

    44 min
  3. OCT 22

    When Jesus Rescues: The Life of Linda Blechinger

    Send us a text What if the hardest chapters aren’t the end of the story but the place where meaning begins? Martha sits down with longtime friend and mentor Linda Blechinger for part one of a three-part arc that starts in the rubble of a fractured childhood and moves toward a life remade. Linda opens up about immigrant roots marked by wartime scarcity, the ache of an orphanage and foster care, and the shock of being taken from safety by a struggling mother. Her early independence becomes a lifeline—three jobs on the West Coast, catching the wave of the nail industry, and a fearless leap into defense manufacturing with nothing but grit and a promise to learn fast. The higher Linda climbs, the more she collides with a culture of exploitation that treats talent as disposable and dignity as a transaction. After years of harassment and one final ultimatum, despair leads her to a silent living room and a handful of pills. She wakes up two days later, convinced even God won’t let her go. Then a new colleague named Dan steps in—driving her to the hospital to see her mother, praying in a way that sounds like a real conversation, and offering care without strings. His simple confession—meeting Jesus changed my life—lands deeper than any argument. Alone that night, Linda whispers a small prayer that opens a wide door. What follows is not a formula but an encounter: tears, relief, and a world that looks newly colored the next morning. Their first date is a walk with a Bible and a flood of questions. Marriage comes with time, as does the courage to face motherhood after a childhood that taught her to fear it. Through it all runs a clear message: your past may explain you, but it doesn’t define you; your response does. This is a raw, faith-filled story of rescue, resilience, and purpose found in the unlikeliest places. If this conversation encouraged you, tap follow, share it with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review so more people can find the show.

    32 min
  4. OCT 7

    When Deepest Grief Forges Profound Trust: Loss of a Child

    Send us a text Grief rewires a life. Hope rewrites a story. We sit down with Hannah to trace both realities—starting with the ultrasound that shifted their world and moving through months of waiting, praying, and holding two truths at once: God can do a miracle, and we may still need to say goodbye. Noah’s 57 and a half hours become a lens for what goodness looks like when outcomes are devastating yet gifts are undeniable—arms full, family gathered, and time granted just before the world closed for a pandemic. We open up about the phrases that helped (“This is so hard, and I’m sorry”) and the ones that didn’t, the difference between digital connection and real presence, and why fixing isn’t the same as loving. Hannah shares the family motto—“Even though, we will”—and how it pushes back against an entitlement mindset that confuses faith with the promise of comfort. Her image from the Smoky Mountains lingers: fog settles in valleys, but from higher ground you see how that fog gives depth and makes the view possible. Suffering becomes terrain, not identity. The story doesn’t end there. Years later, their eldest son, Walker, is diagnosed with genetic epilepsy. Hannah admits what many of us feel: “I’ve suffered enough.” Instead of shutting down, she brings that honesty to God and finds a deeper, steadier trust—one shaped by the cross, the long view of Ephesians 2:10, and the daily choice to keep walking. If you’re carrying loss, living with uncertainty, or wrestling with God’s goodness, this conversation offers practical comfort, sturdy faith, and a way forward that doesn’t require perfect answers—just presence and a next step. If this episode meets you in the valley, share it with someone who needs company on the trail. Subscribe, leave a review, and tell us: what’s your “even though, I will”?

    49 min
  5. SEP 16

    Where is the Good, God? A Young Widow's Journey through Grief

    Send us a text When life shatters our expectations, where do we find God in the wreckage? This question burns at the heart of Kim Kiser's story—a journey that began with a profound spiritual vision at age 30 and culminated in becoming a widow at 43 with seven children to raise alone. Kim's transparent account of her husband Rob's unexpected death following what should have been routine heart surgery pulls back the curtain on grief's raw reality. While doctors initially diagnosed blocked arteries, they discovered multiple blood clots in his lungs during surgery. Despite medical intervention and countless prayers, Rob died ten days later, leaving Kim facing her worst fear. The authenticity with which Kim discusses her coping mechanisms resonates deeply. For six years, she pushed down her questions and pain, staying busy with raising her children and even opening a bakery with friends, all while wrestling with Romans 8:28—how could her husband's death possibly "work together for good"? This theological tension remained unresolved as she continued going through the motions of faith while harboring deep questions. The turning point came through complete surrender. In a moment of brutal honesty with God, Kim poured out her anger, confusion, and pain—and instead of the condemnation she feared, she experienced profound peace. This breakthrough revealed that the "good" promised in Scripture wasn't about improved circumstances but about transformation into Christ's image. Perhaps most surprising is Kim's revelation that her experience with loss gave her a new perspective on death itself. Having walked through that valley, she no longer fears it for herself or loved ones. Drawing parallels to biblical figures like Joseph who endured years of suffering before seeing God's purpose, Kim reminds us that when we're in the middle of our story, we can't just "turn the page" to see how it ends. Ready to discover where God is in your own struggle? Kim's book "Where is the Good God? Finding Good in Our Grief, Sorrow and Disappointment" explores these themes with depth and compassion. Join us in embracing the truth that on this broken planet, suffering might be normal—but it doesn't have to determine who we become.

    43 min
  6. AUG 27

    It's Never Too Late to be Happy: From Victim to Victor

    Send us a text What happens when the life you dreamed of falls apart, and the one you end up with looks nothing like you imagined? Allison Trice's powerful testimony reveals the unexpected joy she discovered in the midst of heartbreak, single motherhood, and raising a child with special needs. After two failed relationships left her feeling broken and ashamed, Allison found herself a single mother to a son with a rare chromosomal deletion. Drowning in medical bills, battling financial hardship, and facing an uncertain future, she reached her darkest moments hiding in her bathroom to cry after putting her son to bed. But everything changed when Allison made a profound choice – to own her part in her pain rather than simply blame those who hurt her. This shift from victim mentality to personal responsibility opened the door for deep healing and transformation. Through powerful prayer encounters, God removed her shame and gave her a promise that her nonverbal son would one day have "a mighty voice." The miracle in Allison's story isn't that her circumstances magically improved. In fact, she continued to face tremendous challenges, including the pandemic isolation as a single special needs parent and the sudden loss of her mother. The true miracle is what happened inside her – a profound contentment that defies logical explanation. "If anyone had ever told me that I would be a single mom in my 40s, raising a special needs child alone, and happier than I'd ever been, I would never have believed them," Allison shares in the moment that defines her journey from victim to victor. Today, Allison ministers to others through teaching, supporting special needs families, and even speaking at marriage conferences – a testament to her complete healing. And her son, though not speaking conventionally, truly has found his voice through assistive technology, fulfilling God's promise in unexpected ways. This episode challenges our cultural obsession with perfect circumstances and reminds us that true joy comes not from getting the life we thought we wanted, but from embracing the one we have with gratitude, purpose, and faith. Listen now and discover how you too can move from victim to victor, regardless of your circumstances.

    36 min
  7. JUL 8

    Young, Alone, and Pregnant: No "Mess Up" is Too Big for God

    Send us a text What do you do when life doesn't follow your carefully laid plans? When the path you expected becomes unrecognizable? This question lies at the heart of Savannah Sands' extraordinary journey from bitterness to breakthrough. Savannah never imagined becoming a single mother at 21. Raised in a conservative Christian home with solid biblical knowledge but limited real-world application, she found herself pregnant in college and facing a future that looked nothing like she'd planned. The judgment she received from her faith community planted seeds of bitterness that threatened to define her future.  But Savannah's story isn't about victimhood—it's about choice. Recognizing that her bitterness would ultimately harm her young son, she took a brave step toward healing. Through a small group for single mothers and transformative books on forgiveness, she began what she describes as God's "open-heart surgery" on her life, removing the infection of resentment that was poisoning her from within. The most profound revelation? Her circumstances didn't change—her heart did. For seven years, Savannah remained a single mother, but her perspective transformed completely. This foundation of healing became crucial when unimaginable tragedy struck: losing two brothers within eight months. Once again facing a choice between bitterness and healing, Savannah chose the harder but more rewarding path. Today, newly married to a man she believes God brought into her life through the very circumstances she once resented, Savannah sees the redemptive thread woven through her pain. "My relationship with God is where it is because of the pain I went through, not the good things," she reflects. Whether you're facing unexpected challenges, processing grief, or simply feeling that life hasn't turned out as planned, Savannah's journey offers a compelling invitation: will you let your heart harden, or will you pray for the courage to face your pain and find healing? Remember, your circumstances might never change—but your heart can.

    37 min
5
out of 5
31 Ratings

About

Learning to drink from Jesus, the Fountain of Living Water, isn’t as hard as I thought, especially when you just start with sips, and those will change everything. 

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