When I first heard about Noelia, I thought about reaching out to her.
I don’t know exactly what I would have said. Maybe I would have told her that I also live with a mental health diagnosis. That I know what it feels like when the pain doesn’t seem to have a bottom. That I have sat across from people carrying the kind of weight she carried, and I have watched hope become possible again — not because the circumstances magically changed, but because they finally had someone who truly understood walking beside them. Someone who could point them, step by step, back to the only source of hope that never runs out.
I thought about reaching out. And then I saw the date. It was already too late.
On March 26, 2026, a 25-year-old young woman named Noelia Castillo Ramos died by euthanasia in Spain. She is now the youngest person in that country’s history to have received assisted death. Her life was marked by trauma, physical suffering, and years of deep emotional pain. She fought hard. But she fought largely alone.
I can’t stop thinking about her mother — who said goodbye, walked out of that room, and had to keep breathing. I can’t stop thinking about her father — who fought through five courts across two countries trying to save his daughter, and couldn’t. Whatever you think about the legal decisions, that is a grief no parent should carry.
And I think about Noelia. Twenty-five years old. So much pain. So much aloneness.
This broke my heart. And it filled me with urgency.
Suffering in Silence Is Not Inevitable
Noelia’s story is not unique. Right now, in every country — in your country — there are people carrying this level of pain in silence. People with mental health diagnoses who feel like a burden. Family members who don’t know how to help and feel completely alone in that too. People who go through the motions every day while something inside them is slowly breaking.
Many of them don’t know that help exists. Many of them don’t know that someone who has walked a similar road is willing to walk alongside them — trained, present, and free of charge. Many of them have never been told that their pain is not the end of their story. That there is a God who sees them, who has not abandoned them, and whose hope is real enough to hold onto even on the darkest days.
The book of Psalms is full of people who felt exactly what Noelia felt — crushed, forgotten, out of options. And yet, again and again, they found their way back to this: “My hope comes from the Lord.” (Psalm 62:5)
That is the foundation everything else is built on.
There Is a Place for You
Fresh Hope is a peer-led, faith-based mental health support ministry. People from over 39 countries attend our groups. Every week, hundreds of people with mental health challenges and their families gather in Fresh Hope groups — spaces where trained peers walk alongside those who are suffering, not to fix them, but to witness their lives, validate their pain, and point them toward the God who heals.
We don’t glorify Fresh Hope. We glorify the One who makes hope possible. Fresh Hope is simply a vessel — a community of people who have found that hope in Jesus Christ and refuse to keep it to themselves. And you don’t have to be a believer to join our groups. The only prerequisite is a desire for hope in your life.
If you are living with a mental health diagnosis: you do not have to struggle alone. Our groups are free. Our Hope Coaches are free. They are people who understand from the inside — because they have been there too. And they have found something worth holding onto. Reach out. There is a place for you in this community.
If you love someone with a mental health diagnosis: your pain is real too. Watching someone you love suffer and not knowing how to help is its own kind of exhaustion. You don’t have to carry that alone either. Fresh Hope has a place for you.
I found Fresh Hope — or better said, Fresh Hope found me — at a moment in my own life when I needed it deeply. It changed everything. Not because someone fixed me, but because someone showed up, week after week, and kept pointing me back to Jesus. Back to truth. Back to hope that is alive.
That is what we do. And we need more people willing to do it.
To Those Already Serving: Keep Going
To every Hope Coach, every group facilitator, every volunteer who shows up week after week — please hear this:
You are making a difference in lives you may never fully see. There is someone in your group right now whose story will not end in despair — because you showed up. Because you stayed. Because you chose to be the hands and feet of Jesus in one of the loneliest places a person can find themselves.
We didn’t make it to Noelia in time. That breaks my heart. But because of you, there are people whose names we will never know who are still here — still hoping — because someone like you chose to answer the call.
Don’t stop. What you are doing matters for eternity.
The Clock Is Running — Get Involved
Every week that a community goes without a Fresh Hope group is a week when someone like Noelia has nowhere to turn.
Starting a Fresh Hope group does not require you to be a therapist. It requires lived experience with mental health challenges — your own or a loved one’s — a heart for people who are suffering, and a willingness to be trained and show up.
Conviértete en un Hope Coach — our next training is on April 25th. Hope Coaches offer one-on-one peer support, walking alongside individuals who are struggling and pointing them toward lasting hope.
Become a Group Facilitator — training is happening Thursday nights throughout April. Facilitators lead weekly Fresh Hope groups in their communities.
The world does not need more people watching from the sidelines. It needs more people willing to step into the gap — to carry the hope they have found in Christ into the darkest corners of their communities.
Our hope comes from the Lord. And that hope is meant to be shared.
The world needs Fresh Hope. Not someday. Now.
Will you answer the call?
Our groups and Hope Coaches are available at no cost. To find a group, connect with a Hope Coach, or register for facilitator or Hope Coach training, visit www.FreshHope.us or write to us at info@freshhope.us
— Samantha Karraa International Ops Director, Fresh Hope International





