A little about Amy, and in her words, how Redemptive Living for Women changed her life, and in turn, the lives of so many women:

In Honor of Amy

“I am a Texas girl from birth and heart but I’ve been living in Arizona for the last 17 years so it feels like home to me. I have a BA in Advertising from the University of Oklahoma School of Mass Communication and Journalism. I am a mom to two boys and a wife to my husband of 21 years this August.  I first became aware of my husband’s addiction 2 years after we were married but I didn’t know the complete depth of it until he gave me his full disclosure in October of 2015. I was devastated. RLFW gave me a place to process my pain and direct me on a path of hope and healing. Since then, I have been honored to come alongside other women devastated by sexual betrayal and remind them of God’s truth-we are seen, we are known and we are loved beyond compare. For these past five years, I have battled brain, liver, lung, bone and breast cancer, and I feel blessed just to be able to live each day!”


If you would like to be a part of Amy’s legacy and donate to Redemptive Living, click below. All proceeds help send women on to the RLW Retreats.

Gifts are tax-deductible. Please specify that your donation is for the Amy Garcia Fund.

Note from Shelley

I’ll never forget the sound of Amy’s voice.  I would buzz her on the phone and she would say - “hey Shell”, in her ever so slightly deep and always soothing voice.  A nickname that only a couple of friends use, she always had a way of making me feel special.

Amy and I knew each other from childhood + college.  We even lived in the same city after college and saw each other once or twice before she headed west to California.  It wasn’t until her marriage was in crisis, while she was living in Arizona, that we reconnected on a much deeper level.  

She willingly joined one of my support groups for women healing from sexual betrayal - maybe she saw this as necessary but I saw this as bold.  For her to fully invite me, her friend, into her dark world of betrayal recovery was so brave.  It would have been easier to find support from a stranger but instead, she chose to show up fully week after week - with me and a handful of other women.

Amy taught our group what it looked like to be raw, to be vulnerable and to press into grief.  She had a warmth and compassion that the others needed.  She was one of our groups greatest gifts.

A year or so after the group graduated, I invited Amy to join my team so that she could support other women walking the road of betrayal recovery.  Her gifting was obvious and I was thrilled that she was ready to support others.  As you will see from the other tributes, her work impacted women at such a deep level - she literally changed the trajectory of women’s lives.  I am so so grateful for her partnership in helping women heal.

One of her greatest hopes was for other women to experience the healing that she received through the blood of Jesus + her intentional recovery work.  Even after she had to pause on client care to start her treatments again, she continued to keep in touch with so many of her clients.  Coaching clients wasn’t just a way for her to make a living - in fact, it wasn’t about that at all.  It was about her being boldly obedient to the gifts God had bestowed upon her.

She was so close to coming back to work about a year ago - and selfishly, I so desperately wanted this - for her, yes, as well as for the women that need her story, her skillset, her knowledge and her love for Jesus.

While I don’t understand all of God’s ways, I do believe that God is a good God.  And I know Amy’s impact will continue - first and foremost through her family that she loved so much, through her friends that were so very blessed to know her, through the clients she helped heal; as well as through this scholarship fund that Alf so generously has offered as a way to continue Amy’s legacy in supporting women affected by betrayal.

Love you Ames.  Forever holding you close and can’t wait to hear your voice again in Heaven.

Notes from Amy’s Clients:

  • “I consider my work with Amy one of the greatest blessings in my recovery. In our coaching sessions, she was a model of grace and truth - she allowed me to be where I was but she also encouraged me and gave me a vision for healing and wholeness that God designed for my life. Amy literally taught me how to breathe - like actually breathing from my diaphragm - which has been one of my most impactful and most used tools. She taught me how to reconnect to my emotions, express feelings other than anger, surrender, and forgive. She taught me practical things about addictions, trauma bonds, shame, anger, etc. and lovingly showed me how these things were impacting my life.

    I love Amy so dearly. My work with her has set me up for continued healing. The framework she set for me in our coaching sessions continues to help me move forward today - three years later. Sadly, I never had the chance to meet Amy face to face, but I am forever grateful to have known her and learned from her. Even after we stopped working together so she could receive treatment, we would check in. She never ceased to show compassion. She was a true light and the voice of wisdom and strength in the toughest time of my life.”

    - Maggie

  • “Amy was a friend to me during a time in my life when I desperately needed a friend.  When the rest of my world was encouraging me to forgive and excuse unacceptable behavior, Amy picked up my broken, bleeding heart in her hands and said to it, “You are worth taking care of and I will help put you back together.” When people in my community judged me and even counseled against firm boundaries that looked like a six-month marital separation due to betrayal, Amy nodded her head and patted my back and said, “Yes, Girl, you get to safety.  I’ll help you do it.”

    The Bible states, “Enter by the narrow gate…and difficult is the way which leads to life and there are few who find it (Matthew 7:13).”  While most of us probably don’t even know where to look for the narrow gate, and I’m talking to myself here, I believe Amy not only discovered it, but was an expert at how to navigate the path, especially as it pertains to relationships.  She took seriously God’s invitation to wellness in her own life, emotionally, physically, intellectually, and spiritually and she taught others—she taught me—to do the same.  

    Once during one of her treatment rounds, several years ago now, I texted her—and I’m paraphrasing my words—but the message was something like, “Why hasn’t God healed you, yet?” I had been contending and covering her in prayer for a good while and Amy sensed my impatient anger towards God.  Her response to me was something I often think about, it was so full of grace and wisdom, without a trace of the same anger and animosity I felt in my own heart.  

    She said something—and again I’m paraphrasing—like: “God is God, and I am not, and I choose to trust Him.” She believed God, even with the awful cancer infiltrating her body, was for her and not against her.  

    As a Christian actively involved in healing prayer and ministry, I can say that I too frequently speak words that suggest cancer is not a sign of God’s wrath, but Amy gently helped me recognize my heart wasn’t aligned with my thoughts and words.  There was a gap in what I professed to believe and what my heart embraced.  

    In this short text exchange with her, I had to admit that Amy was exemplifying a type of trust and surrender in the Divine that is reserved for people in the spiritual big leagues (not for the minor’s leagues, like me.) Her witness was in that moment and remains a profound example to me.  Amy intimately knew the Author of life and that meant she possessed intimate knowledge that while indeed bad things do happen to us in life, the Author only writes what is always good. 

    So, the narrow gate?  Yes, Amy found it, even as cancer took her body.  The cancer did not destroy her because on that small, tricky path, Amy found life and she found it abundantly.  I’m blessed to have known her.”

If you would like to be apart of Amy’s Legacy in helping women heal, click below.