Lately, I’ve noticed something: a lot of people are waking up, and most of them are doing it quietly.
They’re not talking about it much.
They’re paying attention. Observing more. Feeling a little off in places where they used to feel comfortable.
They’re not sure what to call it, and honestly, they’re not trying to label it.
They just know something’s shifted.
And if you’re reading this, you might be in that place too.
They’re paying attention. Observing more. Feeling a little off in places where they used to feel comfortable.
They’re not sure what to call it, and honestly, they’re not trying to label it.
They just know something’s shifted. And if you’re reading this, you might be in that place too.
We tend to associate awakening with disruption—big moments, big realizations, big changes. But that’s not always how it works. Sometimes it starts with discomfort that won’t go away. Or a growing sense that what used to make sense… doesn’t anymore.
That’s a signal & you’re not imagining it.
Here’s something I’ve come to believe: Stillness is not weakness. Sensitivity is not confusion. Discernment is not fear.
In a culture built on reaction, those things can look like resistance. But they’re actually forms of intelligence—especially when everything else feels like noise. You don’t need to make a big announcement about where you are. You don’t need to convince anyone. You don’t even need to be sure what you believe yet.
You’re allowed to just feel it. You’re allowed to slow down. You’re allowed to not know.
A lot of people are looking for calm right now. Not in a performative way, real calm. Grounded presence. A way to move through this shift without falling apart. That’s the kind of space I want to hold. If you’re in that quiet stage of waking up, and you’ve been wondering if it’s okay to not have it all figured out yet— it is.
You’re not behind. You’re not broken. You’re just early to something real.
