Personal Growth for Women
Personal Growth for Women
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The Sacredness of the Season Between Surviving and Sharing Your Life Again

There is a season after leaving an abusive relationship that very few people talk about. Most conversations focus on leaving. Finding safety. Healing from the past. Learning to trust again.

Those conversations are important.

But there is another season that quietly follows, and in many ways it is just as important. It is the season between surviving and sharing your life again. It is a season many women try to rush through because they mistake it for loneliness. I don’t believe it is meant to be rushed.

I believe it is sacred.

Not because it is always easy. But because it gives you something that may have been missing for many years. The opportunity to discover yourself.

The Quiet That Feels Uncomfortable

Maybe you’ve had a Saturday morning like this. You wake up with nowhere you have to be.

You pour yourself a cup of coffee and stand quietly in your kitchen. The dishes are done.

The groceries are in the fridge. There are errands you could run and laundry that could be folded. Yet you find yourself standing there, coffee in hand, asking a question you never expected. “What am I going to do with myself today?”

Not because there is nothing to do. But because none of it feels meaningful. You could crawl back into bed. You could clean the house. You could scroll through social media. You could run errands you don’t really need to run. You could stay busy all day. Yet somehow, none of those things feel like the way you want to spend your hard-earned freedom.

That thought can be confusing. After everything it took to leave an abusive relationship, shouldn’t freedom feel wonderful? Instead, the quiet feels unfamiliar.

Before long another thought quietly slips into your mind. “Maybe I’m lonely.” Sometimes that is exactly what you’re feeling. But sometimes it isn’t.

Is It Loneliness, or Is It Something Else?

For years your days may have been shaped by someone else’s needs.

Meals to prepare.

Problems to solve.

Moods to manage.

Appointments to remember.

Conflicts to avoid.

Whether you wanted those responsibilities or not, they gave your life a familiar rhythm.                                                                                                           

Then one day that rhythm disappeared. The space that was once occupied by someone else suddenly became yours. That can feel strange. Not because there is anything wrong and not because you’ve failed. Simply because it is different, unfamiliar.

Our natural instinct is to fill that space as quickly as possible. We stay busy. We distract ourselves. We convince ourselves that if we can just keep moving, we won’t have to feel the discomfort. But what if that discomfort isn’t asking to be avoided? What if it is inviting you to ask a different question?

What do I want?

That question can be surprisingly difficult to answer because for so long you’ve been asking a different question. What does everyone else need from me? When your life has revolved around another person’s expectations, wants, and reactions, your own desires often become very quiet because they stopped receiving your attention. Learning to ask yourself what you want isn’t selfish. It is one of the first steps in rebuilding your life after abuse.  Perhaps this season isn’t asking you to fill every empty space. Perhaps it is inviting you to discover what belongs there.

Loneliness Is a Poor Matchmaker

When that empty space feels uncomfortable, it is completely understandable to want the feeling to go away.

Sometimes we fill our calendars.

Sometimes we fill our homes with noise.

Sometimes we begin looking for another relationship.

There is nothing wrong with wanting companionship. Human beings are created for connection. But there is a difference between wanting to share your life with someone and wanting someone else to remove the discomfort of being alone. That is why I often say,

Loneliness is a poor matchmaker. Not because relationships are dangerous. Not because love isn’t beautiful. But because loneliness can persuade us to mistake relief for readiness.

The season after leaving an abusive relationship has something precious to offer. Don’t let anyone, or anything, rush you past it.

The Gift of This Season

This season has something to offer you if you’re willing to give it time. Time without the distraction of another relationship.

It’s about giving yourself the opportunity to discover what brings you joy.

What you value.

What gives your life meaning.

What makes you laugh.

What you no longer want to compromise.

In other words, it’s giving yourself the opportunity to create a life that reflects who you truly are. This season gives you something many women have never had. The opportunity to discover yourself.

Approach this season with curiosity. Try something simply because you’ve never done it before. You might discover a new hobby. A new friendship. A new confidence. Or simply a new part of yourself.

Rediscover interests you may have set aside years ago.

Say yes to an invitation.

Take yourself somewhere you’ve always wanted to go.

Spend time with people who leave you feeling encouraged.

Notice what brings you joy.

Notice what drains your energy.

Most importantly, discover what feels like home in your heart. Every new experience teaches you something. Not just about the world around you. But about yourself.

You begin to notice things you may never have paid attention to before.

“I really enjoyed that.”

“I’d like to do that again.”

“That doesn’t feel right for me anymore.”

“I never realized how important that was to me.”

Little by little, you begin to recognize your own voice. It is not the voice of your past. Nor is it the voice of someone else’s expectations. It is your voice.

For many women, that realization is life changing. After years of adapting, accommodating, and trying to keep the peace, you begin to discover that your own thoughts, dreams, values, and opinions matter. Not because someone else finally gives you permission. Because they always mattered.

You are now giving yourself permission to listen. And you begin to trust yourself. That trust quietly grows into confidence.

Confidence in the choices you make.

Confidence in the boundaries you set.

Confidence in the opportunities you embrace.

Confidence in the life you’re creating.

As your confidence grows, your values become clearer. You recognize what brings you peace.

You become more certain about what you will and will not accept. This confidence doesn’t suddenly appear one morning. It grows one experience at a time. One decision at a time. One ordinary Saturday at a time.

The Most Important Relationship

As you begin creating a life that reflects who you are, something else begins to change. The relationship you have with yourself.

You stop apologizing for the things that matter to you. You become more comfortable saying yes when something feels right. You become more comfortable saying no when it doesn’t.

You no longer need someone else to tell you who you are because you’re discovering that for yourself. This relationship with yourself becomes the foundation for every other relationship in your life.

Friends.

Family.

Coworkers.

Neighbours.

And perhaps one day, another intimate relationship.

When we enter a relationship before we’ve had the opportunity to know ourselves, it is easy to begin organizing our lives around another person again. Not because we intend to. But because it feels familiar. Without even realizing it, we slowly stop asking, “What do I want?” And begin asking, “What do they need?” Or, “How do I keep this relationship working?”

Those are the very questions this season has been gently inviting you to step away from. That is why giving yourself time matters. Not because relationships are dangerous and not because you should be afraid to love again. But because you matter.

The more deeply you know yourself, the more likely you are to recognize someone who honours the woman you are instead of expecting you to become someone else. Healthy relationships don’t ask you to disappear. They make room for you to be fully yourself.

The Sacredness of This Season

Our world often tells us to move on quickly, stay busy, find someone new, fill the empty space.

I would like to offer you a different perspective. What if this season isn’t empty at all? What if it is one of the richest seasons of your life? What if this quiet space is where you discover strengths you never knew you had? Where you learn to trust yourself. Where you laugh without wondering whether someone else approves. Where you decorate your home the way you like it. Travel where you want to go. Eat what you enjoy. Spend time with people who encourage you. Create traditions that belong to you. Dream dreams that are yours.

Gradually, you stop building a life around surviving. You begin building a life around living. That is the gift of this season. Not waiting.

Living.

Not preparing for someone else. Becoming more deeply acquainted with yourself.

An Invitation

If you find yourself in this season today, don’t rush through it.

Protect it.

Be curious.

Pay attention.

Allow yourself to become fascinated by the woman you’re getting to know. There is no timetable. No finish line. No prize for reaching the next relationship first. There is simply today.

This Saturday. This cup of coffee. This opportunity to ask, “What do I want?” You may be surprised by the answer.

One day, if someone joins the life you’ve so intentionally created, my hope is that they honour what you have so lovingly built. Because the healthiest relationship you build after leaving an abusive relationship is not a romantic one. It is the relationship you build with yourself.

Everything else grows from there.

If this season feels familiar to you and you’re looking for someone to walk beside you as you create a life that reflects who you are, I’d love to invite you to book a Freedom To Be You Session.

Together, we’ll explore where you are today, where you’d like to be, and the next step that’s right for you. Book your free call today.

You don’t have to figure it all out alone. Sometimes one conversation is all it takes to begin seeing your life differently.

Featured

When Life Feels Shaky, Focus on the Day in Front of You.

Five practical ways to create steadiness.

There are seasons in life when everything feels uncertain.

You wake up and the ground beneath you doesn’t feel solid. You may not say the words “identity crisis,” but somewhere inside, you feel lost. You might even whisper, “I don’t know who I am anymore.”

This is especially common after abuse, divorce, or any major life disruption. The roles shift. The routines change. The version of you that once felt familiar feels far away.

And yet, the day still arrives.

The dishes still need washing. The emails still need answering. You still have the job to attend to. The world keeps moving, even when you feel unsteady.

When life feels shaky, the instinct is to solve the problem. Often, we decide that the problem is us. That now we need to figure ourselves out. Reinvent who we are. But when your energy is low, that is too big of a task.

Instead, focus on the day in front of you.

Not your whole life.
Not your future.
Just today.

Here are five practical ways to create steadiness when you are simply trying to make it through.

1. Shrink the Day Into Manageable Pieces

When everything feels overwhelming, your nervous system is probably scanning for danger. You do not need a five-year plan. You need containment.

Break your day into small sections.

Morning.
Afternoon.
Evening.

You only have to move through the section you are currently in. You do not need to solve tonight while you are still drinking your morning coffee.

Delay some of your to-do list if possible. Determine what your capacity is for the day and honour it. Super woman is a myth.

This simple mental shift reduces pressure. It reminds your system that you are not responsible for carrying the entire weight of your life at once.

2. Stabilize Your Body Before You Analyze Your Life

When you feel lost, your mind will try to fix it by thinking harder.

But identity questions get louder when your body is depleted.

Before you ask, who am I now? ask:

Have I eaten something nourishing?
Have I had water?
Have I stepped outside?
Have I taken three slow breaths?

Practical lifestyle stability is not trivial. It is foundational.

A short walk. A warm shower. A consistent bedtime. These small rhythms communicate safety to your nervous system.

And when your body feels a little steadier, your thoughts often follow.

3. Reduce Decisions on Low-Energy Days

Decision fatigue drains already fragile energy.

On the days when life feels shaky, simplify.

Wear something comfortable without overthinking it. I used to pick my clothes the night before so I didn’t have to decide in the morning based on my mood.

Repeat meals you know feel good. During one difficult season, my go-to was simple chicken, roasted potatoes, and a bagged salad. Nutritious, predictable, and with leftovers. No decisions required.

Postpone nonessential decisions. It is not irresponsible to say, “I can’t do this today.” You are not being lazy. You are conserving capacity. Make any necessary apologies – if it’s safe to do so. Being honest about your capacity allows others the opportunity to support you.

When you do not know who you are anymore, even simple choices can feel heavy. Reducing decisions gives your mind space to rest.

A little note for those in the divorce process. Just because someone wants you to make all the decisions right now does not mean you must accommodate. The phrase, “Let me think about that,” gives you time and space before acting. It does not remove responsibility. It restores capacity.

4. Create One Predictable Anchor

Uncertainty shrinks when something in your day remains consistent.

Choose one small, repeatable ritual.

The same mug each morning.
A short walk at the same time each day.
Five minutes in a quiet chair before bed.

If your mornings looks like, dragging yourself out of bed and then rushing yourself out the door ponder some ways to start your morning in a calmer state. Many leaders speak about the power of morning routines. What I have learned is this: they do not have to be long. They have to be consistent.

I have subscribed to a morning routine for many years now. My morning routine has changed over the years – totally dependant on how much time I gave myself. I’ve had 10-minute routines. I’ve had hour long routines.  Currently I have a 40-minute routine that has exercise and meditation. 20 minutes of each.

Early on I realized that morning routines actually start the night before. Preparing for the next day started with making my lunch, showering or having a bath, picking out my wardrobe for the day and reading before lights out. All this took less than an hour.

Predictability builds internal safety. Safety builds clarity. Over time, this anchor becomes evidence that not everything is unstable. Something remains steady. And that steadiness slowly strengthens you.

5. End the Day With One Honest Acknowledgment

On shaky days, your mind will automatically scan for what you did not accomplish. You will notice the unfinished laundry. The unanswered messages. The moments you felt irritable or distant. The ways you believe you should have handled things better. When you already feel unsure of who you are, this internal criticism can quietly reinforce the fear that you are failing at life.

So instead of evaluating your worth at the end of the day, practice acknowledgment.

Before you go to bed, pause for a moment and name one thing that is true:

I got out of bed.
I showed up for work.
I made dinner.
I answered one hard email.
I asked for help.
I took a breath instead of reacting.

It does not have to be impressive. It has to be honest. This is not positive thinking. It is evidence gathering.

When life feels shaky, your brain collects proof that you are unstable or incapable. Ending your day with one acknowledgment interrupts that pattern. It reminds you that you are still here, still participating, still capable of small steady actions.

There was a season in my own life when my only real goal was to move from morning coffee to bedtime without unraveling. I was not building anything grand. I was not discovering my purpose. I was simply trying to stay steady enough to function. And on many nights, the only thing I could honestly say was, “I made it.”

That sentence carried more strength than I realized at the time. Over weeks and months, that quiet acknowledgment began rebuilding something deeper than confidence. It rebuilt trust. Not the loud kind of trust that says, “I have it all figured out.” The steady kind that says, “I can move through hard days without losing myself.”

If you are in a season where you feel lost, this simple practice matters more than you realize. Identity does not return in dramatic moments. It returns through repetition. Through small, steady confirmations that you are still showing up for your own life.

Sometimes the most powerful sentence you can whisper before sleep is this: “I made it through today.”

If You Feel Like You Don’t Know Who You Are Anymore

When women tell me they feel lost, what they often mean is this: life changed faster than they could adapt. They often assume something is wrong with them. As if they failed to hold on to who they were. Feeling lost is not a problem to be solved. It is often a pause. A transition.

If you are navigating life after abuse, violence, trauma or divorce, your system may still be carrying more than you realize. Trying to “find yourself” while you still feel internally braced can create more pressure. The most powerful thing you can do is create daily steadiness first.

Identity returns through safety.
Clarity returns through calm.
Strength returns through repetition.

If your days feel like something you are surviving rather than living, it may be time to gently address what your system is still holding.

On February 24, I will be hosting a free workshop called Make Peace With Your Past. We will explore simple, practical ways to reduce the emotional load you are carrying so that life feels steadier from the inside out.

You do not have to figure out who you are today. You only need to create enough steadiness to move through the day in front of you.

And that is enough for now.

Featured

The First Step to Change: Believing It’s Possible for You

She stood in front of the mirror, toothbrush still in hand, staring at the same woman who had gotten up every day, done the hard things, kept the peace, kept the schedule, kept herself small.

Maggie didn’t recognize herself anymore. Not really.

The lines around her eyes weren’t just age. They were tiredness. Worn edges. And something else she couldn’t name.

It wasn’t that her world had just suddenly fallen apart.

No, the unraveling had been slow; one broken promise at a time.

One more time she didn’t speak up.

One more birthday she planned for everyone else and no one remembered hers.

And now?

Now she stood at the edge. Not of a cliff exactly but of something she couldn’t see the bottom of.

Becoming herself. Finally.

But where would she even begin?

When the World Quietly Unravels

Maybe you see a bit of yourself in Maggie.

Maybe your “falling apart” wasn’t loud or dramatic. Maybe it was quiet, made of tiny betrayals; some from others, some from yourself, stacked up over years.

Maybe you’ve been functioning like a pro but feeling like a ghost.

If that’s you, I want you to hear this, gently but clearly:

It’s okay to not know where to start.

But it’s not okay to believe that you’re stuck forever.

Because you’re not.

No one talks about how heavy it is to even think about changing your life when you’re already exhausted from surviving it.

The Unseen Weight

You’ve probably said things to yourself like the following. And sadly, you’re not alone:

“I should be grateful…”
“It’s too late to change.”
“I don’t even know who I am anymore.”

These thoughts don’t make you weak. They make you human.

They are very common for women who’ve experienced trauma, especially the quiet, eroding kind that happens over time: emotional neglect, staying in the background, over-giving, never being seen.

So, if you’re overwhelmed and doubting your ability to change anything at all, it makes perfect sense.

After all, you’ve been doing your best just to survive.

That’s not a moral failure. That’s your nervous system doing its job.

But survival isn’t where your story ends.

A Whisper You Can Trust

There’s a sacred moment, a quiet one that shows up for every woman on the edge.

It doesn’t come with trumpets or fireworks.
It’s not dramatic.
It’s often just a whisper.

It sounds something like this:


“There has to be more than this.”

Not louder. Just clearer.

That whisper? In truth, that’s your deeper self—your knowing self.

That whisper? It’s your deeper self—the one who still believes in you. The woman who remembers what she loves is still inside. She’s just waiting for you to turn toward her again.

Not the tired one. Not the doubting one. But the knowing one. The woman who still exists under all the rubble. She’s still in there. She just needs you to come find her.

And I promise you; she’s worth the search.

The First Step Is Not What You Think

Let me lovingly bust a myth here:

The first step is not “having a plan.”

It’s not overhauling your whole life.
It’s not deciding overnight who you are or where you’re going.

The first step is simply choosing to believe that change is possible. Even if you don’t yet believe it for yourself.

Even if the belief is just a flicker.

Even if you’re still scared. Especially if you are.

What Courage Really Looks Like

When Judy and I talk about “courageous confidence,” we’re not talking about strutting into a new life with fireworks and lipstick and a five-point plan.

We’re talking about courage that looks like:

Getting out of bed and drinking water when you wanted to disappear.

Saying “no” to something you always said yes to, just to keep the peace.

Letting yourself want something again, even though you’ve been told you shouldn’t.

Courageous Confidence isn’t a personality trait.

It’s a muscle.
And we build it together.

This is exactly why we created the Courageous Confidence course—for women just like you. Not the ones who are already thriving and confident, but the ones on the edge—where you are right now. The ones who feel the whisper but don’t know what to do next.

You don’t have to do it alone. And you don’t have to figure everything out before you begin.

You’re Not the Only One

Let me tell you something we hear all the time in our women’s groups:

“I thought I was the only one who felt this way.”

But you’re not.

There are so many of us women who have given so much to everyone else for so long, we forgot what it meant to receive. To rest. To heal. To become again.

A Safe Place to Begin Again

That’s why we’re inviting you to join us for the Rooted Resilient Radiant Weekend Retreat September 12 to 14. It’s not a self-help seminar. It’s not a conference. It’s a gentle pause, a chance to step away from the noise, the “shoulds,” and the weight of pretending you’re okay.

It’s a space to be held, seen, and reminded of your wholeness.

And you don’t have to arrive already healed. You just have to arrive.

Saying Yes to Yourself Changes Everything

Here’s what happens when a woman — any woman — says,

“I’m willing to see what else is possible.”

She may not move mountains that day.

But she begins.

And that beginning? It changes everything.

In our Courageous Confidence to an Empowered Life 5 Day Journey, we walk with you through that beginning. We help you reconnect with the values that truly matter to you, shift the beliefs that are keeping you small, and choose what you want your life to look like now, not someday.

This isn’t fluff. It’s real work. But it’s heart-centered, woman-honoring, and completely do-able with support.

You don’t need to know what’s next. Instead, just stay curious about what’s possible.
What matters is that you feel something pulling you toward change.
And no, it’s not too late.

And if that’s you? You’re ready.

You Are Not Broken. You Are Becoming.

Please hear this:

You’re not too old.
Not too late.
Not too far gone.

You are becoming.

And yes, it’s scary. But it’s also beautiful. And Judy and I are hereto walk with you, to believe in you until your belief in yourself takes root.

Two Small Steps Toward Something Beautiful

Single sprouting seed

You don’t need to leap. Just step.

  1. Check out the Rooted Resilient Radiant Retreat happening this September. Even if it’s just to read the details and imagine yourself there. That spark? It matters.

  2. Book a Courageous Confidence Breakthrough Session. It’s a one-on-one chat with someone who’s been where you are. No pressure. No expectations. Just a loving conversation to explore what’s next for you.
    Book Here

If you’re not quite ready to reach out but want to keep exploring, that’s okay too. You might enjoy our reflection on the power of inner language—Watch What You Think—a reminder that your thoughts shape more than you know.

You’ve survived so much already.

You’ve survived so much already. Now, it’s time to build something new—not alone, but together.

Because you deserve a life that feels like yours again.
And it starts… exactly where you are.

If this post spoke to something deep in you, you’re not alone. We invite you to browse our Wounded Women Rising blog—each post is written with women like you in mind: tender-hearted, resilient, and on the edge of something new.