26444 results found
- Happy New Year 2026 – A Letter to My Family, Humanity
Written by Silvana Avram, Inspirational Life Coach and Author Silvana Avram is a successful, Inspirational Life Coach, philosopher, author, teacher, and founder of Life Coaching with Silvana, whose mission is to empower us to embrace our uniqueness, fall in love with life, fulfill our potential, and create a beautiful legacy. Happy New Year, dear family! Yes, family. All of us. As a new year dawns on our small blue planet, my deepest wish for 2026 is simple. That humanity finally remembers that we are one big, wonderful family. That we choose love over division, trust over fear. Connection over separation. That each one of us feels loved, supported, and inspired to offer the best of who we are, not just for ourselves, but for the whole, for the family, for humanity. I am not the first, nor will I be the last, to dream this dream. A dream that has lived in the human heart for centuries. As His Holiness the Dalai Lama once said: “We're all brothers and sisters: physically, mentally and emotionally the same. But we still focus far too much on differences instead of what we have in common. After all, every one of us is born the same way and dies the same way.” Isn’t it time we let this truth gently settle into our hearts? Imagine humanity living like a family. Doesn’t the very thought of it soften something in you? Doesn’t it feel familiar, almost like a memory we have forgotten? I believe it is not only possible, but inevitable, that we will one day recognise ourselves as brothers and sisters, different expressions of the same life, belonging to the same human tribe. The sooner we open our hearts to this awareness, the sooner fear can give way to trust, and separation can dissolve into belonging. Our place in the universe Those who read my work know how deeply fascinated I am by our place in the universe, by the sheer miracle of being alive on this small, precious planet that is our home. As another year begins on Planet Earth, I find myself reflecting on us, humanity, and on the story we are writing together. Our collective legacy. Our signature in eternity. I truly believe that if we made just a little more effort to educate ourselves and our children about the wonder of being alive, about the fact that we are at home in this spectacular universe, we could gently replace fear with trust and despair with hope. All those who have had the privilege of seeing Earth from space speak of the same overwhelming awe. Humility. Reverence. The breathtaking beauty of our planet. The silent music of the cosmos. The sudden, reassuring realization that our worries are far smaller than we imagine. But you don’t need to go to space to know this. You only need to look up at the night sky. Or watch a flower open. Or hold a child in your arms. Life whispers its miracle everywhere. Being human is a precious opportunity. A once-in-an-eternity experience. The forgotten truth Being human is a privilege. A miracle. Being together, here on our little planet, is a precious gift, an opportunity to remember, celebrate, and honour our shared humanity. An opportunity to care for one another with reverence. There is so much more that unites us than divides us. And yet, so often we seem to forget. We forget that kindness is our most natural state. That generosity nourishes both giver and receiver. That love is not weakness, but strength. Each one of our conflicts could begin to dissolve if we simply remembered that we are family, mirrors of one another’s humanity. Deep down, we all know this. Deep down, we all long for the communion, for the recognition, for the unconditional love that comes with the sense of belonging. Recently, I took part in the annual Interfaith Pod organized by Service Space. Each participant felt instantly at home, because we were at home in humanity itself. In listening. In sharing. In recognizing the sacred spark in one another. Across traditions, cultures, and beliefs, the same truth emerged again and again: Different paths, different perspectives, yet the same essence. Love. Compassion. Service. Reverence for life. We know, instinctively, that love is the answer. And that compassion, that natural impulse to care for one another, is what allows humans to thrive. Because when hearts open, compassion becomes natural. Wisdom flows freely. And differences dissolve into shared humanity. As Albert Einstein so beautifully expressed: “A human being is part of a whole, called by us the "Universe," (…) He experiences himself, his thoughts and feelings, as something separated from the rest (…) This delusion is a kind of prison for us (…) Our task must be to free ourselves from this prison by widening our circles of compassion to embrace all living creatures and the whole of nature in its beauty. Only a life lived for others is worth living.” Albert Einstein One family Perhaps what is required of us now is courage. The courage to soften. To unlearn fear. To dismantle the habits of separation we have inherited. It shouldn’t be so difficult to love our neighbour as ourselves. It shouldn’t be so difficult to remember that suffering grows from attachment and fear. It shouldn’t be so difficult to see that all spiritual traditions place love and service at their core. The truth is simple. We, the eight billion human beings living on Earth, are family. We share far more than divides us. We dream the same dreams. To be happy. To be safe. To love and be loved. To live joyful, meaningful lives. We share one fragile, magnificent planet, our only home, suspended in the vastness of the universe. Can you imagine how our world would change if we truly lived from the awareness that we belong to one another, that we are family? Families are not perfect, and humanity would be no exception. But families care. They try. They forgive. Imagine if we chose forgiveness every time. If we cared for one another as brothers and sisters. If we shared our abundance. If we trusted more and feared less. Families aren’t perfect. But they stay. They remember. Imagine if we chose love, again and again. What a wonderful world that would be! A wish for 2026, and beyond “We are family, the family of humanity. We share a common story, a common destiny unfolding in eternity.” Silvana Avram So this is my wish for the year ahead, and for the years that follow, that humanity remembers. That we wake up from the illusion of separation. That we soften our gaze and widen our hearts. That we dare to trust again. That we learn, once more, to love unconditionally. That we begin writing a new chapter in the story of humanity, one rooted in compassion, wonder, shared responsibility, and the quiet courage to see ourselves in one another. If these words resonate with you, know this: you are already part of this gentle movement of remembrance. Through my writing, my coaching, and my teaching, I continue to explore how we can live with greater trust, joy, and a deep sense of home, within ourselves and within the universe. You are always warmly welcome to walk this path with me. As 2026 begins, this is my letter to all of us: My dear family, Let us make this new year a year to remember. Let us remind ourselves that we belong together. Let us look for the light in one another. Let us be kind, patient, and generous. Let us make love and compassion our only true religion. Let us honour our planet, our only home. Let us look up in wonder and feel at home in the universe. Let us celebrate life and the extraordinary privilege of being. Let us begin, together, a new chapter in the story of humanity. And before we part, I would like to leave you with a simple mantra, a small seed to carry into the year ahead: I honour my humanity. I honour my life. I honour my place in the universe. I choose to be a joyful, loving, kind human being. I choose to honour life and my human family by being the best version of me I can be. With trust, wonder, and love for our shared journey! Follow me on Facebook , Instagram , LinkedIn , and visit my website for more info! Read more from Silvana Avram Silvana Avram, Inspirational Life Coach and Author Silvana Avram is a successful, Inspirational Life Coach, philosopher, author, teacher, and founder of Life Coaching with Silvana, whose mission is to empower us to embrace our uniqueness, fall in love with life, fulfill our potential, and create a beautiful legacy. Fascinated from a young age by the mystery of life and our place in the universe, Silvana has been on a quest to find her own answers to the big existential questions facing humanity. Now an acclaimed Coach and Author, she draws on her extensive study of Philosophy, Psychology, Meditation, Holistic Healing, and Spirituality to create a uniquely inspirational and empowering style of Coaching, also reflected in her Book “Being You and Loving You,” in which she guides us through an unforgettable, transformative journey of self-discovery and self-love.
- 5 Ways the Body Tells the Truth – Embodiment Isn’t Just a Concept
Written by Shakti Bottazzi, Best-Selling Author, International Coach, and Embodiment Teacher Shakti Bottazzi is a best-selling author, certified international coach, and three-time entrepreneur. With a successful corporate background and deep expertise in healing hidden emotional wounds, she helps individuals overcome limiting patterns and create authentic, lasting transformation. When the body does not feel safe, life cannot fully move forward. Many people feel stuck, dissatisfied, or unable to move ahead in their lives, despite insight, effort, and self-awareness. They may have reflected deeply, gained clarity, or invested time in personal growth, yet something essential still does not shift. Often, the reason is not a lack of understanding, but a lack of embodiment. Most people do not consciously think about embodiment. And yet, the body is constantly communicating whether we are truly present in our lives or not. It does so quietly at first, through subtle sensations and signals, and more loudly when those signals are ignored or overridden. Embodiment is the degree to which awareness and insight are actually lived through the body, not just understood in the mind. It is the difference between knowing something intellectually and being able to sustain it in daily life, under stress, in relationships, and through change. 1. Disconnection from bodily signals One of the earliest signs of disembodiment is a weakened relationship with the body’s natural cues. Hunger, fullness, fatigue, tension, and pleasure become harder to sense, easier to override, or less trustworthy. This often shows up as pushing past limits, ignoring tiredness, or losing touch with what the body is asking for in the moment. Life begins to be lived primarily from the head, rather than through lived sensation. 2. Illness as the body struggling to process life Illness is not a random punishment, even though many people experience it that way. The body is not working against us, it is communicating. Before illness appears, the body often speaks through quieter signals such as discomfort, recurring tension, fatigue, emotional congestion, or repeating patterns. When these signals are not met, the body raises the volume. Thousands of documented observations within integrative and psychosomatic research show consistent correlations between prolonged stress, unresolved inner conflict, and physical expression in the body. This does not negate medical care, it invites us to look at root causes, not only symptoms. 3. Escaping through meaning (sublimation) Another common sign of disembodiment is escaping upward into meaning, positivity, spirituality, or elevated explanations instead of staying with what feels uncomfortable or unresolved. This process, known as sublimation, can look conscious or evolved, yet it often keeps deeper issues untouched. When meaning replaces presence, life may appear peaceful on the surface while remaining stagnant underneath. 4. Difficulty sustaining presence in daily life When embodiment is compromised, being present becomes difficult to sustain. Attention drifts toward planning, imagining, or future-oriented thinking, while the present moment feels harder to inhabit. This is rarely a discipline issue. Presence requires the body to feel safe enough to stay. Without that sense of safety, attention moves away as a form of self-protection. 5. Anxiety, low mood, or persistent inner restlessness Anxiety and low mood are not merely mental states. They are embodied signals of a nervous system that has not yet settled. Anxiety reflects ongoing alertness, low mood often reflects withdrawal after prolonged strain. These states are not failures of mindset, but invitations for reconnection. The body lives only in the present moment and in what is. The invitation is not to judge what you find, but to listen early, before it has to raise its voice. Embodiment does not require dramatic change. It begins when you take responsibility for one small shift, one course correction that brings you back into contact with yourself. Big transformations are rarely sudden, they are most often initiated by a single, conscious step taken in the body and repeated over time. Further exploration of embodied living and integration can be found through: Soul Wisdom Project Remembering Her: A Soul Embodiment Journey (Book) The Awaken Path : You can find Shakti on social media at @TheAwakenPath and as Shakti Bottazzi, where she shares ongoing reflections and teachings. Follow me on Facebook , Instagram , LinkedIn , and visit my website for more info! Read more at Shakti Bottazzi Shakti Bottazzi, Best-Selling Author, International Coach, and Embodiment Teacher Shakti Bottazzi is a best-selling author, certified international coach, and three-time entrepreneur with a successful corporate career spanning decades. Today, she combines her business expertise with deep training in trauma healing and spiritual development. Through her work, she helps individuals uncover hidden emotional wounds, break free from limiting patterns, and embody authentic, lasting transformation. Shakti is also the founder of The Awaken Path, where she guides clients worldwide through coaching, retreats, and multidimensional healing. Her mission is to awaken the soul and empower people to live with clarity, resilience, and purpose.
- The Zone 2 Paradigm – Why Elite Endurance Performance Is Built at Low Intensity
Written by Osvaldo Cooley, PhD, Dermal Clinician & Body Contouring Specialist Dr. Osvaldo Cooley, PhD, is an expert in body transformation, metabolic performance, and longevity. As the founder of The Elite Hub, Dr Os helps high-performing individuals achieve visible, lasting results through advanced diagnostics, personalised recovery strategies, and specialised body contouring therapies. In the age of high-intensity training trends, wearable technology, and social media-driven performance culture, one of the most powerful tools for endurance performance remains profoundly misunderstood, Zone 2 training. Often dismissed as “too easy,” “boring,” or “a waste of time,” Zone 2 work is paradoxically the foundation upon which elite endurance performance is built. After working with athletes across all levels, from recreational runners to competitive endurance athletes and tactical performers, one recurring theme emerges. Almost everyone underestimates the importance of aerobic base development. Yet, when assessed objectively through metabolic testing, such as PNOĒ, the absence of a robust Zone 2 engine is consistently the limiting factor in performance, recovery, and longevity. Understanding Zone 2 beyond heart rate Zone 2 is not simply a heart rate range. Physiologically, it represents the intensity below the first ventilatory threshold (VT1), a metabolic state where energy is produced predominantly through aerobic pathways, fat oxidation is maximized, and lactate remains stable. Using PNOĒ metabolic analysis, Zone 2 can be precisely identified by: Stable oxygen consumption Controlled ventilation High fat oxidation rates Minimal lactate accumulation This distinction matters. Training “by feel” or using generic heart rate zones often leads athletes to push too hard, turning what should be aerobic development into chronic low-grade stress. Why Zone 2 is the cornerstone of endurance performance Mitochondrial density and efficiency: Zone 2 training stimulates mitochondrial biogenesis, the creation of new mitochondria, while improving the efficiency of existing ones. More mitochondria mean greater aerobic energy production and less reliance on anaerobic pathways at submaximal intensities. This translates into better endurance, delayed fatigue, and faster recovery between efforts. Improved fat oxidation and glycogen sparing: One of the most powerful adaptations from consistent Zone 2 work is enhanced fat-burning efficiency. Athletes who train appropriately in Zone 2 can oxidize fat at higher absolute speeds and workloads, preserving limited glycogen stores for decisive moments in competition. Contrary to popular belief, elite endurance athletes are not “fat-only”, they are metabolically flexible, capable of switching seamlessly between fuels. Raising the aerobic ceiling (VO₂ max support): While Zone 2 does not directly spike VO₂ max, it provides the structural base that allows higher-intensity training to be absorbed and expressed effectively. Research consistently shows that athletes with a higher aerobic base respond better to interval training and demonstrate greater long-term improvements in VO₂ max.[1] [3] Breathing efficiency and coordination: Zone 2 is where breathing mechanics are retrained. Nasal breathing, diaphragmatic engagement, and improved ventilation-perfusion matching occur most effectively at low intensities. Athletes who rush this process often develop dysfunctional breathing patterns that limit performance at higher intensities. Autonomic nervous system balance and recovery: Consistent Zone 2 training improves parasympathetic tone, reflected in higher HRV scores and lower resting heart rates, markers strongly associated with endurance resilience. Athletes who neglect this base often live in a chronically stressed state, unable to recover fully between sessions. What happens when Zone 2 is ignored In my clinical and performance practice, athletes who underemphasize Zone 2 commonly present with: Early lactate accumulation Poor durability late in races Inconsistent performance Plateaus despite increasing intensity Declining HRV and persistent fatigue Perhaps most concerning is the false sense of progress. Athletes feel “fit” because they train hard, yet metabolically, they are inefficient. “But it’s too easy”: The psychological barrier The most common objections I hear are: “It’s boring.” “I feel like I’m not training.” “I can’t run that slow.” “It won’t help me race faster.” Ironically, these complaints are often signs that Zone 2 is exactly what the athlete needs. The discipline to stay aerobic, especially for competitive, driven individuals, is a learned skill. Elite athletes are not those who train hardest every day, but those who respect intensity distribution. What the world’s best athletes do Decades of research on elite endurance performers, from Olympic cyclists to world-class marathoners, show a consistent pattern. Approximately 70-80% of total training volume is performed at low intensity.[2] Athletes such as: Eliud Kipchoge Kilian Jornet Norwegian endurance systems across cycling and triathlon All emphasize massive aerobic volume performed well below threshold. Intensity is used strategically, not habitually. The Zone 2 paradigm shift Zone 2 training is not about doing less. It is about doing what matters most. It builds the metabolic engine, refines fuel usage, improves breathing efficiency, enhances recovery, and creates the physiological conditions required for high-performance training to succeed. In a world obsessed with intensity, Zone 2 remains the quiet differentiator between athletes who train hard and athletes who train intelligently. Endurance excellence is not built in the red zone. It is built patiently, deliberately, and consistently, in Zone 2. At The Elite Hub, we use VO₂ max and metabolic testing to turn physiology into personalized performance strategies. For more information about training zones and VO₂ max, contact The Elite Hub at 3543 0602 or by email here . To book a VO₂ max session, follow the link here to get your training to the next level and receive a 30% discount. Follow me on Facebook , Instagram , LinkedIn , and visit my website for more info! Read more from Osvaldo Cooley, PhD Osvaldo Cooley, PhD, Dermal Clinician & Body Contouring Specialist Dr. Osvaldo Cooley, PhD, is a leading expert in body transformation, metabolic performance, and longevity. A former athlete, his promising career was cut short by injuries that sparked a passion for understanding recovery and performance optimisation. Drawing from his personal journey and extensive research, Dr. Os developed proven techniques to help men and women transform their bodies, improve fitness, and boost long-term health. As the founder of The Elite Hub, he empowers high-performing individuals to achieve visible, lasting results through advanced diagnostics and personalised strategies. References (indicative): [1] Seiler, S. (2010). What is the best practice for training intensity distribution in endurance athletes? International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance. [2] Seiler, S., & Kjerland, G. (2006). Quantifying training intensity distribution in elite endurance athletes. Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports. [3] Hawley, J. A., & Stepto, N. K. (2001). Adaptations to training in endurance cyclists. Journal of Applied Physiology. [4] Brooks, G. A. (2020). Lactate as a fuel and signaling molecule. Physiological Reviews.
- When AI Quietly Changes Your Job – Understanding Silent Displacement at Work
Written by Pierre-Paul Couronne, Entrepreneur, AI Consultant & Founder Humans Of Tomorrow founder Pierre-Paul Couronne helps workers disrupted by AI reskill for future-proof careers. With a decade in data-driven marketing, he channels tech know-how into human-centred progress. For many people, job loss is imagined as a clear moment. A meeting, a conversation, a decision that is difficult but unmistakable. What fewer people expect is something far less visible. No notice, no explanation, just a slow fading of relevance. The emails slow down. Meetings stop appearing on your calendar. Tasks you once handled are now automated or reassigned without discussion. Your dashboard looks different. Your role feels different. Yet no one has said anything out loud. If this sounds familiar, you are not imagining it. This experience has a name. It is silent displacement, and it is becoming more common as AI reshapes work behind the scenes. Understanding silent displacement is the first step toward addressing it. Naming it gives people the language for what they are experiencing and the confidence to speak about it with clarity before roles quietly disappear. It often begins in small, easily dismissed ways. A marketing analyst notices campaign reports are now auto-generated. An HR coordinator sees interview scheduling quietly handled by software. An admin who once managed workflows finds fewer tasks landing in their inbox. Nothing is announced. No feedback is given. The work simply moves elsewhere. What silent displacement looks like in the workplace Silent displacement does not arrive with formal announcements. It unfolds gradually, often unnoticed until the impact becomes impossible to ignore. A person may find their workload shrinking without explanation. Responsibilities once central to their role are quietly automated. Teams are reorganized, but communication is minimal. Titles remain the same, yet expectations shift. Because nothing official has occurred, people often hesitate to respond. They question their own perception and wonder if they are overreacting. This uncertainty is part of what makes silent displacement so difficult. Without clear signals, workers are left to interpret change alone. Unlike layoffs, which force clarity through action, silent displacement keeps people suspended in ambiguity. The lack of conversation is not neutral. It creates confusion, anxiety, and isolation. Why AI often changes roles without communication AI adoption frequently prioritizes speed and efficiency. Tools are implemented quickly to solve specific problems or reduce costs, and human impact is often treated as secondary. In many organizations, responsibility for communication is unclear. Managers may not fully understand how AI systems will affect individual roles. Leadership may assume changes will be minor or temporary. There is also an unspoken belief that people will adapt naturally. If tasks disappear, new ones will appear. If roles shift, workers will find their place. This assumption ignores reality. Change without explanation erodes trust. Silence leaves people guessing about their future. Most silent displacement is not driven by malice. It is driven by systems that move faster than the conversations meant to support them. The emotional impact of being quietly phased out Silent displacement affects more than the workload, it affects identity. Work provides structure, purpose, and a sense of contribution. When that contribution quietly diminishes, people begin to question their value. The absence of clear feedback makes this worse. Without conversation, there is no reassurance or direction. People feel invisible. This emotional toll can be heavier than overt job loss. Layoffs, while painful, offer certainty. Silent displacement offers none. Anxiety grows. Confidence erodes. People hesitate to advocate for themselves because nothing official has happened. These reactions are not a weakness. They are natural responses to prolonged uncertainty. Why silent displacement is harder to address than layoffs Addressing silent displacement requires naming something that has not been formally acknowledged. There is no clear moment to respond to, no document to reference, and no timeline to follow. People worry about being seen as replaceable if they speak up. They fear that raising concerns will accelerate the outcome they are trying to avoid. Without documentation, proving what is happening feels impossible. This keeps many workers quiet. Silence protects systems, not people. The longer the displacement goes unaddressed, the more power shifts away from the individual. Understanding this dynamic helps explain why so many people stay quiet even when they sense something is wrong. Why stories and shared experiences matter When experiences remain unnamed, they are easy to dismiss. When they are shared, patterns emerge. Stories give language to feelings that are otherwise hard to articulate. They help people realize they are not alone. Collective awareness creates accountability. It challenges the idea that silent displacement is isolated or accidental. Sharing experiences is not about blame. It is about visibility. It ensures that human impact is part of the conversation around AI adoption. When people speak, systems are forced to listen. Creating space for conversation before replacement happens AI will continue to change work. That is not in question. How those changes are handled is. Conversations should happen early. Transparency matters. People deserve to understand how tools affect their roles and what support exists. Creating space for dialogue allows for planning rather than panic. It gives people time to adapt with dignity rather than react under pressure. Organizations benefit from this approach as well. Trust supports engagement. Engagement supports performance. If your responsibilities are shrinking and no one has addressed it directly, what conversations have not happened yet? Change does not have to be silent to be effective. Being seen before being replaced Silent displacement is real. It is affecting workers across industries, often without warning or explanation. Recognizing it gives people power. It allows them to name their experience, seek support, and advocate for clarity. No one should feel invisible as systems evolve. People deserve to be heard before decisions are made in silence. Human connection remains essential, even in an automated world. Humans Of Tomorrow™ exists to ensure that people are not left navigating workforce change alone. If you believe dignity, clarity, and human support should remain central as work evolves, there are ways to help. Whether by volunteering your time, contributing resources, or supporting our mission as a donor, your involvement helps create guidance, stability, and community for people facing transition. Learn more or get involved at Humans Of Tomorrow™ , building a future that works for everyone. Follow me on Facebook and LinkedIn for more info! Read more from Pierre-Paul Couronne Pierre-Paul Couronne, Entrepreneur, AI Consultant & Founder Pierre-Paul Couronne heads Humans Of Tomorrow™, a Canadian nonprofit dedicated to counselling, upskilling, and championing people whose jobs are disrupted by AI. Previously, he orchestrated multi-channel, data-driven ad programs that routinely outperformed CPA benchmarks. Today, he fuses that performance mindset with a human-first ethos, ensuring advanced technology lifts, rather than leaves behind, the workers of the AI age.
- Resilience Isn’t Toughness – It’s Intelligent Adaptation Under Pressure
Written by Tannaz Nouri, Mindset Coach Tannaz Nouri is a certified life and mindset coach specializing in science-backed self-love and spiritual transformation. She helps high-achieving women heal, awaken, and reclaim their power from within. I did not write this article from a distance or theory alone. I am Iranian. And these days, my heart carries a quiet, constant ache. I watch my people live under pressure that much of the world can barely imagine. Economic strain, chronic uncertainty, and the psychological weight of not feeling safe in one’s own future. I watch resilience being demanded as if it were limitless, as if human nervous systems were designed to absorb endless threats without consequence. I wish I could stand beside them in every way that matters. I wish I could protect them, amplify their voices, and ease the invisible burdens they carry each day. When physical presence is not possible, love still acts. Meaning still acts. Responsibility still acts. This article is my way of standing with my people, with science, with care, and with deep respect. I write it for Iran, and for every human living under prolonged uncertainty. To say this clearly, you are not weak for feeling overwhelmed, and you are not alone. If you are reading this from anywhere in the world, I invite you to pause for one breath and send love to Iran, to its kind-hearted people, to its mothers and fathers, daughters and sons, thinkers, artists, and quiet heroes. We are not separate. We are one human nervous system. Why resilience needs to be redefined now A quiet epidemic is spreading. People are functioning, but they are not well. They endure. They perform. They survive. And yet their bodies are tense, their minds exhausted, and their hope increasingly fragile. In places shaped by chronic instability, like today’s Iran, where inflation, insecurity, and uncertainty shape daily life, being told to “be resilient” can feel like a command to tolerate the intolerable. Resilience, as it is commonly taught, is no longer sufficient. Because resilience was never meant to require self-erasure. What resilience actually is (and where it came from) The American Psychological Association defines resilience as the process of successfully adapting to difficult or challenging life experiences through mental, emotional, and behavioral flexibility. The defining word here is flexibility. Modern resilience research no longer focuses on the idea of the “unbreakable” person. Instead, it shows something far more hopeful and human. Resilience comes from simple, learnable processes that ordinary people use every day, not from extraordinary toughness or heroic strength. Psychologist Ann Masten called this phenomenon “ordinary magic” to emphasize that resilience is built through everyday support, skills, and human connection. Trauma researcher George Bonanno challenged the idea that hardship automatically breaks people. His research showed that many individuals continue to function and live meaningful lives after trauma, not because they ignore pain or push it away, but because their nervous systems learn how to adapt and regain balance. Resilience is not denial. It is not forced optimism. It is not silent. Resilience is intelligent adaptation. The dangerous lie: Resilience equals endurance In many cultures, particularly under authoritarian pressure or high-performance norms, resilience is translated as: don’t complain don’t feel carry more stay strong at all costs This version of resilience quietly trains people to survive conditions that are actively harming them. A person may appear functional while their nervous system remains locked in threat, sleep is disrupted, digestion is compromised, and emotional numbness is rising. This is not resilience. It is a prolonged strain. True resilience always includes recovery. The neuroscience: Resilience lives in the nervous system At a biological level, resilience is not a belief. It is a capacity. It is the nervous system’s ability to move between activation and safety, between stress and calm, without becoming stuck at extremes. A system that cannot downshift becomes brittle. A system that cannot mobilize collapses. Resilience is a range. This is why resilience work must involve the body. No cognitive insight can override a chronically dysregulated nervous system. Types of resilience (the full spectrum) Resilience is not singular. It is multi-dimensional: Psychological resilience: emotional regulation, meaning-making, cognitive flexibility Physiological resilience: sleep, recovery, stress-response calibration Relational resilience: repair, trust, and emotional safety Community resilience: shared support and collective meaning, especially under oppression Organizational resilience: systems that absorb shock and adapt Digital resilience (AI era): protecting attention, identity, and mental health in hyper-stimulated environments In unstable contexts, community and meaning are as vital as biology. Chronic uncertainty reshapes the brain When uncertainty becomes a long-term condition, the nervous system learns to treat life itself as a threat. The costs accumulate: Diminished attention Heightened emotional reactivity Decision fatigue Erosion of future orientation Inflation not only depletes financial resources. It erodes predictability, and predictability is a psychological necessity. A brief human moment A woman in Tehran wakes before dawn, not because she must, but because her body no longer trusts the morning. She boils water quietly so she does not wake her children, checks the price of eggs and bread on her phone, then puts the phone face down as if that might steady her hands. Later that day, she will stand in line, smile at a neighbor, and come home to cook with what she has. Nothing dramatic happens. No headlines are made. And yet, this is resilience. Not because she endures endlessly, but because, in small ways, she keeps her nervous system from collapsing. She makes tea. She shares a laugh. She protects one routine. She stays human inside uncertainty. This is the kind of resilience science often misses, and the kind life depends on. The core truth: Resilience rests on self-worth Here is the most important truth most people miss. If your self-worth depends on performance, resilience will always collapse when performance is threatened. Because then your brain isn’t just facing a problem, it’s facing identity danger. In that state, you don’t adapt. You defend. You overwork to feel safe. You people-please to avoid rejection. You numb to avoid pain. You attack to avoid shame. This is why the deepest resilience work is not “mindset.” It’s self-worth architecture. Psychological flexibility: The science beneath resilience Research on psychological flexibility shows that resilient individuals are not those who avoid discomfort, but those who remain present while acting in alignment with their values. This allows for: fear without paralysis grief without collapse uncertainty without self-abandonment This is resilience with dignity. A humane framework: The R.E.G.U.L.A.T.E. Resilience Protocol™ Resilience, in real life, is not built through long routines or perfect conditions. It is built through precise, repeatable interventions that restore regulation, meaning, and agency under pressure. The following practices are intentionally minimal because stressed nervous systems cannot absorb complexity. R: Read your state (neuroscience: naming reduces limbic threat). Ask, “What state am I in right now?” activated, collapsed, angry, numb, grieving. Do not analyze. Accurate labeling alone begins regulation. E: Expand safety (neuroscience: safety precedes cognition). Introduce one reliable cue of safety, such as daily warmth, slow exhale, steady rhythm, or familiar sound. Repetition teaches the nervous system predictability in unpredictable environments. G: Ground the body (neuroscience: bottom-up regulation). When thinking loops escalate, intervene physiologically, longer exhales, pressure through the feet, temperature contrast. Regulation begins in the body, not the mind. U: Update meaning (neuroscience: interpretation shapes stress response). Replace identity-threatening narratives (“I am failing”) with accurate ones (“My system is under sustained load”). Meaning does not deny reality, it prevents collapse. L: Lean into values (psychology: values stabilize identity). When life becomes uncertain, goals often feel fragile or out of reach. Values are different. They don’t depend on outcomes. They describe who you choose to be, even when circumstances are unstable. Choose one value, such as dignity, honesty, or care, and express it once today in a small, concrete way. Acting from values helps the mind and nervous system remember who you are, even when the future feels unclear. A: Attach to humans (biology: connection signals safety). One moment of genuine contact, being seen, heard, or held in truth, has measurable regulatory impact. You do not need solutions. You need presence. T: Train recovery (biology: resilience requires repair). Resilience without recovery is a delayed breakdown. Protect sleep, rest, and downshifting rituals as non-negotiable biological maintenance. E: Execute one stabilizing action (psychology: agency restores coherence). Ask, “What is the smallest action that restores order in the next 10 minutes?” Do it. Stop. Agency rebuilds stability. This is resilience designed for real life, under uncertainty, pressure, and constraint. Not endurance. Adaptive capacity with dignity. Resilience in Iran and beyond In oppressive or unstable environments, resilience must never be weaponized to silence suffering. Here, resilience means: preserving dignity protecting mental agency remaining human under pressure cultivating meaning without denial This is not a submission. It is inner freedom. A closing dedication This article is written with love for Iran. For those waking each day without certainty. For hearts that are tired yet still caring. For people who refuse to become numb. May resilience, properly understood, become a bridge not only to survival but to dignity, clarity, and eventual freedom. And to readers around the world, if you believe in humanity, send your love to Iran. Stand in unity. When one nervous system is under threat, the whole human system feels it. Resilience is not how much you can endure. Resilience is how deeply you remain human until freedom arrives. Follow me on Instagram and LinkedIn for more info! Read more from Tannaz Nouri Tannaz Nouri, Mindset Coach Tannaz Nouri is a certified life and mindset coach, speaker, and spiritual guide. She blends neuroscience, metaphysics, and ancient wisdom to help burned-out professionals cultivate deep self-love, emotional clarity, and unshakable self-worth. Tannaz specializes in helping women, especially those from culturally suppressed backgrounds, awaken their inner voice and step into conscious leadership. With a background in science and a deep passion for soul work, she bridges the gap between logic and intuition. Her mission is to empower women globally to rise, heal, and lead from within. References: American Psychological Association (APA): Resilience and adaptation under stress Masten, A. S. (2001): Ordinary Magic: Resilience Processes in Development Bonanno, G. A. (2004): Loss, Trauma, and Human Resilience Kashdan, T. B., & Rottenberg, J. (2010): Psychological Flexibility as a Fundamental Aspect of Health McEwen, B. S. (2007): The Neurobiology of Stress and Adaptation Harvard Health Publishing: Understanding the stress response and nervous system regulation
- When Self-Awareness Stops Working
Written by Rae-Anne Cohen, Emotional Intelligence Coach Rae-Anne Cohen is an emotional intelligence coach and international speaker who helps people deepen self-awareness, cultivate resilience, and lead from a place of relational wisdom. Many people understand their emotional patterns clearly, yet still find themselves repeating the same behaviors under pressure. When insight doesn’t lead to change, the problem is rarely a lack of self-awareness. This article explores what’s actually missing and why emotional maturity is often misunderstood in the process. In recent years, self-awareness has become a quiet ideal. Many people can describe their emotional patterns with remarkable clarity. They can name their triggers, trace reactions back to childhood, articulate attachment styles, and reflect thoughtfully on how they want to show up differently. From the outside, it looks like growth. From the inside, however, something often remains unchanged. Despite strong insight, familiar behaviors persist . Old dynamics resurface under pressure. Reactions repeat themselves in moments of stress, conflict, or vulnerability. This gap between knowing and doing can be confusing, even disheartening, especially for people who are genuinely invested in personal development. When understanding doesn’t translate into change, the assumption is often that more awareness is needed. But the issue is rarely a lack of insight. What’s often missing is not understanding, but capacity. The modern myth: “If I understand myself, I should be able to act better.” There is an unspoken belief that insight should lead naturally to better behavior. If you can explain your reactions, surely you should be able to interrupt them. If you know where a pattern comes from, surely you should be able to choose differently next time. When this doesn’t happen, frustration sets in, not only with the pattern itself but within the self. This belief creates a complex mix of feelings, including frustration, shame, doubt, disappointment, anger, and more. These feelings arise as they confront the evidence of minimal change. Prominent among high-functioning intellectual people, they often start to question their discipline, their commitment, or their emotional maturity. They may wonder why reflection feels so meaningful in hindsight but so powerless in the moment it matters most. What’s rarely acknowledged is that insight typically arises in calm, reflective environments. Behavior, however, is demanded in moments of activation. In those moments, awareness alone rarely overrides well-rehearsed responses. Understanding yourself does not automatically give you access to different behavior under pressure. It simply gives you a map of what is happening. And maps, while useful, do not move the body. Why self-awareness reaches its limit under pressure Self-awareness plays a crucial role in change. It allows patterns to be named rather than acted out unconsciously. It slows reaction just enough to introduce the possibility of choice, but awareness alone doesn’t change the deeper patterns that keep a behavior going. Habits and emotional responses are reinforced through repetition . When a particular response served protection, by reducing conflict, maintaining connection, or avoiding overwhelm, it became efficient. Therefore, over time, it became automatic. Responses that once worked are difficult to let go of, even when they no longer align with one’s growth and values. This is why people can speak with great clarity about their tendencies and still repeat them. At this point, many people assume they need to try harder by exerting more discipline and more self-control. However, effort alone does not build the capacity required to stay present in emotionally charged moments. In fact, pushing harder often increases internal pressure, making old patterns more likely to resurface. The limitation here is not motivation. It is capacity. Where emotional maturity gets misdefined Emotional maturity is often framed as staying calm, being reasonable, not reacting, and managing emotions internally. It’s associated with composure, flexibility, and the ability to “handle things.” While these qualities are useful, they are frequently misunderstood and misused. For many high-functioning people, emotional maturity becomes synonymous with emotional compliance. It looks like accommodating others, minimizing personal needs, staying agreeable, or overriding emotional responses for the sake of harmony. The ability to remain composed is praised, even when it requires significant self-suppression. In this framing, maturity is measured by how little you inconvenience others with your feelings. Regulation becomes about containment rather than contact, and self-awareness becomes a tool for self-correction rather than self-attunement. This misunderstanding matters because it subtly teaches people to use insight against themselves. Insight used against the self When emotional maturity is equated with being easy, calm, and non-reactive, self-awareness can become a skillful form of self-abandonment. People begin to monitor their emotions in order to manage them away, instead of understanding them. They may notice anger, hurt, or resistance and immediately explain it, rationalize it, or dismiss it as something to control privately. Insight is then used to justify silence and accommodation. Statements such as “I know this is my trigger,” “I understand why I feel this way,” and “I don’t want to overreact” sound reflective but often function as a way to bypass the discomfort of responding honestly. Over time, this creates a different kind of stuckness. This is to say, it is not the inability to understand oneself but the inability to act in alignment with what one knows. In this context, maturity means staying regulated even at the cost of authenticity. What emotional maturity actually requires Emotional maturity is not the absence of reaction, nor is it the ability to manage emotions efficiently. At its core, emotional maturity is the capacity to stay in a relationship, with oneself and with others, when things become uncomfortable. This includes: staying present with strong emotion without acting it out or suppressing it tolerating relational tension without immediately fixing or withdrawing allowing internal experience to inform behavior rather than override it choosing integrity over immediate comfort This redefinition matters because it shifts the focus from behavior management to capacity building. It recognizes that different behaviors require the ability to remain regulated while doing something unfamiliar or risky. Capacity: The missing link between insight and change Capacity refers to the ability to stay present, embodied, and choiceful under emotional load, not just understanding what’s happening, but staying connected enough to respond differently. It is what allows awareness to translate into action during moments of intense emotion. Capacity is built through experience, specifically, repeated experiences of staying with discomfort without abandoning oneself or reverting to familiar patterns. This might look like: pausing before a habitual response allowing uncertainty to remain unresolved expressing a need without certainty of how it will be received tolerating the internal urge to comply, fix, or withdraw These moments are often subtle and easily overlooked because they don’t feel dramatic or empowering. In truth, they often feel awkward, slow, and extremely uncomfortable to begin with. However, these are the moments where change actually happens. When behavior doesn’t change despite insight, it’s tempting to interpret this as failure, but difficulty (like many emotions) is often a signal that something new is being asked of the system, not that something is wrong. Struggle indicates that capacity is being stretched, in other words, that familiar strategies are no longer sufficient. Awareness has done its work and is now pointing toward the need for support, practice, and time. Seen this way, resistance is part of the growth process. From insight to lasting change For many people, the hardest part of change is not understanding what needs to be different, but staying with themselves when it matters most. When the moment arrives, insight alone rarely carries the response. This is often the point where people turn back on themselves, assuming they should be further along or more capable by now. But this moment is not a personal shortcoming. It is where awareness gives way to a different kind of work. Change begins here. It is not through more insight, but through the slow building of capacity. The ability to remain present when old strategies no longer fit, and to support oneself in choosing differently before confidence arrives. This work often continues beyond the page. I support CEOs and senior leaders in building the capacity required for meaningful change, especially when insight alone is no longer enough, through one-to-one work and consulting conversations. Follow me on Instagram , LinkedIn , and visit my website for more info! Read more from Rae-Anne Cohen Rae-Anne Cohen, Emotional Intelligence Coach Rae-Anne Cohen is a future-focused changemaker and rising voice in emotional intelligence. Completing her PhD in Education at King’s College London, she examines the sociological forces that shape emotional life and uses these insights to re-imagine how people lead, connect, and communicate. Her work equips individuals and organizations with tools to deepen self-awareness, strengthen relationships, and build more emotionally intelligent cultures. A multilingual speaker fuelled by a deep commitment to human connection, Rae-Anne brings her research to global stages, inspiring new models of leadership and collective wellbeing that place emotional understanding at the heart of societal progress.
- Why Pain Doesn’t Mean You’re Broken and How to Use It to Reclaim Your Life
Written by Shahrzad Jalali, PsyD, Psychologist, Author, Founder & Executive Coach Dr. Shahrzad Jalali is a clinical psychologist and executive coach. She’s the founder of Align Remedy, author of The Fire That Makes Us, and creator of Regulate to Rise, a course that helps people heal trauma and reclaim resilience. Her work equips people to break old patterns and step boldly into who they’re meant to be. A woman once sat across from me in my office, her voice barely steady as she said, “I feel like I’m shattered into pieces. Who would ever want me like this?” Many of us know that feeling. The breakup that hollows you out. The grief that settles into your body. The burnout that convinces you you’ll never return to who you were. Beneath all of it lives the same quiet fear, "If I hurt this much, maybe I’m broken beyond repair." But across cultures and across time, humans have told a different story about pain. In Japan, broken pottery is repaired with veins of gold, a practice known as Kintsugi. The fracture is not hidden, it is illuminated. The vessel becomes more valuable because of what it has survived. What if our lives worked the same way? Pain is a signal, not a sentence We are taught early to treat pain as a problem. As children, when we scraped a knee, someone often said, “Shh, don’t cry, it’s nothing.” As adults, the message becomes subtler but more insidious. Push through it. Stay positive. Don’t dwell. Over time, many of us internalize the idea that pain means failure. But pain is not a glitch in the system. It is the system speaking. Neuroscience shows that emotional pain activates many of the same neural pathways as physical pain. This is why rejection can feel like a blow to the chest, or grief like a physical ache. Your brain is not “confused”. It is responding to threat and loss in the only language it knows. And yet, we rarely shame someone for bleeding after a cut. We offer care. We expect healing. Emotionally, we do the opposite. We judge ourselves for feeling heartbreak, despair, or exhaustion, as if these states were evidence of weakness rather than evidence of being human. Pain is not a verdict on who you are. It is information about what matters, what was lost, and what needs attention. Healing is not linear, it is integrative One of the most destabilizing moments in healing is the return of pain after progress. You’ve been doing better. You’ve had clarity. You’ve even felt hope. And then, unexpectedly, sadness, panic, or anger returns. The mind quickly concludes. If I’m back here again, something must be wrong with me. But healing does not unfold in a straight line. It unfolds in cycles of integration. Psychological research on grief and recovery shows that people naturally oscillate between engaging with pain and re-engaging with life. This movement is not a regression. It is how the nervous system metabolizes experience. Think of healing less like climbing a ladder and more like walking a spiral staircase. You pass familiar emotional terrain again, but each time from a slightly higher vantage point, with more awareness and capacity. The return of pain does not mean you are broken. It means another layer is ready to be integrated. Your biology is adaptive, not a life sentence Another myth pain whispers is this, "If I feel this way, maybe my brain is permanently damaged." For years, trauma was framed as something that irreversibly “hardwires” us. But newer research tells a more nuanced story. Trauma can shape stress responses, this is true. But the same biological systems that adapt to threat are also capable of adapting to safety, connection, and regulation. Your nervous system is not static. It is responsive. I once worked with a client who believed her history of generational trauma made her fundamentally defective. As we focused on stabilizing her nervous system and cultivating safe relational experiences, something shifted. Her reactivity softened. Her sense of self expanded. Hope, once unthinkable, became possible. She said, “I used to think my past decided my future. Now I see it was teaching me how to heal.” Pain shaped her, but it did not imprison her. Using pain as a portal, not a prison If pain is not proof of brokenness, how do we work with it rather than against it? See the crack as a threshold: Like Kintsugi, healing does not erase fractures. It transforms them. The places that broke you open are often the same places where meaning, depth, and empathy grow. Repair the nervous system first: Healing does not begin with insight alone. It begins with regulation. Small, embodied practices such as slower exhalations, humming, or grounding rituals signal safety to the nervous system. These are not minor techniques. They are acts of biological repair. Turn experience into expression: Unexpressed pain becomes stored tension. When pain is given language through writing, art, movement, or advocacy, it shifts from shame into meaning. Expression allows suffering to be integrated rather than carried silently. As Viktor Frankl observed, suffering changes its nature when it is held within a framework of meaning. You were never broken You are not broken because you hurt. You are human because you hurt. Pain does not diminish you, it deepens you. The cracks you carry are not evidence of failure, they are evidence of survival. As I write in The Fire That Makes Us, “Your scars are not proof of your brokenness. They are the gold veins of your becoming.” So don’t rush to hide the cracks. Let them teach you where you’ve been and who you are becoming. Your story is not over. It is still unfolding. Follow me on Facebook , Instagram , LinkedIn , and visit my website for more info! Read more from Shahrzad Jalali, PsyD Shahrzad Jalali, PsyD, Psychologist, Author, Founder & Executive Coach Dr. Shahrzad Jalali is a clinical psychologist, trauma expert, and thought leader in emotional transformation. She is the founder of Align Remedy and Dr. Jalali & Associates, where she’s helped thousands individuate and reclaim their inner truth. Bridging science, soul, and psychology, her work guides high-functioning individuals through nervous system healing and self-reinvention. As the author of The Fire That Makes Us and creator of Regulate to Rise, she helps people turn their most painful beliefs into their greatest source of power, alchemizing wounds into wisdom and survival into strength.
- The Secret Gifts of a Collapsed Nervous System
Written by Diana May, Neuro Somatic Practitioner & Yoga Teacher Diana May integrates somatics, applied neurology, and yoga to help clients relieve chronic pain and reconnect with their bodies. Her work empowers people to regulate their nervous system and move with confidence at any stage of life. It’s no secret that living a full, meaningful life requires tending to your nervous system. But as conversations around regulation have become more mainstream, they’ve also become more simplified. Regulation is often mistaken for being calm all the time or for staying neatly within a “window of tolerance.” In reality, life is far too complex for that. Activation is inevitable and necessary. Our survival responses exist for a reason, they’ve carried us through threat, uncertainty, and profound change. Fight or flight tends to get the most attention, and in many ways, they’re even rewarded by our culture. Productivity, urgency, and pushing through are often praised. Collapse, on the other hand, is rarely met with the same compassion. It’s misunderstood, pathologized, or quietly shamed. And yet, experiences of collapse and depression are far from rare, affecting more than 20% of people in some populations. If you find yourself in a state of collapse, it’s important to know this, while it can be deeply uncomfortable, it is not meaningless. There are specific and often overlooked insights available in this state. In this article, we’ll explore what collapse actually is, why it happens, and the unexpected wisdom it can offer when we learn how to meet it with curiosity rather than judgment. What is collapse? Collapse is an autonomic survival strategy of the nervous system. At its core, it’s the body’s attempt to protect you by conserving energy when a perceived threat feels inescapable. You can think of it as the nervous system’s version of “playing dead”, a last-resort response when neither fighting nor fleeing feels possible. In this state, the body shifts into extreme conservation mode. Energy drops. Motivation wanes. Movement, emotion, and even thought can feel heavy or distant. This isn’t a personal failure or a lack of resilience, it’s physiology doing exactly what it evolved to do. Like all survival responses, collapse is not a conscious choice. It emerges when your nervous system perceives a high enough level of threat and determines that neither action nor escape will ensure safety. Often, there is a period before collapse where the sympathetic nervous system is highly activated, with racing thoughts, anxiety, tension, or agitation. But instead of moving into action, the system is overridden by a powerful parasympathetic response that immobilizes you. This is why collapse can feel simultaneously overwhelming and numbing. It’s important to understand that collapse is different from freeze, though they’re often confused. Freeze typically involves high sympathetic activation paired with immobilization, energy is present but trapped. Collapse, on the other hand, is marked by a dominant parasympathetic response, where energy drops significantly, and the system moves toward shutdown. Understanding the nervous system states There are several survival states within the nervous system, and while it’s helpful to name and understand them, real human experience is rarely clean or linear. You can move between states or experience blends of them. A survival state simply means your system has detected a real or perceived threat that exceeds your current capacity to cope. Understanding these states isn’t about labeling yourself or trying to “fix” what’s happening. It’s about developing language and awareness, so you can meet your experience with more clarity, less shame, and greater compassion. The 6 nervous system states 1. Safe & social This is often referred to as your window of capacity. It’s the state where you can engage with life’s ups and downs without becoming overwhelmed. You can feel pleasure and connection, tolerate discomfort, and respond rather than react. You’re able to express yourself, connect with others, and move through emotions without becoming flooded. This isn’t a flat or neutral state but it’s dynamic, responsive, and alive. 2. Flight . When your nervous system detects a threat, real or perceived, its first line of defense is often to orient away from it. This mobilized response prepares you to escape. Your heart rate may increase, your pupils may dilate, and you might feel a surge of energy in your legs or throughout your body. On a behavioral level, this can look like avoidance, distraction, leaving situations, or even giving the silent treatment. Internally, it often carries a sense of urgency or restlessness. Flight is protective, it’s the body trying to create distance from danger. 3. Fight If escape doesn’t feel possible, the nervous system may shift toward confrontation. This response is still highly activated, heart rate increases, breath quickens, and energy often concentrates in the arms, hands, and jaw. You might notice impulses to argue, defend, criticize, or push back. Emotionally, this can show up as anger, irritation, or rage. Like all survival responses, fight is not a conscious choice, it’s an automatic attempt to restore safety. 4. Freeze When neither fight nor flight feels viable, the nervous system may move into freeze. Here, sympathetic activation is still present, you may feel tension, fear, or internal agitation, but the body becomes immobilized. It can feel like being stuck, frozen, or unable to act despite wanting to. You might know what you want to say or do, yet feel unable to move toward it. Freeze is the body’s way of surviving an overwhelming threat when action feels impossible. 5. Fawn Fawn is a blended response, often combining elements of mobilization and shutdown. In this state, safety is sought through appeasement and connection. You may unconsciously prioritize others’ needs over your own, minimize yourself, or shape-shift to maintain harmony. It can look like people-pleasing, difficulty identifying your own needs, or feeling responsible for others’ emotions. The underlying belief is that staying connected is what keeps you safe. 6. Collapse Collapse occurs when the nervous system moves into deep conservation. It’s often a last-resort response after prolonged stress or threat. Energy drops significantly. Motivation, vitality, and interest in the world may fade. This state can resemble depression or profound exhaustion and may be accompanied by physical symptoms or chronic pain. While deeply uncomfortable, collapse is not a failure, it’s the nervous system’s attempt to protect you when it believes there is no other option left. Let’s take a break Take a moment and shift your eyes from this article. Look around the room you’re in. If you’re by a window, look out the window. Sense the chair and the ground effortlessly holding your weight. If it feels supportive, gently squeeze your own arms or gently touch your own face. Or take a few gentle stretches. Reading about survival states can be activating. If you noticed any tension, tightness, or emotional stirrings, that’s completely normal. That was your nervous system responding. Rather than pushing through, allow yourself a brief pause. Let your system know you’re here with it. You’re not rushing. You’re listening. Notice what happens when you offer yourself just a moment of presence and care. How to support collapse? Collapse isn’t talked about very often, and that makes sense. If you’ve ever been in it, you know it’s not exactly something you want to advertise. Our culture also tends to praise high-energy states such as productivity, momentum, fixing, and pushing through. Do something about it. Get back on track. But when you’re in a collapsed state, your system simply doesn’t have the resources for that approach. Trying to “power through” can actually feel like another threat to an already overwhelmed nervous system. In many cases, resisting collapse creates more distress than the collapse itself. You might intellectually know that you’re safe, that you have a roof over your head, food available, and support around you. But your nervous system doesn’t operate on logic. It responds to sensation, energy, and perceived safety. Much of that information lives below conscious awareness, so reasoning your way out of collapse rarely works. Instead of resisting, there is another option, support the collapse. Intentional rest This is different from scrolling on your phone while internally criticizing yourself for not being productive. Intentional rest is an active form of care. It might look like lying down with a blanket, dimming the lights, or allowing your body to rest without an agenda. Even five or ten minutes can be meaningful. Brew a cup of tea and let yourself actually taste it. Settle into a posture that feels supportive and allow yourself to soften. Try this short restorative posture I share here if you need an idea. Glimmers When you’re collapsed, joy doesn’t need to be big or transformative. Small moments of neutrality or gentle pleasure matter. Maybe it’s a familiar show that feels comforting, a favorite snack, or the presence of someone who doesn’t require you to perform. If possible, make a short list of these low-effort comforts ahead of time so you don’t have to think about it when your energy is low. Increase signals of safety While we don’t want to force ourselves out of collapse, we can gently increase the sense of safety around us. Lower stimulation where possible. Reduce demands. Support your nervous system with simple sensory cues, soft light, warmth, and predictable routines. Practices like slow eye movements or other neuro-somatic tools can help signal safety to the brainstem without pushing you out of your current state. Believe your body Your nervous system is always communicating something important. Rather than wishing you felt different, try approaching your body with curiosity. Place a hand somewhere that feels grounding, your chest, your belly, your legs. You might gently say, “I’m here. I’m listening.” Instead of asking your body to change, ask what it needs. The response might come as a sensation, an image, a memory, or a subtle emotional shift. There’s no right answer. Simply listening builds trust. Share Collapse can carry a lot of shame, especially when it affects your energy, productivity, or ability to show up the way you’re used to. You might withdraw or feel like you’re letting people down. If there’s someone in your life who feels safe, letting them know what you’re experiencing can soften that shame. You don’t have to explain or justify, just being witnessed can be regulating in itself. Seek support when needed If collapse feels prolonged or overwhelming, you deserve support. Working with a therapist, somatic practitioner, or grief counselor can offer steady containment and understanding. You don’t have to navigate this alone. The quiet gift of collapse While collapse is rarely something we’d choose, it can open the door to a different kind of wisdom. This state often slows you down enough to notice what normally goes unseen. In a world that rewards speed and productivity, collapse invites slowness. In that slowness, there can be depth, greater sensitivity, empathy, and attunement. Many people in collapse find themselves more connected to subtle experiences. The rhythm of breath, the movement of trees, the texture of light, and the quiet presence of others. There can be a deepening of compassion, for yourself and for those who carry invisible weight. You may also find that this state brings you closer to something larger than yourself. A sense of connection to nature, to meaning, or to a quieter inner knowing. While our culture doesn’t always recognize this kind of wisdom, it can be profoundly grounding and restorative. Collapse is not a failure of your system. It’s a communication. And when met with patience, care, and curiosity, it can become a doorway into a deeper relationship with yourself. When collapse is an invitation Collapse is far more common than we’re taught to believe. Many people move through it quietly, assuming something has gone wrong, when in reality, their system is responding exactly as it was designed to. When met with understanding and the right kind of support, this state can become surprisingly rich, an opening into deeper listening, slower wisdom, and a more honest relationship with yourself. If you find yourself here, you don’t have to navigate it alone. My one-to-one work is centered on meeting you where you are, helping you learn how to support your nervous system with care, curiosity, and respect for its timing. Together, we create space for your system to settle, restore, and reveal what it’s been asking for beneath the surface. Follow me on Instagram and visit my website for more info! Read more from Diana May Diana May, Neuro Somatic Practitioner & Yoga Teacher Diana May is a yoga educator and Somatic Experiencing® practitioner who integrates applied neurology, mindful movement, and nervous-system science to help people reduce pain and restore mobility. She holds degrees in environmental studies and urban planning, grounding her work in a lifelong passion for ecology and natural systems. Diana weaves these perspectives into her teaching, connecting the rhythms of nature with the intelligence of the body and brain. Through her classes and 1:1 work, she empowers clients to build resilience, regulate their nervous system, and feel at home in their bodies.
- The Angel Path – Why Another New Year's Resolution Won't Fix Your People-Pleasing, But This Will
Written by Polly Angel, Founder, The Angel Path Polly Angel is the founder of The Angel Path and creator of the "Meet Your Inner Team" emotional intelligence system. As an RTT practitioner and somatic trauma-informed coach, she specialises in helping women overcome generational patterns whilst teaching emotional intelligence to young people. You've tried everything. Therapy that scratched the surface but never quite reached the root. Self-help books that made sense intellectually but didn't change how you actually feel. Promises to yourself that "this year will be different", you'll set boundaries, prioritise yourself, and stop saying yes when you mean no. Yet here you are again, exhausted from putting everyone else first, drowning in guilt whenever you consider your own needs, appearing "together" on the outside whilst crumbling inside. The Angel Path offers something profoundly different: hand-held guidance that feels like a warm hug, not another self-improvement demand you'll inevitably fail to meet. Why New Year's resolutions fail for people-pleasers New Year's resolutions are designed for people who believe willpower and discipline are their missing ingredients. But if you're reading this, you already have too much discipline, you've disciplined yourself into exhaustion, into chronic pain, into a life where everyone else's needs matter more than your own. The painful truth about people-pleasing is that it's not a personality flaw requiring more willpower to overcome. It's a deeply embedded subconscious pattern, often formed in childhood as a survival strategy. These patterns live in your subconscious mind, operating automatically below conscious awareness. This is why traditional talk therapy, whilst valuable, often falls short. You can understand why you do something and still be unable to stop doing it. The identity crisis behind every failed resolution But there's something even deeper at play: an identity crisis that makes lasting change impossible. You can force yourself to go to the gym for a few weeks, but if your subconscious identity believes, "I'm not the kind of person who's fit and healthy," your motivation will mysteriously vanish. You can attempt to set boundaries, but if your core identity is "I'm the helpful one everyone needs," saying no will feel like betraying yourself. This is the real reason resolutions fail by February. It's not a lack of willpower. It's an identity mismatch. Your behaviours can't outrun your beliefs about who you are. The Angel Path addresses this at the root. Through RTT, we don't just change behaviours, we update the subconscious identity and beliefs driving those behaviours. What is The Angel Path? The Angel Path isn't another programme teaching you what you should do differently. It's a transformative journey back to yourself, one where you feel genuinely supported every step of the way. The name itself reflects the essence of this work: guidance that feels like being gently held through your transformation, not pushed, pulled, or lectured. An angel walks alongside you, offering wisdom and protection whilst you find your own way home to yourself. It's the warm hug you've been giving everyone else, finally offered to you. Through a unique combination of Rapid Transformational Therapy (RTT), Internal Family Systems (IFS) principles, and somatic trauma-informed coaching, The Angel Path addresses limiting patterns at every level: the subconscious beliefs driving them, the protective parts maintaining them, and the nervous system reinforcing them. Whether you struggle with people-pleasing, perfectionism, chronic self-doubt, imposter syndrome, relationship patterns, physical symptoms, or anxiety, these patterns all share the same root: subconscious beliefs formed in childhood that are still running your adult life. What walking The Angel Path actually feels like From your first discovery call through your transformation and beyond, you're held and guided. This isn't "here's your homework, see you next week." This is genuine support that feels like having a wise, compassionate guide who truly understands your struggle because she's walked this path herself. Perhaps the most powerful testimony comes from Millie: "To unlock my future, I first had to find the courage to unlock my past. With Polly, I shared colours, shapes, and vulnerability. In this open and trusting space, we were able to work together as a team. With her calm and intuitive guidance, I was able to remain mindful and grounded while confronting my 'inner team.' Since my session with Polly, something shifted. I knew it was time to spread my wings and that nothing was going to hold me back. I listen to my personalised audio recording each evening, which gently encourages my mind to embrace the future I truly want. I now wake with positivity and love, feeling more connected to who I am and who and what matters. Everyone needs a Polly in their pocket, and I can thankfully say I have Polly in my pocket." – Millie Why January is the perfect time to start There's something powerful about the turning of a new year, that sense of fresh possibility. But instead of making yourself another promise you'll struggle to keep, what if you gave yourself something more profound? What if, instead of resolving to "set better boundaries," you addressed the subconscious patterns and identity beliefs that make those things feel impossible? Starting your Angel Path journey in January means you're not beginning 2026 with another list of "shoulds." You're beginning it with genuine support for transforming the patterns that have been running your life, and the identity that's been keeping those patterns in place. Special New Year offer I'm deeply grateful to every woman who trusts me to walk The Angel Path alongside her. The privilege of witnessing transformation, of being present for those moments when patterns finally shift, there's no greater joy in my work. For the first five women who book in January, I'm offering 20% off your first RTT session (£360 instead of £450) as a small gesture of gratitude for the trust you're placing in this journey. Your journey back to yourself begins here The Angel Path is specifically for women who appear capable and together but feel exhausted inside, have tried traditional therapy with limited results, struggle with chronic guilt about putting themselves first, and recognise they can't think their way out of patterns they felt their way into. If you're reading this and something inside you is saying, "Yes, this is what I need," trust that inner knowing. Your Wise Self recognises the path home. This January, instead of another resolution that adds to your burden, give yourself the gift of genuine transformation. The kind that feels like coming home to yourself. The kind that feels like walking The Angel Path with a guide who truly understands, because she's walked this journey herself. Book your Angel Path Discovery Call and begin your journey back to yourself. Because understanding is power, and you deserve to understand the patterns that have been running your life, and to release them with compassion, support, and genuine healing. The first five women who book in January receive 20% off their first RTT session (£360 instead of £450). Follow me on Facebook , Instagram , LinkedIn , or visit my website for more info! Read more from Polly Angel Polly Angel, Founder, The Angel Path Polly Angel is a Rapid Transformational Therapy practitioner, IFS & Somatic trauma-informed coach, and founder of The Angel Path – Guidance toward Wellness. After her own transformative healing journey from chronic people-pleasing and debilitating migraines, she became passionate about helping others break free from limiting patterns. She specialises in working with women who appear strong on the outside but feel exhausted from putting everyone else first. Through The Angel Path, Polly offers individual RTT sessions and created "Meet Your Inner Team," a revolutionary emotional intelligence system for all ages. Her mission: Understanding is power, and every person deserves to understand their own emotional wisdom.
- New Year, New Me – The Do’s and Don’ts of the 2026 Job Search
Written by Nathaniel McAllister, Founder of Hurdle Community Nathaniel is the founder of Hurdle Community, a platform empowering graduates and young professionals to find clarity, confidence, and opportunity. He is now building a platform and ecosystem that redefines how people grow and progress in a rapidly changing world of work. 2025 saw one of the toughest employment markets in recent history, almost rivalling the COVID-19 pandemic. UK unemployment rose beyond 5%, and as we move into 2026, there are few signs of meaningful improvement. There are plenty of theories behind the decline: AI displacement, weak government decision-making, and a growing skills and knowledge gap that many argue stems from outdated education systems. In reality, it’s a combination of all of the above. The result is a job market where very few roles feel secure, and even fewer feel accessible. Graduates and young professionals have been hit the hardest. Competition is intense, opportunities are scarce, and standing out feels increasingly difficult. Many entry-level roles now attract well over 1,000 applications, often including candidates who are significantly overqualified but unable to secure positions at their own level. I’ve experienced this firsthand throughout 2025. I’ve navigated multiple interview processes, progressed to final stages, and even turned down a small number of offers while holding out for something better aligned with my long-term goals. Alongside this, through running a job search community for graduates and young professionals, I’ve spoken to hundreds of candidates, recruiters, and career coaches. One thing is clear: there is an overwhelming amount of conflicting advice about how to secure a job in today’s market. While every job search is different, I’ve noticed clear patterns among those who do succeed. Rather than debating which job board is best (most applications end up in the same central databases anyway), the real differentiator comes down to behavioural and mindset shifts. If you’re committing to a “New Year, New Me” approach to your 2026 job search, these are the three shifts that could make the difference. 1. Confidence This may sound obvious, but when I review CVs, the lack of confidence is striking. Many candidates simply do not sell themselves effectively. There is a fine line between confidence and arrogance, but getting this balance right can completely change how you are perceived. The same applies in interviews. If you cannot confidently articulate your value, employers won’t be convinced, even if you are highly capable. If you can’t sell yourself, then how do you expect anyone to believe you can do the job? How do you build real confidence? Start with a brag book. Write down every achievement you can think of. If you’re thinking, “I don’t have anything worth mentioning,” think again. Did you graduate with a strong grade? Take responsibility in a part-time job? Captain a sports team? Lead a project? Add numbers wherever possible: How many people did you manage? What results did you achieve? What measurable outcomes were you responsible for? Next, build your personal pitch. Almost every interview begins with a version of: “Tell me about yourself.” This is your opportunity to deliver a clear 30- to 60-second summary of who you are, what you’ve done, what you enjoyed most, and how you’ve continued developing. Then comes rehearsal. Practice with a friend or family member, or record yourself on your phone and review it critically. Confidence comes from preparation. Once you’ve mastered this, everything else becomes easier. 2. Networking (yes, you have to do this) We are now firmly in what many recruiters call a “silent job market.” More roles are filled through referrals, LinkedIn searches, and informal outreach than ever before. If you’re relying solely on applications, you’re missing a huge part of the market. With confidence in place, networking becomes far less intimidating. LinkedIn is non-negotiable. If recruiters are searching there, your profile must work for you: A clean, professional profile photo (head and shoulders) A simple, professional cover image Turn off the green “Open to Work” banner and instead enable “Allow recruiters to view my profile” in settings; make sure you toggle it regularly A strong headline: your current or target role, target industry, plus a differentiator Follow relevant companies and individuals, and engage consistently to build familiarity and trust Consistency here matters. If you show up regularly, opportunities tend to find you. Beyond LinkedIn, get yourself on platforms like Eventbrite and search for events in your target industry. Aim to attend at least one networking event per month, many are free. If attending alone feels daunting, go with like-minded people. You’ll often find them through communities such as Hurdle Community, where job seekers connect, attend events together, and hold each other accountable. Not every event will be a success. That’s normal. What matters is following up with the people you do meet and being genuine. You never know who they might introduce you to next. 3. Consistency Consistency is one of the most underestimated factors in a successful job search. This does not mean burning yourself out. Job searching is mentally demanding, often as intense as a full-time role. You need rest. But you also need momentum. Set realistic weekly goals: A set number of applications One networking event A few LinkedIn interactions or posts You won’t see results overnight. But over weeks and months, consistency compounds. Opportunities appear when preparation meets visibility. It’s also easy to be overly harsh on yourself during unemployment. The job market has changed dramatically, and it is difficult for everyone. Focus on progress rather than perfection. And if you need accountability, Hurdle Community runs peer-powered challenges designed to keep members motivated, supported, and moving forward. You don’t need to completely reinvent yourself to land your next role in 2026. Believe in your value. Don’t take no for an answer, especially from yourself. Keep showing up, even when it feels uncomfortable. If you need support, guidance, or accountability, you’re welcome to get in touch or join Hurdle Community. We’re here to help you move forward, and you will get over the hurdle in front of you. Good luck. Follow me on Instagram , LinkedIn , and visit my website for more info! Read more from Nathaniel McAllister Nathaniel McAllister, Founder of Hurdle Community After experiencing redundancy firsthand, Nathaniel recognised how isolating the job search can be and set out to change it. Through Hurdle, he’s building a global platform and community where people can rebuild confidence, find support, and move forward together. His mission is simple: no one should face the job search alone.
- How Conscious Leaders Turn Resolutions Into Intentional Practice
Written by Aang Lakey, Life Coach, Consultant & Speaker Aang Lakey is the founder and CEO of Increasing Consciousness, a company dedicated to facilitating global equity through leadership coaching and education. Aang is well known for connecting key research areas in the self-development, human intelligence, DEI, and violence prevention realms to empower leaders to facilitate systemic change. How is your New Year’s resolution holding up? Every January, we set goals to change, fix, or accomplish something new. Yet by February, most resolutions fade… Not because we lack motivation, but because they’re often disconnected from our values and our actual capacity. If you’ve noticed that your resolutions rarely last, you’re not alone. What most of us call a “failure of discipline” is really a lack of intentional alignment. This year, instead of more resolutions, try something deeper, leading with intention. Let go of resolutions and choose intention instead Resolutions focus on outcomes. Intention focuses on alignment. Traditional resolutions tell us what to achieve, but intentionality asks us why it matters and who we are becoming in the process. When we start from presence instead of pressure, our goals evolve from an external performance to an internal congruence that supports all that we are and wish to be. Leading with intention invites us to let go of urgency and perfection, and to slow down long enough to make conscious choices that actually reflect our values, capacity, and lived wisdom. Sustainable change doesn’t come from willpower, rather it comes from integrity and alignment with our deepest beliefs and values. From awareness to intentionality If you’ve read my work on Leadership Reflexivity , you’ve likely already developed a rhythm of awareness, evaluation, and adjustment to support you in turning your insight into conscious intentions for the new year. This cycle helps us to notice what’s happening within and around us, make meaning of our reactions, and realign our behavior with our values and capacity. But after engaging in our reflective process comes a key question, what do we do with what we’ve learned? That’s where intentionality begins. Introducing conscious intentionality Conscious Intentionality recognizes that intention doesn’t live in a single decision, but that it’s woven into the daily patterns we repeat. Bringing Conscious Intention to your desires is a values-driven approach that helps leaders translate their reflective insights into aligned direction. It focuses on six interconnected dimensions that influence how we think, feel, and act: Thoughts: What internal narratives or beliefs shape my self-perception and mood? Emotions: Which emotions guide or distort my decisions to take action? Behaviors: What habits reinforce (or disrupt) my alignment? Actions: Where can I act more consciously and courageously to live in alignment? Processes: Which systems or routines no longer reflect who I am or desire to be? Community: Who keeps me accountable to growth and integrity? These six dimensions act as both a mirror and a lever to reveal where we’re out of alignment and offer direction for our conscious change. If we truly want to meet a goal or specified resolution, we must understand each of these dimensions and how they impact our intentions to meet those goals. The power of intention: An example in practice Imagine you begin the year with a resolution to “be more productive.” By mid-February, your calendar is full, your energy is low, and guilt creeps in. Now, let’s look at your resolutions through the lens of intentionality: Intentional thought: What story do I want to stop believing this year? Intentional emotion: What emotion do I need to honor (or release) in order to live more authentically? Intentional behavior: What daily habit would help me embody my values more consistently? Intentional action: What is one meaningful action or decision I want to make from alignment this year? Intentional process: What system or routine no longer reflects who I am or how I want to live? Intentional community: Who do I need to stay connected to in order to remain accountable to my growth? Through awareness and alignment, our productivity can transform from performance into presence. This is how consciousness supports your desired intentions and facilitates the outcomes you desire for the new year. Why this matters right now The new year often triggers urgency or a push to plan, produce, and prove. But conscious leadership asks for a sustainable presence that endures the test of time. As you practice intentional awareness and alignment this year, you’ll notice: You’re more attuned to your actual needs and how things support your growth. You’re more aware of your limits and boundaries that support your intentions. You’re more clear about what no longer aligns, releasing and making time for what does. Intentionality honors your internal wisdom and replaces the illusion of “new year, new you” with the truth that transformation begins by living your values, not escaping yourself. A conscious practice to begin the year Before setting another goal, try this reflective pause: Find 15 minutes of quiet. Ask yourself: What values feel most alive in me right now? What kind of leader, partner, or human do I want to be this year? What small but meaningful shifts am I ready to make in how I think, decide, or act? Breathe deeply. Don’t rush the answers. Remember that intention requires presence, so tap into your inner essence and hold onto your deepest desires and why you desire those outcomes, so you can bring it into your daily life as you navigate the outcomes you seek. Lead the year with conscious intention You don’t need to reinvent yourself this year, you only need to stay aligned with what matters. Every thought, emotion, and action can either reinforce old conditioning or cultivate conscious leadership. The choice is yours, one intentional pause at a time. Instead of starting this year with a resolution, bring intentionality and aligned rhythm. Let consciousness guide your intentions, and let those intentions shape the way you lead, live, and love. Explore more on intentional leadership in my book Conscious Intentionality , part of the Leadership Consciousness Essentials series . Subscribe to “The Conscious Leader” Newsletter. Follow Aang on LinkedIn or Instagram . Read more from Aang Lakey Aang Lakey, Life Coach, Consultant & Speaker Aang Lakey is a leader in ushering in a new wave of global consciousness. Their work facilitates global equity by educating and coaching leadership teams to integrate reflexivity, intentionality, and anti-oppressive practices into their daily lives and leadership styles. Through the principle of refraction, Aang encourages leaders to touch as many people as possible by living with integrity and emanating congruence in their leadership. Their approach is simple: elevate your own consciousness and watch the ripple effect that has on every aspect of your life and with every person you interact with.
- Obesity Isn’t Just About Food – The Lifestyle Factors That Shape Your Health
Written by Andrea Douala, Certified Personal Trainer and Nutrition Coach Andrea Douala is the founder of MissDoualaFitness, a bilingual fitness and wellness brand. Her approach emphasizes nurturing every dimension of health, mind, body, and soul to help you become the best version of yourself. If obesity were only about willpower and food choices, we would have solved it a long time ago. Yet, the narrative that obesity is all about “eating too much and not moving enough” still dominates public debate. While diet and physical activity matter, they only represent one piece of a much bigger and complex puzzle. Biology says something different. Obesity is now recognized as a chronic medical condition, not a lack of self-control or a personal failure. It is influenced by a combination of multiple factors such as metabolism, genetics, environment, hormones, psychology, and even past weight-loss attempts. These mechanisms can actively work against the body’s ability to lose or maintain weight. Because of its complexity, obesity oftentimes requires more than just lifestyle tips. In many cases, a medical approach combined with sustainable and personalized lifestyle strategies, is necessary to support long-term health. To move away from blame and get a better understanding of obesity, we need to look beyond calories and diet, and explore the hidden lifestyle and biological factors that shape how the body regulates weight. The body & stress Regardless of our weight or lifestyle, we all experience stress. It’s part of being human and, to some extent, it’s unavoidable. But what exactly is stress? Stress is the body’s natural response to change or challenge. Not all stress is harmful. Some forms of stress are positive, the kind that makes you feel motivated, energized, or excited. Think about starting a new job, going on a first date, or learning a new skill. This type of stress is usually short-lived and can even be beneficial. The problem arises when stress becomes constant. Chronic stress, such as ongoing financial pressure, job insecurity, or relationship difficulties, keeps the body in a prolonged state of alert. Over time, this persistent stress leads to elevated levels of cortisol, often referred to as the body’s main stress hormone. High cortisol levels don’t just affect how we feel emotionally, they directly impact our physiology. Cortisol influences appetite, energy levels, mood, sleep, and how the body stores fat. When cortisol remains elevated for long periods, it can increase hunger, promote cravings for unhealthy and convenient foods, and disrupt normal eating patterns. Even more importantly, chronic stress affects where fat is stored in the body. Elevated cortisol is strongly associated with increased fat accumulation in the abdominal area, a region that is particularly linked to metabolic complications. This type of fat distribution is associated with a higher risk of conditions such as type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease. In other words, obesity is not only about how much fat the body carries, but also where it stores it, and stress plays a major role in that process. Sleep: The silent regulator Sleep is often the first thing we sacrifice when life gets busy, yet it is one of the most powerful regulators of body weight and metabolic health. Just like stress, poor sleep doesn’t affect only how tired you feel the next day, it affects how your body functions at a hormonal and physiological level. When you don’t get enough sleep, your body enters a state of imbalance. Two key hormones that regulate appetite are directly affected, ghrelin, the hormone that stimulates hunger, increases, while leptin, the hormone that signals fullness, decreases. In simple terms, lack of sleep makes you hungrier and less satisfied after eating. This explains why short nights are often followed by stronger cravings, larger portions, and a tendency to snack more, especially on high-calorie, sugary or salty foods. Poor sleep also worsens insulin sensitivity, meaning your body has a harder time managing blood sugar levels. Over time, this can promote fat storage, particularly in the abdominal area, and increase the risk of metabolic conditions such as type 2 diabetes. Combined with elevated cortisol levels from chronic stress, sleep deprivation creates a hormonal environment that actively works against weight regulation. Beyond hormones, fatigue affects behavior. When you are exhausted, decision-making becomes harder. You are less likely to cook balanced meals, more likely to rely on convenience foods, and less inclined to move your body. Physical activity feels more demanding, recovery is slower, and motivation drops. This creates a cycle where poor sleep leads to behaviors that further impair sleep quality and metabolic health. So sleep is a biological necessity. Improving sleep duration and quality doesn’t just support weight management, it supports hormonal balance, energy levels, mental health, and overall well-being. Movement is not a punishment Movement is often reduced to one thing, burning calories. But this limited view misses its real power. Movement is not a punishment for what you ate. It is a cycle breaker. Regular movement, whether it’s walking, mobility work, or resistance training, plays a central role in regulating your metabolism. It helps your body use energy more efficiently, improves insulin sensitivity, stabilizes blood sugar levels, and supports fat metabolism. In other words, movement helps your body work with you, not against you. But the benefits go far beyond physiology. Movement is one of the most effective tools we have to manage stress. It lowers cortisol levels, improves mood, and supports better sleep. Even low-intensity movement like walking can significantly reduce stress and improve mental clarity. Another key benefit of movement is its impact on body composition. Rather than focusing only on the number on the scale, movement helps increase muscle mass, preserve lean tissue, and reduce fat mass over time. This shift improves metabolic health, strength, and resilience, regardless of weight loss. What matters most is consistency, not intensity. You don’t need extreme workouts to see results. Sustainable, enjoyable movement practiced regularly is far more effective than short bursts of high-intensity effort followed by long periods of inactivity. Beyond the physical, movement reconnects you to yourself. It builds confidence, restores trust in your body, and allows you to rediscover what your body is capable of. For many people, it becomes a gateway to improved mental well-being, self-awareness, and even a renewed sense of identity. Environment & lifestyle Finally, we need to talk about environment and lifestyle, not as excuses, but as real and powerful influences on our health. Most people don’t live in a vacuum where they can perfectly plan meals, train daily, sleep eight hours, and manage stress effortlessly. Real life looks like busy schedules, long workdays, commuting, academic pressure, financial stress, family responsibilities, and emotional load. When your days are packed, and your energy is constantly drained, healthy choices become harder, not because you don’t care, but because you’re exhausted. A lack of structure often leads to irregular meals, skipped meals, followed by overeating, reliance on convenience foods, and eating driven by emotions rather than hunger. Emotional eating, in particular, is not a lack of discipline, it’s a coping mechanism. Food can become a source of comfort, relief, or control in an environment that feels overwhelming or unpredictable. Mental health also plays a major role. Anxiety, low mood, chronic stress, or burnout can significantly impact appetite, motivation to move, sleep quality, and even how connected you feel to your body. When mental health is struggling, expecting “perfect” lifestyle habits is unrealistic and unfair. Our environment shapes our behaviors, our rhythms, and our capacity to care for ourselves. Sustainable health improvements don’t come from shame or extreme rules, but come from creating supportive routines, realistic structures, and an environment that makes healthy choices easier, not harder. Reframing obesity Obesity is a complex and multifactorial condition that cannot be reduced to individual choices alone. Sustainable health improvements do not come from shame, restriction, or extreme rules. They come from small, consistent habits, supportive routines, realistic goals, and environments that make healthy choices easier, not harder. Sometimes, the most powerful thing you can do for your health is not to do more, but to simplify. To slow down. To listen to your body. To rebuild habits that fit your real life, with kindness rather than pressure. If there is one takeaway, let it be this, health is not about perfection, it’s about creating a lifestyle that works with your biology, not against it. Follow me on Facebook , Instagram , and LinkedIn for more info! Read more from Andrea Douala Andrea Douala, Certified Personal Trainer and Nutrition Coach Andrea Douala is a certified personal trainer and nutrition coach passionate about inspiring others to embrace the joys of healthy living. As the founder of MissDoualaFitness, a bilingual small business offering services in both French and English, she is dedicated to making fitness and wellness accessible to everyone. No matter how busy life gets, Andrea believes that your health is your greatest strength. With her holistic approach, she empowers clients to create sustainable and meaningful changes that are unique to them.














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