What Changes Us
- info590620
- 2d
- 2 min read

This year shifted something deeply meaningful within me.
A health scare arrived unexpectedly early in the year, the kind of thing that stops you in your tracks, reroutes your attention, and rearranges your priorities without asking permission. It was quite serious and I made it through. I am grateful beyond words, still processing, reflecting. It was as if life cracked open a small door and said, Look here. Pay attention. This matters. Stay in the light.
I have always tried to live with presence and appreciation, but something about moving through profound fear and uncertainty made everything feel sharper, more precious, more true. I found myself waking up each morning simply thankful to be here. Thankful for breath, for sunlight, for the people I love, for ordinary days that felt miraculous because they existed.
And it also made me look at perfectionism in a real and honest way. Not the loud version, but the quiet ways I have pushed myself, the over-efforting, the subtle tension of wanting to do everything right, the fear of disappointing others. Somehow this year broke that open. I can see more clearly now how perfectionism steals joy, how it whispers that nothing is enough, how it tricks us into holding our breath and holding rigidity in our bodies. My health scare did not just soften me, it invited me to lay that heaviness down.
Another unexpected gift of this year was the people. I worked with the most extraordinary humans, creative, wise, generous people who showed up with their whole hearts. New relationships were forged in the best way, naturally, unexpectedly, through shared purpose and shared values. And the circle of women in my life grew stronger. More supportive. More rooted in real connection. There is something powerful about walking through a challenging year and realizing who stands with you.
What remains is gratitude. A simpler gratitude. A deeper appreciation for life as it is, not as I wish it would be. Being in my sixties, I am more aware than ever that our time here is both beautiful and brief. And that makes joy, peace, and pleasure feel like worthy pursuits. Not luxuries, but necessities.
So here I am, grateful for this year. Grateful for the lessons that arrived uninvited. Grateful for the grace that met me and held my hand. Grateful for the people who walked beside me. Grateful for the chance to keep learning how to live in a way that feels awake, true, and tender.
Ciao to the days ahead. My simple blessing: May the days ahead be full of presence. May they be full of love. And may we remember, with all the softness we can muster, that being alive at all is the real miracle



