“Take the first step in faith. You don’t have to see the whole staircase, just take the first step.” – Martin Luther King Jr.
One reason people stay stuck in careers and jobs that suck their souls is that they think they need the whole plan before they begin. They want certainty. A map. Some assurance that if they make a move, it will all work out.
But that’s rarely how real change happens.
Most exciting next chapters don’t begin with a master plan. They begin with a first step. A conversation you’ve been avoiding. A class you’ve been meaning to take. An idea you stop dismissing and finally give some real attention.
When I was making my own pivot, I wanted clarity before movement. What I got instead was movement that created clarity. I didn’t (couldn’t) think my way into a new life. I had to step into it.
That can be hard for high achievers. Especially for lawyers, executives, and professionals who are used to studying the options, managing risk, and trying to get it right before they act.
But your next chapter is not a problem to solve on paper. It’s something you discover by living into it.
You don’t need to know exactly where it ends. You just need enough courage to take one honest step. Then pay attention to what that step teaches you.
That is how momentum begins. And momentum changes things. Once you start moving, you gather evidence. You learn. You adjust. You begin to trust yourself again.
That’s how a new chapter becomes real.
So let me ask you: What’s one step you know you could take right now?
Want to talk about what that step might look like? Email me for a no-obligation strategy call: [email protected]





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