02/01/2026
Iâm not setting goals yet.
Not because I donât care.â¨Not because Iâve given up.â¨Not because Iâm afraid of wanting things.
But because this year asked me to slow down in ways I didnât choose.
â¨There was change.â¨There were moments where simply staying present with what was took more energy than planning what could be.
And Iâve learned this the hard way:â¨When I rush into goal-setting before Iâve actually listened to myself,â¨my goals stop being supportive.â¨They become another form of pressure.
Another quiet way of saying:â¨âGet it together.ââ¨âMove on already.ââ¨âBe productive again.â
Right now, that doesnât feel honest.
What I need before goals is orientation.â¨I need to notice whatâs tender.â¨What feels heavy.â¨What feels surprisingly steady.â¨What Iâm still carrying that I havenât named yet.
Iâm letting myself be in that space without demanding clarity from it.
Because clarity thatâs forced isnât clarity.â¨Itâs compliance.
Weâre taught that January is about answers.â¨But sometimes itâs about asking better questions.â¨Or not asking anything at all.
So instead of goals, Iâm paying attention.
To my energy.â¨To my capacity.â¨To what feels like relief instead of âgrowth.ââ¨To what Iâm no longer willing to push through.
Goals can come later.â¨When theyâre shaped by honesty instead of urgency.â¨When they feel like an invitation, not a verdict.
If youâre not ready to set goals yet,â¨youâre not behind.
You might just be listening.â¨And that matters more than weâre taught to believe. đЎ
30/12/2025
My goals didnât fail this year. They just changed shape.
This year didnât move the way I planned.
Some intentions softened.
Some timelines stretched.
Some goals quietly stepped aside so something else could take their place.
Not because I gave up.
Not because I wasnât disciplined enough.
But because life asked for flexibility instead of force.
Weâre taught to review a year like a performance report.
What worked.
What didnât.
What to fix.
But sometimes the most honest reflection is this:
What did I need instead?
If your year looks different than what you imagined,
that doesnât mean it was wasted.
It might mean you adapted.
It might mean you survived.
It might mean you listened.
And that counts more than weâre taught to believe đЎ
29/12/2025
I have been quiet, and thatâs part of the story.
This year came with change, grief, and a lot of reorientation, personally and professionally.
Some goals didnât happen.
Some plans fell apart.
And some things grew that I never planned for at all.
Iâm not here to turn that into a failure story.
Iâm here to name whatâs real: sometimes being quiet is how we survive, process, and listen.
Iâm easing back in with honesty, compassion, and less pressure to perform.
If this year held grief for you too, you are not alone đЎ
TheNourishedProfessional
22/07/2025
Slowing down doesnât mean youâre falling behind.
But it can feel that way, especially when you are used to measuring your worth by how much you get done.
Weâve been taught that rest is risky.
That if we stop, weâll lose momentum.
That doing less means weâre lazy, weak, or wasting time.
That if we stop tracking, pushing, or performing, everything will fall apart.
This shows up around food too.
The fear of slowing down to eat.
The fear of fullness.
The fear of not âmanagingâ your body.
So we stay in motion, overworking, overthinking, overriding our needs.
Even when weâre exhausted, tired, numb, or on autopilot.
But hereâs the truth: that urgency?
Itâs not coming from your body.
Itâs coming from hustle culture, diet culture, and systems that benefit when you ignore your limits.
Instead, what I practice and guide through is this:
Your value isnât in your output.
You donât have to earn stillness.
You can slow down and still trust yourself.
With food.
With movement.
With your body.
With your time.
Rest isnât the opposite of growth.
Itâs part of it.
When you slow down on purpose, you can hear yourself again.
And thatâs where trust begins with food, with your body, and with your time.
đ What would you give yourself today if you didnât feel guilty for needing it?
21/07/2025
This is your reminder that a slower start doesnât mean youâre falling behind.
It means youâre listening.
And that matters more than any to-do list.
20/07/2025
Nourishment isnât just about food.
You can honor your hunger and still feel off.
You can eat something that fills you up and still feel tense, disconnected, or unheard.
Thatâs because real nourishment includes more than meals.
Itâs also rest.
Itâs how you talk to yourself.
Itâs setting a boundary.
Itâs feeling safe in your body, even when things are messy.
I used to think food was the whole picture.
But intuitive eating helped me see it differently.
Yes, food matters but so do satisfaction, self-trust, and care that goes beyond whatâs on a plate.
Now I ask: What actually feels supportive today?
Right now, reading this book has been part of that for me.
Not for self-improvement. Not to check off a list.
Just because it feels good. Supportive. Like something my nervous system says yes to.
Sometimes thatâs a meal that hits the spot.
Sometimes itâs silence.
Sometimes itâs saying no without explaining yourself.
This is what I help people practice.
Not performing health. Not chasing rules.
But learning how to listen, and respond with care.
So, whatâs been nourishing you lately, even if it doesnât look like wellness content?
19/07/2025
We donât need to earn our rest. Or our joy. Or our pleasure.
But wow â doesnât it still feel like we do?
The other day, I was enjoying a quiet moment. Sun on my face. A warm drink. No agenda.
And then, out of nowhere, that familiar voice popped up:
âShouldnât you be doing something?â
âHave you been productive enough to relax?â
âAre you wasting time?â
Itâs so automatic, this guilt that creeps in when we enjoy something just because it feels good.
And Iâve noticed:
It doesnât just show up during time off.
Itâs the same guilt that used to shape how I approached food and my body.
I used to believe I had to earn my meals.
That rest days had to be justified with soreness or strictness.
That pleasure â from food, movement, or simply existing â was only allowed if Iâd first âbeen good.â
That mindset didnât just rob me of joy. It disconnected me from my body.
Because when we treat food as a reward, and rest as something we have to deserve, we stop listening to our needs.
We stop trusting ourselves.
Thatâs what my intuitive eating journey helped me shift.
It taught me that satisfaction isnât dangerous.
That hunger isnât a problem.
That rest and nourishment go hand in hand.
And now, I carry that same compassion into my daily life:
⨠I let rest be part of my rhythm â not something I earn.
⨠I allow food to be joyful and satisfying â not a moral test.
⨠I practice trusting my desires â without needing to explain or justify them.
This is what I coach on â not just how we relate to food, but how that relationship ripples into everything else.
đ So hereâs your gentle prompt:
What would you choose to enjoy today â if you didnât feel the need to earn it first?
18/07/2025
I used to see rest in black and white.
Either I was completely âoffâ â no work, no thinking, no actionâŚ
Or I was âonâ â productive, structured, always proving something.
It was all-or-nothing.
If I opened my laptop on holiday, I failed at resting.
If I wasnât totally checked out, then clearly I was still hustling.
There was no room for intuition, desire, or nuance.
But hereâs the truth:
I didnât learn to change that through mindset work or time management hacks.
I learned it through my relationship with food.
Because I used to approach food and my body the same way:
𼌠Be good â eat clean, light, controlled.
đŤ Be bad â eat emotionally, eat âtoo much,â feel shame.
đŤ Restrict â Rebel â Repeat.
There was no middle ground.
No trust.
No satisfaction.
Just rules and guilt.
And when I started unlearning diet culture and rebuilding trust with my body, something shifted:
⨠I saw how this black-and-white thinking wasnât just about food.
⨠It was how I was living my whole life.
So now, I bring the same compassion and curiosity into how I rest:
đ If I feel like writing on holiday, I do â because I want to, not because I have to.
đ¤ If I need stillness, I honor it â without needing to âearnâ it.
đż I donât let old rules about âhow rest should lookâ dictate how I spend my time.
This is what I help with:
Learn how to trust ourselves with food â and watch how that trust expands into the rest of our life.
đŹ What would it look like to stop living in extremes â with food, rest, and everything else?
17/07/2025
Iâm not using my holiday to âcatch upâ.
Not on content. Not on admin. Not on personal development.
But also not to âcheck outââŚ. not forcing myself to only rest.
Because Iâve learned that even the idea of âfull restâ can turn into another rigid rule.
Another performance.
Another way to disappoint myself.
I used to believe I had to use every break to be productive â to get ahead, prove my worth, or fix something.
So Iâd pack my time off with work⌠and end up more exhausted than before.
Then I swung the other way:
I told myself I must rest.
No work. No structure. Just stillness.
And somehow, that created a different kind of resentment.
Because sometimes, I want to create.
Sometimes I get a little spark and want to follow it.
And sometimes doing something for my coaching business feels good â not draining, not forced.
But then I wonder: Is this rest? Or am I just slipping back into hustle again?
Hereâs what Iâm practicing this summer:
⨠Letting my free time be mine
⨠Not filling it out of guilt
⨠Not restricting it out of fear
⨠Following what feels nourishing â whether thatâs napping or writing, swimming or storyboarding
And the same thing applies to food and body image:
You donât have to be all-or-nothing.
You can enjoy rest and movement.
Satisfaction and structure.
Ease and intention.
This is what I help explore:
What it means to live in the messy middle.
To trust your desires.
To rest without earning it â and still create without overworking.
đŹ Does this feel familiar to you?
Are you also trying to find your own way to rest?
16/07/2025
After a long pause, Iâm finding my way back to this space.
Not with a bang. Not with a big strategy.
Just with honesty, softness, and presence.
Life pulled me inward the past few months.
I was navigating personal things, and my work at the university became more intenseâmore responsibilities, more people relying on me.
The old me wouldâve tried to juggle it all.
Keep posting.
Keep producing.
Keep performing.
But thatâs not the kind of life I believe in anymore.
And itâs definitely not what I coach others to do.
So I did what felt radical in a hustle culture world:
I stepped back.
I chose to rest.
And now, as I step into my summer holidays, I feel the spaciousness returning.
The energy.
The spark.
And with it, the quiet nudge:
âItâs time.â
Time to reconnect with this space.
With you.
With my work.
With myself.
I donât have it all figured out.
But Iâm coming back with a full heart and a deep breath.
A slower way. A kinder way. A nourished way.
đ
If youâve also needed a break, or are in the messy middle of oneâyouâre not behind. Youâre human. And youâre allowed to start again.
13/01/2025
The problem isnât you. The problem is how goals are set.
For years, I thought I needed to âfixâ myself to achieve my goals. I believed I had to work harder, be more disciplined, or change completely. But hereâs what Iâve learned: sustainable goals arenât about fixing whatâs âwrongââtheyâre about building on what already matters to you.
⨠Goals rooted in the idea of âfixingâ often sound like:
âĄď¸ âLose weight to feel worthy.â
âĄď¸ âWork harder to prove yourself.â
âĄď¸ âStop doing XYZ completely.â
But when your goals build on your values, they feel lighter and more achievable:
â
Focus on joyful movement that energizes you.
â
Prioritize meaningful work that excites you.
â
Create habits that fit your lifestyle.
Letâs stop chasing goals that feel like punishment and start creating goals that feel like growth.
đŠ Comment GUIDE to grab my free workbook and start setting goals that stick.
11/01/2025
New Year, New Me?
Do we really need to start over every January?
Hereâs the truth: Youâre not a project that needs fixing. Youâre already enough.
⨠This year, instead of chasing a ânew me,â letâs focus on:
âĄď¸ Honoring who you already are.
âĄď¸ Building on what makes you feel good.
âĄď¸ Setting goals that align with your values.
Because growth doesnât mean changing who you areâit means celebrating yourself and moving toward what matters.
đŠ Comment GUIDE for my free workbook and start setting goals that truly honor YOU.