For a year, I tried to make something work that wasn't going to work.
I was volunteering my time and energy toward a mission I believed in completely — the kind of cause that feels less like a project and more like a piece of who you are. But somewhere along the way, the direction the organization was moving in stopped matching what I believed, or how I wanted to use my own resources and energy. I noticed it. And then I spent a year trying to close that gap anyway.
I wrote proposals. I sat in meetings. I fundraised. I picked apart my own thinking, again and again, looking for the flaw in my perspective rather than the misalignment in front of me. With every step, the anxiety got louder. Not dramatic, not a single moment of crisis — just a low hum that kept turning up in volume, the way a smoke alarm doesn't stop chirping just because you've decided to ignore it.
Eventually I understood what it had been telling me the whole time: it was time to complete my term.
What came next wasn't relief. It was grief. But the anxiety — the thing I'd been carrying for a year — was gone.
What Anxiety Actually Is
Most of us are taught to treat anxiety as the problem. Something to calm down, medicate, push through, or manage until it's quiet enough to function around. I understand the impulse — anxiety is uncomfortable, and comfort feels like the goal.
But here's what I've come to believe, both in my own life and in fifteen years of sitting across from people in this work: anxiety only arises when something is being ignored that is demanding attention. It is not a malfunction. It is a signal.
Your body doesn't produce a year of low-grade dread for no reason. It produces it because some part of you already knows something your mind hasn't caught up to yet — a misalignment, a decision you're avoiding, a version of yourself you've outgrown but haven't yet left. The anxiety isn't the malfunction. The gap between what you know and how you're living is the actual thing. The anxiety is just what tells you the gap exists.
This is also why anxiety so often gets worse right before something shifts, not better. It's not the work going wrong. It's the work arriving — getting loud enough that it finally can't be managed around anymore.
How to Actually Listen to It
You don't need a dramatic breakthrough to hear what anxiety is pointing at. You need a few honest questions, asked without trying to immediately fix or explain the answer:
What have I been trying to force to work, that isn't working?
What am I picking apart in myself, that might actually be a misalignment outside myself?
What would I need to complete, or let go of, for this feeling to have somewhere to go?
Where in my life does my outer situation not yet match what I already know to be true inside?
You may not get a clean answer right away. That's fine. The point isn't to solve it in one sitting — it's to stop treating the anxiety as static and start treating it as information.
A Small Practical Step
While you sit with what your own anxiety might be pointing at, it can help to work with the physical sensation directly — not to silence it, but to give your body a way to process what it's holding. I use a simple tapping technique with clients for exactly this. You can try it yourself here →
It won't answer the bigger question for you. But it can quiet the noise enough to actually hear it.
The Honest Ending
I wish I could tell you that once I listened, everything felt better. It didn't — not right away. What I felt was grief. Grief for the mission I still believed in. Grief for the year of effort. Grief for a version of my involvement that I had to let go of in order to stay aligned with myself.
But the anxiety was gone. In its place was something harder, but more honest — the clean, uncomplicated sadness of an ending, instead of the exhausting static of trying to force something that had already told me, a hundred small ways, that it was over.
That's usually the trade. Not anxiety for peace. Anxiety for grief — which is heavier, but real. And underneath both of them, still there, still yours: whatever it is you were actually longing for in the first place.
If something in your own life has been signaling for a while now, and you're ready to actually listen to what it's pointing at, Beginning is a 30-day container built for exactly that.