You Know Your Path, But May Not Trust Yourself to Follow It—Yet
Doubt, Distraction, and Cultural Noise Keep You from Believing What’s Been Inside You All Along.
We Know.
We always know.
That quiet truth inside—the pulse of yes, the ache of no, the path forward we pretend not to see—it’s there. Waiting.
But knowing is not the hard part. Not really.
The Two Hardest Things
Michael Meade says the two hardest things you’ll ever face in life are:
1. Not knowing your path.
2. Knowing your path.
Not knowing is brutal. You feel unmoored, unsure, grasping for anything to make the confusion stop.
But knowing?
Really knowing?
That’s terrifying in its own way—because now there are no more excuses. Now you’re called to act. To follow through. To become the one who says yes to their life. And that takes more courage than we’re usually trained for.
So We Hide
We pretend we don’t know.
We hide in confusion.
We scroll.
We ask everyone else.
We wait for permission.
And this avoidance—this deep cultural habit of outsourcing our inner authority—creates the very anxiety we’re trying to escape.
We tell ourselves we’re not enough.
We imagine someone else has the answer.
We think we need more time, more clarity, more credentials, more confidence.
But clarity doesn’t come before the leap.
It comes after we commit.
The Tragedy of Our Time
We’ve given our power away to algorithms and influencers.
We’ve forgotten how to sit in stillness.
We’ve mistaken the trance of distraction for peace.
We’ve stopped trusting ourselves.
“The real fear isn’t being lost. It’s being found—and then having to live like it matters.”
Your Knowing Is Still There
Beneath the noise, the stress, the doubt—your knowing is still there.
Something ancient.
Something sacred.
Something yours.
Your intuition.
Your truth.
Your path.
Not the one your family expects.
Not the one that scores the most points or looks good on paper.
The one that lights something up in you. The one that scares you, but won’t leave you alone.
The one that asks you to risk your comfort in service of your soul.
This Is Why We Train
This is why we gather.
This is why Find Your Path exists—not to give you answers, but to help you build the foundation that lets you hear your own.
Because you don’t need more advice.
You need more presence.
Daily practice.
Devotion to stillness.
Habits that help you return to yourself—again and again.
The Real Work
This is the heart of The Invitation Beyond.
This is the foundation of our coaching, our circles, our programs.
Not self-improvement.
Self-remembrance.
We train to stop running.
To stop performing.
To stop pretending we don’t know.
Because the truth is:
You already do.
This landed well with me today. Thank you for carrying the torch for our inner light into the Beyond!