Aligned Action
When Knowing Isn’t Enough Anymore
There comes a moment in personal growth that feels almost unfair. You know better. You see the pattern. You recognize the red flag, hear the shift in your own voice, feel the tightening in your chest. And yet, you hesitate. I’m in that space as I write this.
Because knowing is not the same thing as acting.
Real aligned action asks you to risk being misunderstood. It asks you to disappoint someone. It asks you to choose long-term self-trust over short-term comfort. These are not small things. You are moving from safety to something unpredictable. Big, wonderful (most likely), but it’s the unknown.
I am one of those who has become very fluent in self-awareness. Many of us have that “gift” (or is it a curse?) We read, reflect, and journal. We understand boundaries. We can pinpoint and articulate our patterns and responses with clarity. We can name exactly what is happening inside. But explanation is not embodiment. It’s intellectual, not fully alive. There is a quiet gap between insight and action, and that gap is where fear lives.
Aligned action is rarely dramatic like in the movies, a grand exit or a fiery speech. More often, it’s subtle. It’s declining an invitation without over-explaining. It’s not responding immediately when responding re-opens something you are trying to close. It’s allowing silence to exist instead of rushing to fill it. It’s saying one calm sentence and allowing it to stand.
And there is grief in it. And this is important. Even a positive move forward means grieving what we leave behind.
We don’t talk about that enough.
When my parents were alive, I felt anchored in a way I didn’t fully appreciate at the time. They reflected back to me a version of myself that was steady and capable. After they were gone, something shifted. The ground beneath me became unpredictable. The people who had always known me without distortion were no longer there. I didn’t become a different person overnight, but I did become more willing to bend. More willing to smooth over discomfort if it meant staying connected. I became smaller, less colorful, less interested, less interesting. More likely to accept that I had contributed to a distance, even when I wasn’t sure I had. All of this in search of my footing.
There is another layer to this that I don’t always admit out loud. The fears I have talked myself into believing. I can dismantle them intellectually. I can ask whether they are true, and I know, rationally, that most of them are not. I know what I want to build is possible. I feel it in my bones. I feel the strength in me. I feel the clarity. And yet I still hesitate.
The hesitation isn’t about capability. It is about expansion. About what happens in our lives when we outgrow where we are.
There are places in my own life where this tension is alive right now. I know the work I want to do is bigger than the rooms I’ve been standing in. I know I can hold it. I feel the steadiness of it in me. The self-assured willingness and even excitement. And yet I notice the pause before I pitch the larger space, before I raise my hand for the broader stage. It’s not because I doubt the message.
It’s because I know all too well what changes when we grow in new directions.
When you step into a bigger room, something rearranges. Some people lean in. Some step back. Some begin relating to you differently. Visibility changes the ecosystem around you.
For a long time, I interpreted that as loss. I feared that loss and the thought that moving beyond the familiar, the predictable, would leave holes that would never close, like a death. Now I am beginning to see it as a shift and growth. Expansion. Environments respond to growth. They reorganize around it. What strengthens, strengthens. What’s new arrives. What cannot stretch reveals its limits.
I am not trying to be bigger for the sake of being bigger. I am expanding because the work wants to expand. Because the message feels larger than the current room. Because the version of me that can hold it is already there. I feel I have something bigger to share. I want to use it to make that difference I came here to make. I believe that. I know what I am here to do. And yet…
The protection of almost is subtle. Almost pitching the bigger room. Almost claiming the next level. Almost stepping fully into visibility. Almost allows you to grow quietly without disrupting the existing balance. I’ve been doing just that… for years.
But fully stepping in requires trusting that the relationships meant to evolve with you will. And the ones who can’t were never meant to hold the next version of you. God! This is so important to remember. Some things are in our lives for a short time, until we learn the lesson that moves us to the next big step.
Perhaps aligned action is not about becoming fearless. Perhaps it’s about trusting that growth will be met. That the right people will travel with us. That new rooms will bring new alliances. That stepping forward does not mean stepping alone. We are never alone.
I am still practicing this. But I’m learning that staying small to preserve connection is not loyalty. And it’s certainly not safe or secure. It is self-abandonment. And I am no longer willing to negotiate that.
Knowing who you are is beautiful.
Living like you know changes everything.
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With steadiness,
Laura
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This resonated with me so deeply! I've also become fluent in the language of self-awareness and personal growth, which I treasure, but the most transformative chapter of my life really began when I discovered how to put that insight into action. This practice has not only brought exciting shifts to major areas of my life but also given me the gift of more jpy, delight, and curiosity in my everyday life as well. This is why I'm so passionate about helping other people with a collection of personal insights finally start putting it into practice and experiencing authentic momentum in their lives. Thank you so much for sharing this.
I am so glad this was meaningful to you, Betty! It has been a long journey for me, and I still find myself holding back without being courageous about it! I am so inspired by you and your journey! Thank you for sharing.