Dream
People don’t feel like they have the right to figure out or to do what lights them. We give our power away to not figuring out what we really want. We question who we are to live our dreams and shine bright. Your dream is not a performance review from your family, culture, or résumé; it is the felt sense of how your soul wants to move, love, work, and contribute if nothing were being auditioned for. It usually shows up as a quiet but persistent pull—toward a way of living that feels true, even if it looks irrational, less impressive, or more vulnerable from the outside. When you’re in touch with that dream, there is often both relief (“this is me”) and fear (“can I really live like this?”), which is why we so often push it away and go back to the life we were handed.
Honoring that dream means you stop waiting to feel ready and instead use your discomfort as a compass. The hard conversation, the boundary, the new offer, the creative risk, the “no” to misaligned money—those are the exact frictions that shape the bridge between your current life and your soul‑life. Running toward those uncomfortable actions “again and again” is how you vote, in behavior rather than fantasy, for the world in which your dream is real. Each time you move through the fear instead of obeying it, you slightly re‑write who you are and what reality is allowed to be for you.
“Partnership with something bigger than you” names the fact that you can’t control outcomes, timing, or other people. Your side of the partnership is clarity and courageous action; the “bigger” side is the field of synchronicity, support, and openings that you can’t manufacture but that tend to appear once you’re in motion. Living this way is less “I will manifest exactly X” and more “I will keep taking brave, aligned steps, trusting that whatever meets me will be better than the smaller life I could control.” In that sense, the dream is not only a destination but a way of relating to life: honest about what you want, brave enough to act, and humble enough to let life co‑author the details.