The Changeover Apr 2026

Do not go back.

We are addicted to timelines. We want the six-week transformation challenge. We want the 30-day happiness cleanse. But real change—the kind that rewires your neurons and reshapes your destiny—operates on what the poet David Whyte calls "the time of the heart." It does not punch a clock.

Stop trying to glue the shell back together. Stop asking, "How do I get back to how I used to feel?" You can't. You shouldn't. The old feeling was a prison cell that you had simply decorated nicely. The Changeover

I call this moment The Changeover .

We spend so much of our lives obsessed with the finish line —the promotion, the weight goal, the relationship status, the academic degree—that we completely ignore the terrifying, messy, glorious transition required to get there. We want the destination without the demolition. But life doesn't work that way. To change your life, you must first be willing to be destroyed by it. Before we talk about the changeover, we have to talk about the cage. Do not go back

You are not depressed. You are completed . You have finished the puzzle of who you were supposed to be, and you are staring at a picture you no longer like. Most people think the changeover begins with a choice. It doesn't. It begins with a collapse.

For you, it might be the phone call that ends a decade-long marriage. It might be the pink slip that arrives via impersonal email. It might be a diagnosis. It might be the quiet, horrifying realization that your children have grown up and you no longer recognize yourself in the mirror without their small hands reaching for you. We want the 30-day happiness cleanse

I can tell you that the worst of it—the raw, weeping-in-the-shower phase—lasted about four months. The rebuilding—the tentative, hopeful, "maybe I'll try that pottery class" phase—lasted two years. And the integration—the phase where you finally look in the mirror and recognize the stranger as yourself—is actually ongoing. It never really ends.

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