There’s a quiet kind of power in realizing that the voice in your head is not always telling the truth. Especially the one that whispers limits. The one that says you’re late, behind, not ready, not capable enough. That voice sounds convincing because it’s familiar, not because it’s right. You are more than you thinkContinue reading “Still Early. Still Becoming. Still Yours.”
Tag Archives: learning
Still a Student
Somewhere along the way, many of us quietly stop being students. Not because we’ve learned everything—but because we start protecting the image of knowing. We avoid questions that might make us look unprepared. We hesitate to try new things in front of others. We trade curiosity for competence, and without realizing it, growth slows toContinue reading “Still a Student”
The Chapters You Don’t See Yet
Some days feel like you’re stuck in the messiest part of your own story. You know the chapters—where everything feels slow, heavy, confusing, or downright exhausting. The pages where you’re doing your best but it still feels like you’re falling short. It’s easy to look at those moments and think the whole book is goingContinue reading “The Chapters You Don’t See Yet”
The Curiosity Theory
Maybe the goal was never to be endlessly happy. Maybe that was never the finish line. Happiness comes and goes like weather — warm one minute, overcast the next. Trying to hold onto it forever is like trying to keep sunlight in your hands. It slips through no matter how tightly you try to graspContinue reading “The Curiosity Theory”
The Feynman Technique: Mastering Concepts through Simplicity and Clarity
The pursuit of knowledge is a lifelong journey that often presents challenges in understanding complex concepts. Richard Feynman, a Nobel laureate physicist, devised a simple yet powerful technique to overcome this hurdle – the Feynman Technique. This method, named after the brilliant mind who created it, emphasizes the art of simplification and clarity as theContinue reading “The Feynman Technique: Mastering Concepts through Simplicity and Clarity”
