There comes a moment โ sometimes in the quiet between meetings, sometimes in the sleepless hum of a Sunday night โ when we feel it.
That subtle ache that whispers: this isnโt what I came here to do.
For many of us, that whisper began as a roar in our younger years โ a clear knowing of what lit us up. We wanted to paint, to write, to heal, to teach, to serve, to build something beautiful. But somewhere along the way, we made a trade.
We traded meaning for security.
Wonder for routine.
The wild unknown for the predictable paycheck.
And while there is nothing inherently wrong with earning a living โ in fact, money is energy, a resource for our evolution โ the wound comes when we begin to earn a living at the cost of our aliveness.
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The Subtle Slipping Away
The abandonment doesnโt happen all at once.
Itโs gradual, like sand slipping through our fingers.
It starts when we tell ourselves:
โIโll just do this job until I figure out what I really want.โ
Then years pass. Promotions come. Bills expand. Comfort sets in โ or perhaps numbness does.
We lose touch with our inner compass โ that quiet, soulful knowing that once led us toward what was real. Instead, we begin to chase metrics, titles, and status symbols that were never our true north.
Before long, our bodies start to revolt. Fatigue, anxiety, burnout, illness โ they are the soulโs way of saying, โYouโve strayed too far from home.โ
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The Courage to Come Home
Reclaiming our soulโs work doesnโt mean quitting everything overnight (though sometimes, yes, it does). It means beginning to listen again โ deeply, honestly โ to what our inner self has been trying to tell us all along.
It might look like:
Dusting off a dream that once felt impossible.
Saying โnoโ to what drains you, even if it pays well.
Letting curiosity guide you instead of fear.
Remembering that fulfillment doesnโt come from a direct deposit โ it comes from alignment.
Because when we are in right relationship with our work โ when it feeds our spirit instead of depleting it โ we stop abandoning ourselves. We become whole again.
—
A New Economy of the Soul
The future of work โ the conscious future โ asks us to redefine success.
Not by the digits in our bank accounts, but by the depth of our peace.
Not by the number of hours we grind, but by the amount of joy we embody.
When we choose work that honors our souls, we donโt just heal ourselves โ we help heal the collective. We model a new way of being, one that values presence over productivity, purpose over performance.
This is the great remembering.
The call back to what we once knew.
The invitation to live โ and work โ from the inside out.
—
โจ Reflection Prompt:
What part of your soul have you been trading for a paycheck?
And what small act could you take this week to invite it back into your life?
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