Are You Ready to Get On With the Rest of Your Life?
Because the past can explain where you are without deciding where you go next
There are times when life feels less like a journey and more like a waiting room. Something has shifted, but you are not yet moving confidently towards what you want next.
Outwardly, life may look much as it always has. You go to work. You meet responsibilities. You make decisions. You support other people. You keep the practical machinery running. Yet beneath all that activity,
something feels paused.
Perhaps you have been through a difficult relationship, a disappointing career chapter, illness, loss, burnout,
family conflict, or a long period of simply putting one foot in front of the other. Perhaps nothing dramatic
has happened. You have just become aware that the life you are living no longer fits as well as it once did.
You may sense that something needs to change without yet knowing what.
You may find yourself saying:
‘I don’t know what I want’
‘I should be further on by now’
‘I keep going over the same ground'
‘Part of me wants to move forward, but another part holds back’
‘I know what I don’t want. I’m less clear about what I do want’
‘I’m waiting to feel ready’
‘I don’t want to make another wrong decision’
That is one form of stuckness. It is not necessarily the absence of effort. Often, people who feel stuck have been thinking very hard, trying very hard, and carrying a great deal. The problem is not always that nothing is
happening. Sometimes the problem is that the same internal conversation keeps happening.
When the past becomes a prediction
The past matters. It shapes what you have learned, what you expect, what you guard against, what you value, and how you understand yourself. Difficult experiences can leave useful lessons. They can also leave
assumptions.
You may begin to expect that:
These expectations can make sense in the context in which they developed. But a belief that once protected
you can later restrict you. A conclusion drawn from one chapter – or maybe just one page - can quietly
become a rule for the whole book. The past then stops being information and starts becoming a prediction. You
are no longer only remembering what happened. You are organising the future around the assumption that it
will repeat the past. That can look like caution. Sometimes it is. But sometimes it is yesterday
continuing to make decisions for today.
The past is information, not instruction
Your history contains information. It can show you:
That information matters. But it does not have to become a set of instructions for the future. Something
happening before does not mean it must happen again. A response that once made sense does not have to define you. One decision going badly does not make you incapable of making a better one. A relationship ending does
not prove that closeness is unsafe. Confidence can be lost - and rebuilt. Your past may help explain your present.
It does not have to dictate your future.
Stuckness can feel safer than movement
Moving forward sounds positive. In reality, it can feel threatening. A familiar life may be unsatisfying, but it is
known. A different future contains uncertainty. Change may require you to:
That is why stuckness should not automatically be interpreted as laziness or lack of motivation. Sometimes
stuckness is protection. Part of you may be trying to prevent another disappointment, another conflict,
another failure, or another period of feeling out of control. The difficulty is that protection can gradually become confinement. A strategy that once reduced risk can eventually reduce possibility as well.
Waiting for certainty
One of the most convincing ways to remain stuck is to wait until you feel certain. Certain about the decision.
Certain about the outcome. Certain that you will not regret it. Certain that other people will understand.
Certain that you are choosing the right path. Certain that you are finally ready. Yet most meaningful choices
do not arrive with guarantees. Clarity often develops through movement. You try something. You notice what happens. You learn. You adjust. You discover more about what fits and what does not. The bigger picture
rarely arrives fully formed because life itself remains fluid, dynamic, and unfinished. You do not need a perfect
map of the whole journey. You need a direction of travel and a next step that is useful enough to take.
Rather than waiting for perfect certainty, you can choose to move in a meaningful direction. That is not
recklessness. It is agency.
Readiness is not a feeling you must wait for
People often speak about readiness as though it is a state that arrives one morning.
‘I’ll know when I’m ready.’ Sometimes that happens. More often, readiness is something you begin creating
through action. You become more ready by:
Readiness does not mean the absence of doubt. It means doubt is no longer making every decision. It does
not mean you can see the whole path. It means you are willing to take one step and learn from where it leads.
Which is shaping your next step more strongly at the moment: what you hope to build, or what you fear repeating?
The cost of staying where you are
Stuckness can feel passive, but it has consequences. Not deciding does not leave life unchanged; it usually
allows the current pattern to continue. Remaining in the same role, pattern, relationship, routine, or
internal argument may avoid an immediate risk. It may also carry a longer-term cost. The cost may be:
This does not mean you should rush. Pressure is rarely the best foundation for wise change. But there is value in asking: What is the cost of continuing as I am? Not to frighten yourself. To see the whole decision. We
often examine the risks of moving forward while overlooking the risks of standing still.
You do not have to reject your past to move beyond it
Moving forward does not require you to deny what happened. It does not require forced forgiveness. It does not require pretending the difficult parts were ‘meant to be’. It does not require gratitude for experiences that
caused harm. And it does not require you to forget. You can respect the reality of the past without building your future inside it. You can acknowledge what was lost and still make room for what may be built. You can understand why you became cautious and still decide that excessive caution does not have to govern your future choices. You
can carry the wisdom without carrying every limitation. That is not betrayal. It is development.
When your old identity no longer fits
Sometimes it is not a situation that keeps us stuck. It is a version of ourselves. You may have become:
These identities may have been useful. They may have earned approval, created safety, or helped you survive demanding periods. But an identity can become too small for the life you now want to build.
The question is not necessarily:
‘Who have I been?’
It may be:
‘Who am I becoming?’
That question creates space. It does not demand a complete answer. It simply asks you to notice whether your
current choices are serving only the person you once needed to be - or also the person you now have the
opportunity to become.
Direction matters more than a perfect destination
You may not know exactly what you want the rest of your life to look like. That is all right. A meaningful future
does not need to begin with a detailed vision. It may begin with qualities. You may want your life to contain more steadiness, connection, freedom, creativity, health, meaning, rest or choice. These are directions. They can guide action before the final destination is known. You do not need to decide what the whole future will be. You can ask:
‘What would move me one step towards a life with more of what matters?’
That is often enough.
A question to sit with
Consider one area of your life where you feel stuck. Then ask: Where am I treating the past as a prediction?
Perhaps you are assuming that because something was difficult before, it will always be difficult. Perhaps you
are expecting an old response from a new person. Perhaps you are judging your present capacity through the
lens of an earlier version of yourself. Perhaps you are waiting for certainty that life cannot provide. Notice what
comes up. Do not rush to solve it. Then ask:
If the past were information rather than instruction, what might I choose next?
· One conversation?
· One boundary?
· One hour protected for something meaningful?
· One request for support?
· One decision to stop revisiting a question you
have already answered?
You do not need the whole answer before you begin. You need one honest next step.
Are you ready to get on with the rest of your life?
This question is not intended as criticism. It is an invitation. Getting on with the rest of your life does not mean rushing past grief, ignoring pain, or forcing a positive meaning onto what happened. It means recognising that
your past and your future are not the same thing. It means allowing what you have learned to support you rather
than confine you. And it means remembering that movement does not require perfect certainty—only enough willingness to begin.
When structured support may help
If you recognise yourself in this - still managing the practical demands of life, but internally aware that you are
circling the same ground - you may benefit from a structured approach to building what comes next.
PERMA Pathways is a 10-session hypnotherapy and wellbeing programme for reflective adults who are ready to
move beyond recurring patterns and build a steadier, more meaningful and more self-directed way of living.
It combines Solution Focused Hypnotherapy, positive psychology, self-hypnosis, structured workbooks, guided hypnosis recordings, and practical between-session exercises.
The programme does not ask you to erase the past or produce a perfect life plan. It helps you understand what
is happening now, strengthen your agency, reconnect with what matters, and begin creating a clearer
direction of travel.
I work with a small number of PERMA Pathways clients each year so the programme can be properly paced, personalised, and integrated.
It is not for everyone at every stage. If life currently feels too unstable or daily functioning is significantly affected,
a more flexible one-session-at-a-time approach may be more appropriate first.
But if you have the capacity to reflect, practise and build—and you are ready to begin shaping what comes
next—the first step is a suitability conversation.
Less survival. More living.
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