Forward! March!

This is what I sensed as I prepared for the day ahead. This military command provides direction for a movement and determines how it should be carried out. With this directive comes the requirement to focus on the area in front of me as I move with the gait designated by the commander.

The march is not the same as a stroll or jog in the park. It necessitates a deliberate, concentrated effort to perform as dictated. Enlistees in the armed services demonstrate many characteristics in this one discipline that are warranted to be successful as service people. Focus, honor, and determination, to name a few. Marching forward is only one of the commands enlistees must follow. Adhering to the commands of the right, left, about face, or halt are also essential for successfully reaching the designated location, whether physical or metaphorically.

As I march forward, I want to be able to shift when the directives change and not stumble or get out of alignment when adapting to new marching orders.

ATTEN-HUT

Pride: the Beast Within

Have you ever wondered why pride can feel like a beast lurking beneath the surface? For me, it’s a creature I wrestle with from time to time. Pride isn’t always a villain—it’s natural to celebrate our accomplishments and those of the people we love. It can fuel confidence, motivate us to reach higher, and help us recognize our worth.

But pride has a shadow side. If I’m not careful, it can deceive me, altering my perceptions and leading me astray. When I slip into a stance of superiority—even if I’d never say it out loud—I risk isolating myself from the very wisdom and impartation that could change my life. Pride whispers that I know best, that my way is the only way, and suddenly, I’m cut off from growth, connection, and humility.

The truth is, pride is a beast we all face. It’s not about banishing it forever, but about being mindful of its presence. When we celebrate, let’s do so with gratitude and openness. When we feel tempted to elevate ourselves above others, let’s remember that humility is the gateway to learning and transformation.

So, the next time pride rears its head, ask yourself: Am I celebrating, or am I isolating? Am I open to change, or am I closing the door on new possibilities? Taming the beast isn’t easy, but it’s worth the effort—for ourselves and for those we love. 

Winter to Spring

Winter to Spring

Embracing the Spiritual Transition from Winter to Spring

As winter settles in, its quiet snowfall blankets the world in stillness. For many, this season brings a sense of introspection—a time when the cold and numbness outside mirrors our own emotional, physical, and mental states. The hush of winter invites us to slow down, reflect, and become attuned to the subtle shifts within ourselves. Our sensitivities to the atmosphere may be dulled or heightened, echoing the climate’s changes and prompting us to examine our spiritual landscape. 

Yet, as the days lengthen and the first signs of spring emerge, a gentle awakening begins. Spring is not just a change in weather; it is a spiritual renewal. The thawing earth, budding trees, and returning birds remind us that transformation is possible. The numbness of winter gives way to the vibrant energy of spring, encouraging us to reconnect with our senses and embrace growth.

This transition is more than physical—it is deeply spiritual. Moving from winter’s introspection to spring’s renewal, we are invited to shed what no longer serves us and welcome new beginnings. The spiritual journey mirrors nature’s cycle: periods of quiet reflection followed by bursts of creativity and hope.

As you witness the shift from winter to spring, consider how your own spirit responds. Allow yourself to honor the lessons of winter’s stillness, then step forward into the promise of spring’s renewal. In this way, the changing seasons become a metaphor for our ongoing spiritual evolution. 

Mindset Change

Mindset Change

Things to learn and things to unlearn—what a challenge that truly is. As the years accumulate, so do layers of experiences, teachings, assumptions, and interpretations about the world. Much of what we carry wasn’t taught to us explicitly; it seeped into our thinking through the environments we grew up in, the people we admired, and the systems we moved through. It’s this subtle education—the kind we don’t remember receiving—that quietly forms the boundaries of what we believe is possible.

The challenge is that the mind, brilliant as it is, becomes comfortable in familiarity. Over time, certain thoughts become well-worn paths. Neuroscience explains that these ingrained patterns form because the brain prefers efficiency; it moves quickly along established routes rather than forging new ones. Unlearning, then, isn’t merely letting go—it’s resisting the brain’s preference for comfort in order to create space for new understanding. This is why, for those of us with “a few years behind us,” mindset change can feel like swimming upstream.

But change is not only possible—it is powerful.

Mindset change begins with awareness: noticing the beliefs that no longer serve us, the assumptions we inherited rather than chose, and the behaviors that made sense in one season but restrict us in another. Many limitations we accept as truth are really just well-practiced stories. And stories can be rewritten.

Unlearning is an act of courage. It asks us to question what we’ve always known, to sit in discomfort, and to consider that the world may be wider than our conditioning allowed us to see. It’s not forgetting—it’s re-evaluating. It’s loosening our grip on old patterns so our hands are free to take hold of something better.

And yet, unlearning is not just subtraction; it is preparation. Once space is cleared, learning has room to flourish. We can adopt new perspectives, embrace change with greater ease, and build mindsets that support growth instead of guarding old wounds or outdated beliefs.

With every mindset shift, no matter how small, we reclaim agency. We choose how we think, rather than allowing past environments to choose for us. That is the quiet revolution of personal transformation.

Mindset change is not a single decision—it is a practice. A choice to stay curious. A willingness to outgrow old versions of ourselves. A commitment to becoming, again and again, who we are meant to be.