blog (& self-discovery)

  • Growing up, he always encouraged us to see as much of the world as we could. In my mid-twenties, he would always say, “Travel everywhere before you get married and have kids.”


  • Those small, genuine moments truly inspired me. I want to be someone who consistently spreads those same good intentions, positive energy, and warmth to others.


  • I’ve been thinking about that lately—what it means to exist like that. To grow into yourself without waiting for the right conditions or the perfect moment. To not constantly bend in response to the noise of others or the pressure of your environment.


  • It might sound a bit odd, but I often find myself Googling things like, “Should I feel guilty for not working on the weekends?” I think I have been looking for external validation, just to reassure myself that it is perfectly normal not to work during the weekend.


  • Also, I’ve realized something profound: there’s no shame in vulnerability. There’s no shame in being open about our past, our mistakes, our failures. There’s liberation in vulnerability because it paves the way for authentic self-acceptance.


  • My biggest struggle right now? Resisting change. It’s rooted in fear, a fear of stepping outside the lines drawn by society: the 9-to-5, the ladder climbing, the milestones. But deep down, I know that growth, purpose, and genuine joy lie just beyond that comfort zone.


  • When we create a space that’s uplifting, clean, and open, filled with light and pleasant scents, it’s almost inevitable that the energy within those walls will shift. When your space feels good, you feel good. Your mind feels clearer, your emotions feel steadier.


  • Think back to when we were born—we were naturally attuned to these frequencies. But somewhere along the way, we started to dim our own light, influenced by external voices telling us who we should be, what we should wear, how we should define success.


  • I promised I’d share these, and here they are: 20 questions I’ve been sitting with, the kind that dig deep and make you think. They’re part of my own journey into shadow work, into understanding the parts of myself I’ve often pushed aside.


  • Maybe it’s turning 30, maybe it’s something deeper, but I’ve been wrestling with some big ‘what ifs.’ I left my job recently. Not because I hated it, but because I realized something crucial: ‘career’ doesn’t equal ‘purpose.’