Clarity Is Power: Preparing Your Mind for Life’s Unfolding

There comes a point in life when we realise that it’s not the chaos outside that overwhelms us,
it’s the noise within.

For the longest time, many of us move through life reacting  to people, to situations, to emotions we don’t fully understand. We rush into decisions, speak from hurt, act from fear
and later wonder why life feels so heavy.

But what if the real shift is not outside us
but in learning how to hold ourselves differently within?

A Clear Head Is Not an Empty Mind: Having a clear head doesn’t mean having no thoughts,
It means not being controlled by every thought that arises.

It means learning to pause to observe to create a little space between what happens and how you respond.

Because in that space, lies your power.

When your mind is cluttered with past wounds, fears of the future, or the need to prove something,  your decisions become reactions.

But when your mind is clear, your decisions become intentional. And intention changes everything.

Preparation Is Not Control: It’s Awareness

Life will always be unpredictable.
No amount of planning can prevent every challenge, every disappointment, every unexpected turn. But preparation is not about controlling life. It is about strengthening yourself to meet life.

Preparing yourself means:

Understanding your emotional patterns

Recognising your triggers

Building inner stability

Knowing what truly matters to you


So when life presents you with choices,  you are not choosing from fear or confusion but  you are choosing from awareness.


Thoughtful Decisions Create Aligned Lives:

Every decision you make either brings you closer to yourself or further away.
When your head is unclear, you may choose what feels urgent.
When your mind is grounded, you choose what feels right.
Thoughtful decisions are not always the easiest ones.
They may require patience, discomfort, even letting go. But they carry a different energy
one of alignment, rather than impulse.

And over time, these decisions shape a life
that feels less like survival and more like truth.

The Practice of Inner Clarity: Clarity is not something you achieve once and keep forever.
It is something you practice.

Some gentle ways to return to clarity:

Sitting in silence, even if just for a few minutes

Journaling your thoughts instead of carrying them

Asking yourself: “What am I really feeling right now?”

Slowing down before making decisions

Letting go of the need to react immediately

Clarity grows in stillness.

And in today’s world, stillness is a choice.

Coming Back to Yourself: At the heart of it all,
a clear mind is simply a mind that has come back home to the present moment.
Not lost in yesterday.
Not anxious about tomorrow.

Just here.

Because when you are here,
you can see clearly.
And when you can see clearly,
you can choose wisely.
And when you choose wisely
you begin to create a life
that is not driven by circumstances
but guided by consciousness.

Maybe life isn’t asking you to have all the answers.
Maybe it’s simply asking you to meet it
with clarity, awareness, and presence.

Because from there,  everything changes.

You Are Not Stuck, You Are Patterned

There was a time in my life when I believed being strong meant holding everything together,
not breaking, not stopping, just moving forward no matter what.

But deep inside, there were beliefs I wasn’t even aware of,
Beliefs about not being enough.
About having to prove myself.
About carrying more than I ever needed to.

And life, in its own quiet way, brought me to a pause.
Not to break me,  but to show me.

To show me that I didn’t need to fight myself anymore,  I needed to understand myself.

That healing is not about becoming someone new, it’s about gently letting go of who we thought we had to be.

And step by step breath by breath
I began to unlearn, to release, and to return to myself.

And if there’s one thing I’ve learned, it’s this:

You are not stuck.
You are patterned.
And patterns,  can be changed.


Closing Reflectio: What patterns are you ready to release?



Doing vs Being: The Moment I Stopped Fixing Life and Started Living It

When Life Stops Being a Task and Becomes an Experience. For most of my life, I believed that love, relationships, and even peace could be achieved through effort. If something was broken, I believed it could be fixed. If someone was unhappy, I believed I could do more to make things right. If life became difficult, I believed I simply needed to try harder.


I lived in what psychology calls the “doing mode.”
In this mode, the mind is constantly trying to solve problems, close gaps, improve situations, and control outcomes. It is the mode that helps us build careers, manage responsibilities, and achieve goals. It pushes us to act, to plan, and to change what is not working.


But the mind has a hidden trap in this mode.
When we live only in doing mode, life becomes a constant project that needs fixing. The mind keeps searching for what is wrong, what is missing, and what needs to be corrected.


Instead of living life, we start managing life.
Psychologists explain that the brain is naturally wired for problem-solving. It scans for threats, mistakes, and unfinished business. While this ability helps us survive, it can also keep us stuck in cycles of worry, rumination, and emotional exhaustion.


And that is exactly what happened to me. There came a time in my life when no amount of effort could fix what had already broken. No amount of explanation could change someone’s perception. No amount of love could repair what another person had already decided to destroy.


For a long time, I kept trying.Trying to save what was slipping away. Trying to correct misunderstandings. Trying to hold together something that was already falling apart.
The more I tried to do, the more I felt drained, confused, and lost.


It took deep pain for me to understand a profound truth, not everything in life can be solved through doing. Some wounds require something entirely different. They require being.


In psychology and mindfulness practices, there is another state of mind called “being mode.” Unlike doing mode, being mode is not about fixing, controlling, or achieving. It is about simply experiencing the present moment as it is.


Being mode invites us to pause. To observe our thoughts without fighting them. To feel our emotions without trying to suppress them.
To sit with life instead of constantly trying to change it.


Spiritually, many ancient traditions have spoken about this state for centuries. They teach that the deepest peace does not come from constant striving, but from presence and awareness.
A flower does not struggle to bloom.
A river does not force its flow.
The sun does not try to shine.
They simply are.


Human beings, however, often forget this natural rhythm. We become so busy doing life that we forget how to be in life. For me, the shift did not happen overnight. It happened slowly, through reflection, silence, and healing. I began learning to sit with my pain instead of fighting it. I started accepting that some answers would never come.
I allowed life to unfold without constantly trying to control it. And in that space of being, something unexpected happened.
Peace started returning.


Not because life suddenly became perfect, but because I stopped exhausting myself trying to control every outcome. I began to understand that life needs both modes. We need doing mode to act, create, and move forward. But we need being mode to stay connected to ourselves.


Without being, doing becomes endless struggle.
Without doing, being can become passivity.
The wisdom lies in knowing when to act and when to simply sit with life. Sometimes the most powerful step forward is not another action.
Sometimes the most powerful step forward is a moment of stillness. Because in that quiet space, when the mind finally stops trying to fix everything, we rediscover something we had forgotten along the way.


We rediscover ourselves.

From Reaction to Awareness: Understanding and Healing Emotional Triggers

There are moments in life when something small happens,  a tone, a word, a silence,  and suddenly, the reaction within us feels too big for the situation.

We tell ourselves, “Why am I reacting like this?”
But the truth is,  we are not reacting to the present alone. We are responding to a memory.

What Is an Emotional Trigger?

An emotional trigger is not just an event.
It is an activation of something unfinished within us.

A look that feels like rejection.
A silence that feels like abandonment.
A disagreement that feels like betrayal.

The moment is current, but the emotion is historical.

The Mind Remembers, But the Body Feels:  Our mind may forget details, but our body remembers feelings. Somewhere within us,
experiences from the past are stored not as stories, but as sensations, emotions, and meanings. And when something in the present resembles that past, the emotional brain, especially the amygdala reacts instantly.

It does not ask: “Is this safe now?”
It assumes: “This feels familiar. This must be danger.” And just like that, we are no longer here. We are there.

We Are Not Overreacting, We Are Remembering:

What looks like an overreaction is often an unprocessed emotional memory resurfacing.

The anger may belong to a time we felt unheard.
The fear may belong to a time we felt unsafe.
The hurt may belong to a time we felt unseen.

And in that moment, we are not just adults responding, we are also the younger versions of ourselves still carrying what was never resolved.


The Parts of Us That Speak Through Triggers:

Within us live many “parts” the confident one, the wounded one, the protector, the pleaser.

In moments of triggering, it is often the wounded part that rises. A part that once felt:

dismissed

misunderstood

silenced

This perspective is beautifully explored in approaches like Internal Family Systems,
where every reaction is seen as a voice within us asking to be heard. Not to control us, but to protect us.


What If Triggers Are Not the Enemy?

We often try to:

suppress our reactions

judge our emotions

“fix” ourselves quickly

But what if triggers are not problems to eliminate, but messages to understand?

They point to:

wounds that still need compassion

needs that were never met

truths that were never spoken


A trigger is not here to break you. It is here to show you something that still lives within you.

From Reaction to Awareness:

Healing does not begin by stopping the trigger.
It begins by pausing within it.

In that moment, instead of asking:
“What is wrong with me?”

Try asking:

“What is this feeling?”

“When have I felt this before?”

“What part of me is asking for attention right now?”

And slowly, something shifts.

You move from:

reaction → reflection

overwhelm → awareness

pain → understanding


The Gentle Work of Healing;

Healing is not about becoming someone who is never triggered. It is about becoming someone who: understands their triggers,  responds with awareness,  holds their own emotions with compassion. 

It is about reminding yourself: “This feeling is real,  but it is not all from now.”

A Closing Reflection:  Every trigger carries two stories: the one happening in the present, and the one echoing from the past

When we learn to tell the difference, we reclaim our power. Because then, we are no longer controlled by our reactions,  we are guided by our awareness. And in that awareness, healing quietly begins.

Between Two Names, I Found Myself

The day I chose my name was the day I began choosing myself:

There was a time when I believed a name was just something given to you, something you carry without question, like an inheritance you never chose.

Sunita was that name for me.
It held my childhood, my family, my fears, my conditioning, my roles. It carried the echoes of expectations, the weight of being seen a certain way, and the silent stories I lived through.

Sunita knew how to survive.
She learned to adjust, to hold, to endure.

And then came a moment that changed something quietly, yet deeply.

The day I got married.

A day where the world expects you to take on new roles, new responsibilities, sometimes even a new identity.But in that moment, I made a choice, one that seemed small on the outside, yet profound within.

I chose to be addressed as Saira.

I didn’t fully understand it then.
There were no deep explanations, no long reflections.

Just a feeling.

A knowing.

Saira didn’t come from the outside.
She wasn’t given, she was felt.
She felt like breath after being held too long.
Like softness where there was once rigidity.
Like a quiet courage that didn’t need permission.

Looking back now, I see it clearly.

At a time when identities are often handed over,
I claimed mine.

Saira is not separate from Sunita.
She is not an escape.
She is not a replacement.

She is an emergence.

For a long time, I wondered if becoming meant leaving something behind. If growth required rejecting who I once was. But healing doesn’t work that way.

True healing is not about abandoning who you were, it is about making space for who you are becoming, without erasing where you came from.

Today, I don’t stand as one or the other.

I stand as Saira-Sunita Jethnani.

A name that holds both the one who survived and the one who awakened. The one who learned through pain and the one who now chooses with awareness. The one shaped by the world and the one reshaping her inner world.

Sunita is my roots.
Saira is my wings.

And I no longer have to choose between grounding and flight.

Because I have learned,
I can be both.

And in being both,
I have finally come home to myself.


My Life, In This Moment

We often tell our life story as a sequence of past events what happened, who hurt us, what we lost, and what changed us. It becomes a timeline of pain, love, betrayal, and survival.

But what if our story is not in the past at all?
What if our story only exists in this moment,  in how we hold it?

My mother passed away  in 2018.
For a long time, this sentence felt like an ending heavy, final, and filled with absence.
But in this moment, when I sit with awareness, I notice something else.
I notice that her love did not leave. It lives quietly within me in the way I care, the way I feel, the way I soften.

My father passed away in 2022.
There was fear, distance, and also admiration.
And today, in this moment, I become aware that both the fear and the strength are still alive in me. Not as wounds alone, but as imprints shaping who I am becoming.

My husband betrayed me six years ago.
This was not just an event. It was a breaking of trust, identity, and the life I thought I had.
For years, I carried that story as pain.
But in this moment, I see something deeper,
I see the part of me that endured, the part that did not collapse, the part that is still here  breathing, aware.

There were moments I felt abandoned.
Moments I questioned my worth.
Moments I carried grief so heavy it felt like it would never lift.

But awareness changes the relationship with these moments.

In awareness, I am not the abandonment, I am the one noticing it.
I am not the unworthiness, I am the one observing the thought.
I am not the grief, I am the one holding it with gentleness.

And something shifts.

Life stops being a story of “what happened to me”
and becomes a living experience of
“what is moving through me right now.”

I see how I tried to stay strong for everyone.
How I held everything together, even when I was breaking inside.
And in this moment, I allow myself something new, the permission to rest, to feel, to not have to carry it all alone.

There were parts of me I lost along the way.
Or at least, it felt that way.
But maybe they were never truly lost,
maybe they were waiting for me to come back with awareness.

Because healing is not about fixing the past.
It is about changing how we meet it in the present.

Today, my story is not:
“I lost, I was hurt, I was broken.”

Today, my story is:
“I am here. I am aware. I am becoming.”

And in this moment, that is enough.

You Are Not Alone: The Power of Ancestral Strength Within You

We have been taught to believe that we are entirely self-made that life is shaped solely by our personal will, our focus, and our effort. That if we just try hard enough, stay disciplined enough, and remain committed to our goals, success will inevitably follow.

And when it doesn’t?

We begin looking for reasons.
We blame circumstances.
We blame people.
We blame the world.

And eventually, we turn that blame inward.

We question ourselves.
We doubt our worth.
We fall into a quiet cycle of frustration, despair, and hopelessness.

But what if this belief, that we are meant to do it all alone is incomplete?

Because the truth is: we are not isolated beings trying to carve a path from nothing. We are the continuation of a story.

Within us lives more than just our individual experiences. We carry our learnings, yes but also something far deeper. We carry the strength, the resilience, the struggles, and the survival of those who came before us.

We are not just like our parents.
In many ways, we are them extended through time.

We are our ancestors their courage, their endurance, their unspoken stories encoded within us, not just psychologically, but biologically. Their lives have shaped our responses, our instincts, our capacities to endure and to rise again.

And yet, in our pursuit of independence, many of us unknowingly disconnect from this immense source of support. We forget that we were never meant to stand alone.

When we reject our roots consciously or unconsciously we also distance ourselves from the very resources that can sustain us. Our strength becomes limited, our resilience fragmented.

But when we begin to acknowledge where we come from, When we allow ourselves to receive not just from life, but from those who gave us life something shifts.

We feel supported
We feel grounded
We feel stronger not because we are doing more, but because we are no longer doing it alone.

Stepping into our full power is not about becoming someone new. It is about remembering who and how many we truly are.

The Many Parts Within: Understanding Your Inner World Through Psychology

In modern psychology, especially in approaches like parts work, we don’t see the mind as a single, fixed identity. Instead, we understand it as a system of inner parts, each carrying pieces of our life story, our experiences, wounds, strengths, and ways of coping.

One of the most well-known frameworks for this is Internal Family Systems, developed by Richard Schwartz. It offers a compassionate way of understanding why we think, feel, and behave the way we do.


1. Healthy Parts (Core Self / Integrated Parts)

These are the parts of you that are grounded, calm, and connected. In IFS, this is often referred to as the Self, your natural state when you are not overwhelmed.

Qualities of healthy parts:

Clarity and wisdom

Compassion toward self and others

Confidence and calmness

Ability to make balanced decisions


These parts are not created they are inherent. But they can get overshadowed when other parts take over.

Example:
When you respond to a stressful situation with patience instead of reactivity, your healthy part is leading.


2. Traumatized Parts (Exiles)

These parts carry unprocessed pain from the past often from childhood experiences, rejection, abandonment, shame, or fear.

They are called exiles because the system tries to push them away to avoid feeling their pain.

What they hold:

Emotional wounds (hurt, grief, shame)

Limiting beliefs (“I am not enough”, “I am unlovable”)

Memories that feel overwhelming

Example:
A small part of you that feels deeply rejected when someone ignores you may not be about the present it may be an exiled younger part reliving an old wound.


3. Survival Parts (Protectors)

These parts develop to protect you from the pain of the exiles. They are not the problem they are solutions your mind created to help you survive.

They are usually divided into two types:

a) Managers (Preventive Protectors)

They try to control life so that painful feelings never get triggered.

Examples:

Perfectionism

People-pleasing

Overthinking

Being overly responsible

“If I do everything right, I won’t get hurt.”


b) Firefighters (Reactive Protectors)

They step in when pain breaks through and try to numb or distract you quickly.

Examples:

Emotional eating

Anger outbursts

Avoidance or withdrawal

Addictive behaviors

“This feeling is too much, shut it down now.”


How These Parts Work Together:

Think of your inner world as a team trying to protect you, even if their methods clash.

A traumatized part holds pain

A manager tries to prevent that pain from being triggered

A firefighter reacts when the pain surfaces

Your healthy Self can bring understanding and healing


The conflict you feel inside “part of me wants this, another part resists” is actually different parts speaking.


Key Insight from Psychology:

All parts even the ones that sabotage you have a positive intention.

The anxious part is trying to protect you from danger

The angry part is trying to protect your boundaries

The avoidant part is trying to protect you from overwhelm


Healing doesn’t come from fighting these parts, but from:

Listening to them

Understanding their role

Helping them feel safe enough to relax


What Healing Looks Like:

When you begin to work with your inner parts:

Exiles feel seen and healed

Protectors don’t have to work so hard

Your Self begins to lead


You move from: “What’s wrong with me?”
to  “Which part of me needs understanding right now?”


A Gentle Reflection:

If you pause for a moment and ask yourself:

Which part of me is most active right now?

Is it trying to protect me or express pain?

What does it need instead of being judged?


You begin to build a relationship with yourself, not control over yourself.


“Forgiveness: Letting Go of the Wound, Keeping the Wisdom”

Forgiveness Is Not Forgetting the Act, but Understanding the Human Behind It

Forgiveness is often misunderstood.

Many people believe that forgiveness means saying what happened was acceptable.
It does not.

Forgiveness is not about approving the act.
It is about releasing ourselves from the emotional prison created by the pain.

What we truly forgive is not the act itself, but the person behind the act — the actor.

When we begin to look deeper, we often see that behind hurtful actions there may have been suffering, confusion, fear, emotional immaturity, desperation, or unskillfulness. Sometimes people wound others from the very wounds they themselves never healed.

This does not excuse their behavior.
But it helps us understand their humanity.

People often act from the level of awareness they possess at that moment. A person carrying unresolved trauma, fear of abandonment, shame, anger, or inner emptiness may unconsciously project that pain onto others.

Seen through this lens, forgiveness becomes less about them and more about us.

It becomes a conscious choice to no longer carry the poison of resentment in our own body, mind, and spirit.

Pain that remains unexpressed often lives inside us as heaviness, anger, grief, anxiety, and even physical tension. Healing begins when we allow ourselves to fully feel what was never felt.

The tears we held back.
The words we never said.
The hurt we minimized.
The betrayal we kept replaying.

When feelings are acknowledged, witnessed, and released, they begin to loosen their hold on us.

Only then can we truly let go.

Forgiveness is not a single moment.
It is a process.

A process of honoring the pain, understanding the lesson, and reclaiming our peace.

Every person we meet and every experience we go through carries a lesson.

Some people come into our lives to love us.
Some come to awaken us.
Some come to mirror the wounds we need to heal.
Some come to teach us boundaries, self-worth, and resilience.

Even the most painful experiences often become our greatest teachers.

What once broke us may later become the doorway to wisdom, compassion, and inner strength.

Life does not always send us what is easy.
Sometimes it sends us what is necessary for our growth.

The lesson may be self-love.
The lesson may be discernment.
The lesson may be learning not to abandon ourselves for the sake of others.

Forgiveness allows us to take the lesson without carrying the wound forever.

It is choosing peace over punishment.
Freedom over fixation.
Growth over bitterness.

And perhaps the deepest truth is this:

Forgiveness is not something we do for the other person.

inspired by Louise L.

Don’t Suppress Your Emotions — You Are Human

Modern psychology reminds us that emotions are not problems to be eliminated; they are experiences to be understood.

In counselling and psychological practice, one of the most important concepts is emotional regulation not controlling emotions by shutting them down, but learning how to experience them in a healthy and aware way.

Research shows that acceptance is a key part of emotional regulation, especially in mindfulness-based therapies. When people learn to notice feelings without judgment, their stress and emotional reactivity often reduce.

You are human.
It is natural to feel sadness, anger, grief, fear, disappointment, and even emotional overwhelm.

These emotions are not signs that something is wrong with you.

They are signals.

Sometimes sadness asks for comfort.
Sometimes anger points to a violated boundary.
Sometimes fear is asking for safety.

Psychology teaches us that suppression is different from regulation.

When emotions are constantly pushed away, they often do not disappear. Instead, they can show up as anxiety, irritability, numbness, burnout, physical tension, or repeated thought loops.

Healing begins when we allow ourselves to sit with what we feel.

This is where mindfulness comes in.

Mindfulness is the practice of becoming aware of the present moment and witnessing thoughts and emotions without immediately reacting to them.

Instead of saying:
“I am broken.”

You begin to notice:
“I am experiencing pain right now.”

Instead of:
“I should not feel this way.”

You gently say:
“This feeling is here, and I can witness it.”

That shift is powerful.

It creates a space between you and the emotion.

You are not your sadness.
You are not your fear.
You are the observer of it.

In counselling, this awareness helps clients move from reacting to responding.

Awareness allows choice.

Acceptance allows movement.

Witnessing allows healing.

Sometimes the most therapeutic thing you can do is not to fix yourself, but to stay present with yourself.

Feelings are like waves.
If we fight them, they crash harder.
If we witness them, they eventually pass.

So allow yourself to feel.

Sit with the emotion.

Breathe into it.

Witness it with compassion.

Because healing is not the absence of emotion —
it is the ability to hold emotion with awareness.