Reflections in the reinvention cycle

THE BAD DAYS HAVE SUCH A POWER TO UPTURN PEACE THAT OUR TENDENCY TO PLAY IT SAFE BECOMES INSIGNIFICANT IN COMPARISON.

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I may believe that changes in my mindset must reap results before I speak about them. But I won’t stall. Here are reflections on things I have started doing, which I believe will show positive results in my life.

Being audacious

I am not the most audacious person, but I am trying to be. Something that held me back from leaving my job was the fear that I wouldn’t be able to land on my feet. The fear that I would somehow wither away and nothing would become of me now that I left a good thing behind. What silently added itself to the equation was that also I didn’t feel brave enough to endeavour something new that would possibly reap disappointing rather than empowering results. There was nothing audacious about my mindset.

But I thank God that I took the leap anyway. Because that was an audacious choice. What’s more audacious now is my determination to go after anything that my heart desires, because why not?

And that is the question that audacity begs. Why not? Why can’t I imagine a beautiful life for myself after taking risks? Why can’t I assume that something good could come of this? Why can’t I be audacious in asking for help, making enquiries, professing positivity into my future, expecting good results?

When I spoke to a friend about what I’m hoping for since leaving, I caveated a lot of it with “but what if it goes wrong?”. All she did was challenge me with the question, “what if it goes right?”. And it put a fire in my belly. Whatever it is in my life that previously told me I have little right to think big or expect much from myself has got to shut its mouth! It’s interesting to me because I have only ever envisioned a great life for myself. But somewhere along the way I lost sight of how to get there and my fears crept in. So, rediscovering my audacity has become a step in the right direction, getting back onto the path that birthed me.

Throwing old clothes away

I’m going through a “clothing renaissance”. That’s what I’m calling it. For a while I have looked at my wardrobe and sighed! Nothing to wear. That wasn’t the case before, but the reality of ‘no clothes’ has crept up on me again. What is it about clothing that makes you wonder who you really are? Why do clothes have the power to bring down your mood so much? It’s presentation of course. Your clothes speak for you while your mouth is closed. So I guess the last thing I want is to visually/aesthetically come across in a way that is more congruent with who I was back when I bought something, than who I am now.

It seems there are different versions of us almost every day. Skin regenerates for a reason and I think our psyche is the same. So in reflection of renewal I ended up wanting to throw most of my clothes away. Too many t-shirts reminiscent of my early 20s that I don’t wear much anymore. Way too many plaid shirts, including the first one I thrifted when I was 17. I hadn’t worn it in over a year. It had to go. It all had to go. I tore many clothes off their hangers and dumped them into a charity collection bag because I felt too impatient to wait for someone to buy them on Vinted.

I can’t reduce this renaissance to my current self being incongruent with my clothing though. Beauce I think that implies I know who my current self is. And if we want to directly relate that to clothes, I must be truly lost because I don’t know how I want to dress right now anyway. Perhaps that’s truly it – I just don’t know who I am in this season of transition, or, “reinvention cycle” as articulated by a content creator I’ve been enjoying lately.

But I’m practising self-patience with it all because many things in life take time – the meaningful, deep things, especially. Greatness doesn’t happen overnight. Neither does talent, or pure genius. I think social media enables our forgetfulness when we see the finished product of people’s labour and fail to recognise that they laboured at all.

D’Angelo, a pioneering neo soul artist, passed away recently, aged 51. He had three albums to his name. The first was released in 1995 and the last in 2014. Since then, he had reportedly been working on his fourth. If you listen to his music, you will witness pure greatness. But the number of his albums within the time frame he released them reminds me that good things can take time. We don’t need to rush any process in this life. Time-sensitive ones aside I guess – but rushing should only happen if you are actually running out of time. And sometimes we move like we are when there’s really no clock ticking.

This opens my eyes when I consider the phase of life I am currently in. What is there to rush, really? Why should I let a loss of self-certainty make me feel so untethered? Even if my wardrobe is bringing me little joy, the last thing I want is to rush into whoever my next wardrobe will represent. Sometimes you just need to throw the clothes away and let it breathe. The development of you and I takes time, for this development is greatness in itself.

Illusions of control

I have desired the spirit of bravery for as long as I can remember. Yet, I am pretty risk averse. However, since summer I realised I don’t have an excuse to not take risks. This ties into being audacious. One major thing that may stop us from being brave is fearing an unfavourable outcome — fair enough, it’s human nature. But when I think further, I realise that not only is it fear, but it is also control. If timidity holds me back, I can at least save myself the heartbreak of failure and stay in my comfortable place. We don’t say that word-for-word so I am saying the quiet part out loud.

My epiphany came when I realised that this control we [subconsciously] grip onto is an illusion anyway. Because you can do everything right in life: play it safe, make calculated decisions, take a leap only when things feel right… and tomorrow could still end up being the worst day of your life. You can’t plan that. So, what were you controlling really? I guess the average day-to-day is under our surveillance to great avail. But the bad days have such a power to upturn peace that our tendency to play it safe becomes insignificant in comparison.

So I have been asking myself, why not just be brave anyway? Why not accept that it’s only a force bigger than myself that could ever be in true control of my life? How much freer will that make me feel? How many opportunities for the expansion of my joy am I missing out on because I keep playing everything so safe?

They say when you know better, do better. And I feel like this realisation is endeavouring to better me. So I need to act like I know that, and keep being brave.

The freedom of pointlessness

If you are hoping to read the Bible more, or tend to have a pessimistic outlook on life, I would recommend reading Ecclesiastes. It rocked my world when I read its first two verses as a teenager: “These are the words of the Philosopher, David’s son, who was king in Jerusalem.  It is useless, useless, said the Philosopher. Life is useless, all useless.” That philosopher told no lies. I felt very seen when I first read that book. It truly does capture the essence of life – the pointlessness of it all, since we will die one day. And this truth being put into these words opened my eyes to a way that I can operate in my life: pointlessly. I think that sounds kind of crazy, but it’s not that crazy when you think about it.

In a recent conversation surrounding someone’s grief, they told me that rehashing the pain by speaking about their grief and how they are feeling, followed by sadness, tears, and the heaviness of it all, then moving on and repeating that cycle when the feelings get heavy again, makes them wonder the point of speaking about it in the first place. My only response was to ask whether there had to be a point at all.

Life is pointless anyway right? So why don’t we just keep doing pointless things while we’re here? We speak so highly of purpose and ambition but I think we’ll be damned if along the journeys that they push us through, we fail to acknowledge the eventual pointlessness of it all once we pass away. Of course there are legacies and immediate results of many endeavours, but the greater personal pursuits of life can often feel like there’s no point to them, especially during moments of disappointment. So I begin to wonder if that’s something we should turn towards and embrace rather than treat like the greatest inconvenience of all.

Do we remember how much peace can be found in surrender over resistance in the right places? If I accept that the things I do may have no point, it could really reduce my attachment to outcomes, no matter the size of the endeavour. I don’t think an assumption that I won’t have motivation for anything as a result even applies here. I think I can acknowledge that there’s probably ‘no point’ of something but do it anyway. That can help me really, really experience life as a human in this pointless world!

I can make friends with one of life’s most demotivating elements. I could even take it so far as to do pointless things on purpose if I really wanted to. Surrendering to the pointlessness of life and choosing to live anyway is what you will find me doing going forward.

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And that is it. I hope these reflections resonated with you. I am always grateful for realisations that make me feel a bit more free; freedom being a constant desire of mine. And thank you for taking time to read this all.

i left my good job.

IN THE MOMENT IT FELT LIKE A SUDDEN EVENT, BUT UPON BRIEF REFLECTION I REALISED IT HAD BEEN AN EVENT IN THE MAKING. MANY DROPS FILL A CUP UNTIL IT FINALLY OVERFLOWS.

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April 2025. The beginning of the end

I begin this piece at my desk in our London office. I’d like to call it my old desk actually, because by the time this is published, I hope for this chapter of my life to be closed. 

Today I produced a video about the effect of Donald Trump’s tariffs on the EU (latest here). That’s what I did day to day as a video journalist – produce news videos and keep audiences engaged throughout them. Now, is audience engagement something I have always been passionate about? Definitely not! The only audience engagement I’ve ever been interested in is that of this blog. So that aside, no, I don’t care about audience engagement. And that’s one epiphany that led me to leaving my job. 

Overall I realised there was a lot at my place of work that I no longer cared about. I didn’t care much about the company’s vision, the performance of its content, or the trickle-down effect that improving our production will have on our audience. I did, however, care enough to keep me afloat there, probably for longer than was beneficial to me. Enough to help me survive rather than thrive. Caring about my work therefore became a personal principle over time – I’m not the kind of person that can clock in and out, not valuing what I’m doing in-between.

How did I get here?

I passed my journalism diploma in 2021 and got into the industry through an internship that began two days after Russia invaded Ukraine (latest here). I was inundated with more information than I could understand, so it became my mission to comprehend all this new information. From random acronyms I couldn’t guess the reasoning behind to editorial decisions, the industry felt like a brand-new problem to solve – a puzzle to complete, something to learn and grow within.

And this was my mission for the three years I was there – first as a digital video intern, then full time staff as a digital video producer. Throughout I was determined to understand the inner workings of this huge network while just being a “good enough” journalist pitching stories from hard-hitting and breaking, to light-hearted and feel-good. I reported on so many stories in those three years that I can’t list them all.

Then Israel’s war on Gaza began (latest here). And this moment in time – this genocide, aside from teaching me a lot, triggered a chain of events.

Burnout knocked on my door

I was burnt out. I did a lot of overtime and the stories were taking a toll on my mental health. We were reminded to think of death tolls as people rather than numbers, but I knew this would grow more difficult as I became desensitised by the volume of saddening stories I learnt about. Even the mental health resources available to me didn’t seem enough to process the tragedies I reported on so regularly.

And when I got my hours back for overtime, the damage felt like it had already been done. My brain would spend so much time cooling down from an intense shift that the less intense ones felt like an oasis in a desert that I couldn’t even appreciate. Like an overheated computer, my body would feel uncomfortable, my head hot, chest tight, and my eyes so tired from looking at multiple screens during my edits. There were days I walked out of the office building feeling like a zombie, crossing the road with eyes that could look but not see, falling asleep on the train, sweaty and exhausted, knowing I would do it all over again tomorrow. 

So much of my time outside of work was spent recovering from work and my creative endeavours took a back seat. So, in the last few months that I spent there, despite feeling the most confident I ever had been in my role, it felt like my day-to-day at work was cannibalising what I hardly had left of myself.

Second-hand PTSD

It came to a head in the early hours of a Saturday morning in February. My parents came home late and accidentally slammed their bedroom door, which is beside mine. It woke me up, violently. The first thought that came to my mind was “airstrike.” Airstrike! Never in my life had a loud sound triggered something so specifically violent in my head. The gravity of the situation hit me when people reacted to this story. And when I spoke to my therapist about it months later, she gave the moment a name: Second-hand trauma, second-hand PTSD

I wasn’t even the person filming the airstrikes that I watched while searching for impactful news videos. I’d never been in a house when an airstrike made impact. I was in fact a video journalist sitting in front of a screen in London, watching violent attacks on innocent people.

And after three years of such violence consistently passing my sight, I woke up with a beating heart at the sound of a door slamming, reminiscent of something that had ended the lives of countless numbers of people across the world.

Something similar happened a month later early in the morning, in between asleep and awake, and I thought again – airstrike. What more of a reason did I need to consider how my job was impacting me? I knew my mental health was crying out for help. The light-hearted stories I did every now and then could not drown out this noise.

I’d like to be perceived within context as I write this. I’m not the only journalist in the world that is affected by the stories I’ve covered. As I mentioned earlier, I’m not the person whose house was struck, nor the person that filmed it. It wasn’t my job to blur videos of dead bodies either (even though I have had to blur other things). My coworkers were also affected by the nature of our work – I know. The correspondents and field producers who were flown to war zones within hours of them breaking out were too, along with the news anchors having to remain composed while reading out heartbreaking lines. All of it. 

At times I would move through the office and look at people, wondering who else’s heart felt as heavy as mine. When I spoke to others in my last days at the job, everyone resonated with what I was saying. It is a very intense job, and the exposure to violence and traumatic content is rife. But some people have coping mechanisms to help them stay, and some simply don’t.

May 2025. Work-related stress

So, a month after I began this piece the doctor wrote me a sick note. The irony was that I’d just returned from a two-week holiday in a neutral enough state to feel optimistic about things getting better at work. Yet a week and a half after my return, I was signed off due to work-related stress. I’d known it was bad when I took a break from my overtime to speak to the doctor about feeling burnt out then returned to my desk afterwards to finish said work. I had to get it done!

In the moment the sick note felt like a sudden event. But upon brief reflection I realised it had been an event in the making. Many drops fill a cup until it finally overflows.

I took two weeks off work to try and recover from the stress. Two weeks became four, and four became six. Six weeks. I spent my days going to the gym, thinking about what burnout meant – “is it a genuine thing?” Telling people what I was up to and slowly coming to terms with the uncertainty of my near future. When I returned to work in June, I still didn’t feel like I’d had all the time I needed to recover. But I did know that that time off lifted a weight off my chest and I began to feel happier. So when I chose to return to work I told myself, the sooner I return, the sooner I can finally hand in my notice and leave. 

What a process it had been, because I’d honestly known since January that I needed to leave my job (I was fasting and praying about it). But coming to this choice was a slow process. I didn’t plan to be signed off but I see it as the destined denouement of my journey. I wanted to leave by July 16th, my 26th birthday – or simply by the end of summer. 

I’m gone!

I walked into work on the day I handed in my notice not knowing that I was going to do it. I entered a meeting room with my manager that morning wondering what I would say to her, and how honest I was going to be about the feelings pulling me away from my role. Maybe I’ll tell her in a couple weeks – maybe in a month? I don’t know, as long as I leave by the end of summer…

She asked me how I was doing and later, what I was “thinking.” Suddenly truth was my only answer. I could have said I’m ready to get back into the swing of things and I’m excited for my future at this network, but instead I found myself saying it’s time for me to go. The words left my mouth because I let them. In that moment, I let go of stability, a solid income, part of my identity, and elements of myself. And the rest of the day was chained to relief, anxiety, sadness and eventually numbness. I can’t believe I just quit my job, I thought to myself. It was a big deal to me. I always thought such a decision would be more premeditated than this. 

I thought I’d return to work with a new job offer in my inbox, making it easy to let go of this one. But what had become more important to me was knowing that I need to “move” in my life. I haven’t been able to shake the word for months. I need to move. So, there I was, and here I am, moving.

Beyond that, I am putting myself and my mental health first. That’s something people have been commending me for – from my friends to my former colleagues. Well done for putting yourself first. What they may not realise is that I learnt to do that just now. I have not been a person that puts themself or their mental wellbeing first, but this period of my life has taught me how to do it. I can’t turn back now. 

What does this feel like?

I could go on for ages about the incremental epiphanies I had in approach to my final decision but they are probably more relevant to my diary. But one that I will share follows a question my therapist asked me a day after I handed in my resignation: What did you learn? She suggested that the rollercoaster of relief to numbness was reflective of the grieving process, and that since my day of resignation I have been grieving my job. I still find that hard to accept. She then mentioned another stage of grief, which was purpose, or lessons learned. Reflection. What am I now that I have lost this thing? What has the experience taught me, if anything? 

I answered, “I have to make some decisions in the absence of confidence” (less elegantly than that). I must go forward in life knowing that my decisions won’t always be made confidently! That’s when my heart comes in. In my heart, I knew it was time to go. Some people advised me to wait until I got another job before I left but that did not align with how I felt. Such advice filled me with doubt until the second before I said I want to resign. Because in that exact moment, the only person I was thinking of was myself. My decision, although lacking in confidence due to the uncertainty of life following it, was made for me, by me.

And the cherry on top is that my last day is the day before my birthday. That feels like a confirmation that I made the right choice, because it is something I previously expressed that I wanted. So divinely aligned, maybe I spoke it into existence. Maybe it was God’s plan all along.

What now?

I don’t hate journalism. I actually really like it. I had the opportunity to learn something new about the world every single day. And maybe breaking news just isn’t the home for me. Something else in the industry could eventually be and that gives me some peace.

Now I am on a break from work. Don’t be fooled, I have applied for other roles! But the job market is just as bad as they say (when don’t they say that?) and to be honest, I’m not sure what I want to do next anyway. I don’t know if I’ll try a new industry, take a course, or boomerang back to journalism.

But what I do know is that I’ve taken a step in the right direction. Plus, I live at home, I’m not married and I have no children – I have minimal responsibilities. So, if now is not the time to explore, when is? I want to use this time to reconnect with my creativity and walk down the street with nowhere to really be. Of course, money will be tight but that’s life, inconsistent. There will be a time when money is abundant again and I look forward to it.

Life is fluid. Everyone’s path is so different and there is no right way to do things. I realised that during this journey too, as I would voice my thoughts in the hope that someone would validate or correct them in case my moves were wrong.

But no answer besides my own was the right one. We write our stories as we live them, and it is so clear to me that a new chapter in mine has just begun.