Tag: Focus

  • Untangling the Knot of Desire

    Untangling the Knot of Desire

    The past few days, I’ve felt my words ripple outward, landing softly in places I hadn’t expected. It reminds me how much of writing is a conversation with life itself—sometimes whispered, sometimes thundered, always carrying echoes we don’t fully hear until another heart reflects them back.

    Yesterday, while speaking with a dear friend, I promised to put language around a concept my son Sid once breathed into being for me: the conflict of desire. This morning, her birthday message—gentle, luminous—was the spark that reminded me to keep that promise, and so here I am, writing into the heart of it.

    For years I’ve circled around the question: what do I want? And almost immediately, before the answer even has time to rise, the other voices crowd in: what do I think I should do, what would be best for my kids, what would make the most sense for my future. It’s like standing in the middle of a crossroads where every signpost has my handwriting on it, but each one points in a different direction.

    For me, this often shows up in geography. Half of my kids are here in California, half in British Columbia. My heart splits across borders. I think about my daughter Eden—one day she’ll get married, she’ll have children—and part of me aches at the idea of not being close enough to witness those moments. Then I look north toward my son Cedar and my granddaughter Cypress, and I feel the sting of distance again, only getting to hold her a few times a year.

    Desire pulls me in opposite directions, and up I end up scattered like sunshine through too many windows—luminous, yet unfocused.

    But here’s my truth: clarity doesn’t come from trying to please every “should” or chase every tug of your heart. It comes from peeling back those layers until you can see the highest path—the one that belongs to this season of your life.

    “The privilege of a lifetime is to become who you truly are.” — Carl Jung

    Conflict of desire isn’t something to “solve” once and for all. It’s part of being human. But staying caught in the swirl—trying to hold onto everything at once—only creates exhaustion. What helps is having a ritual of reflection. A way to strip away the noise and hear the deeper truth.

    The dreams you carry in youth are not meant to be abandoned—live them fully, so the person you one day become can look back with gratitude, not longing…

    Here are some questions I return to when I’m tangled up inside:

    If no one else’s needs or opinions mattered for a moment—what would I choose today? What desire feels rooted in love and expansion, and which feels rooted in fear or obligation? Which choice, when I imagine living it fully, brings me energy rather than draining it? What story am I telling myself about what I “should” want—and is it actually true? If I were looking back from my 80-year-old self, which path would I thank myself for taking now? Where do I feel the tug of excitement and fear at once—that’s often the edge of growth. What vision feels most aligned with the person I’m becoming—not just the person I’ve been?

    You don’t need to rush through them. Take a pen, let yourself write freely, and then circle the answers that repeat themselves in different ways. That repetition is usually where clarity starts to shine through.

    “You are always one decision away from a totally different life.” — Unknown

    I’ve found that sometimes the clarity that emerges isn’t about geography or circumstance—it’s about freedom. For me, it means accepting that right now, California is my home base, but committing to building a life where travel and flexibility let me see my loved ones more often. A vision that lets me grow where I am, while still honoring the pull of my heart northward.

    And here’s the most important part: you don’t need to announce your clarity to the world the moment it arrives. Sometimes, sharing your decision too soon gives you a little dopamine burst that tricks your brain into thinking you’ve already done something. Better to let it ripen quietly inside you, or share it only with the wise people in your life—the ones who can hold space while you step forward.

    “Clarity comes not from knowing the whole path, but from taking the next faithful step.” — Unknown

    So maybe today isn’t about solving the whole puzzle. Maybe it’s about asking the right questions, listening long enough to hear your truest answer, and letting that clarity rise slowly, like the sun.

    Sunrise through my window this morning…

    And tomorrow—we’ll go deeper. I’ll share a practical step-by-step tool, like a decision matrix or future-self lens, to sharpen that clarity into a vision you can act on.

    Tarot Card for Reflection

    Today’s card is the Two of Wands. You’re standing on the edge of possibility, holding the world in your hands. The horizon is wide open. Not every path can be taken, but choosing one boldly is what creates momentum.

    If it feels right to share, please tell me—of the seven questions above, which one tugged at you the hardest?

    May you conquer your personal conflict of desire, develop both your intention and vision for your life. And, despite the little wisps of fear floating through the ether of your mind, may you live your wildest dreams.

    From my heart to yours,

    Joy