Mindset
How to Embrace Change: Working With Transitions, Not Against Them
Change is uncomfortable, even when it's good. A gentle guide to easing the friction of transitions and finding small footholds when the ground keeps shifting.
Mindset
Change is uncomfortable, even when it's good. A gentle guide to easing the friction of transitions and finding small footholds when the ground keeps shifting.
We like to think we want change. We talk about wanting things to be different, better, new. And then change actually arrives — a move, a new job, the end of something familiar, even a good thing we chose — and we find ourselves unexpectedly off-balance, anxious, a little grief-struck. I wanted this. Why does it feel so hard?
If you've ever felt that, nothing is wrong with you. Change is genuinely difficult, even when it's welcome, and learning to work with it rather than against it is one of the quietly important skills of a good life. Let's talk about how.
Here's something that took me far too long to understand: every change, even a positive one, involves a loss. To step into the new, you have to leave the old behind — and some part of you grieves what's being left, even if you don't want it back.
Take a wonderful new job. It's an upgrade in every measurable way, and still you might find yourself missing your old desk, your familiar commute, the coworker you saw every morning, the version of you who knew exactly how everything worked. That's not ingratitude. That's the ordinary grief that rides along with every transition. Naming it helps. You're not failing to appreciate the good thing. You're simply human, and humans don't shed their old shapes without a pang.
So if a change you chose still feels unsettling, give yourself permission to feel both — the excitement and the ache. They're allowed to coexist.
Imagine being caught in a river's current. You can thrash against it, fighting to stay exactly where you are, exhausting yourself and getting nowhere — or you can stop fighting, find your footing, and let the current carry you somewhere new while you steer.
Resisting change is the thrashing. It's the stubborn insistence that things should stay as they were, the energy poured into wishing reality were different. And it's so tiring, because the change is happening regardless of how hard you push back. The world doesn't owe us stability, much as we'd love it to.
You can't stop the river from moving. But you can stop fighting it long enough to notice you actually know how to swim.
Working with change doesn't mean you're passive or that you love everything that's happening. It means you accept that the change is real, and you turn your energy from resisting what is toward navigating what's next. That single shift — from fighting the current to steering within it — changes everything about how a transition feels.
One of the hardest parts of any change isn't the start or the destination. It's the middle — the messy, formless stretch where the old thing is gone but the new thing hasn't settled yet. You're no longer who you were, but you're not quite who you're becoming. Everything feels unfamiliar and a little wrong.
This in-between is deeply uncomfortable, and it's also completely normal. The discomfort is not a sign that you've made a mistake or that something has gone wrong. It's simply what transition feels like from the inside. Plants don't bloom the instant they're planted; there's a stretch of bare soil and patient roots first. You're in the bare-soil phase. It passes.
The most important thing to remember here is that the in-between is temporary. It feels permanent — discomfort always does — but it isn't. You will, in time, arrive on the other side and find a new normal, one that feels as ordinary and familiar as the old one once did.
When everything is shifting, you don't steady yourself by trying to control the whole change at once. You steady yourself with small, stable things — footholds you can plant your feet on while the larger landscape moves.
A foothold is any tiny routine or anchor you keep constant. When the big picture is in flux, these small steady things give your nervous system something to hold onto:
Adjusting to change isn't something you can rush, and you'll likely move through it unevenly — fine one day, wobbly the next. That zigzag isn't failure. Growth and adjustment are non-linear for everyone. Be as patient with yourself as you'd be with a friend finding their feet on new ground.
It can also help to look backward for evidence. Think of a change you once dreaded — a move, a goodbye, a beginning you weren't sure you wanted. At the time it probably felt overwhelming, maybe impossible. And yet here you are, on the other side of it, more or less intact. You've already survived every transition life has handed you so far. That's not a small thing. It's a track record, and it quietly suggests you'll find your footing this time too.
All of this is general self-development — the everyday work of moving through life's ordinary transitions with a little more ease. But some changes carry real weight: a loss, an upheaval, a season that pulls you into persistent low mood, anxiety, or distress. If that's where you are, please don't navigate it alone. This article is not therapy or professional advice. Reaching out to a qualified mental-health professional or a local support line is a wise, brave, deeply human thing to do.
For the ordinary transitions, though — the moves and shifts and endings and beginnings that make up a full life — you have more steadiness in you than you might feel right now. Stop fighting the current. Find a small foothold. Take one quiet step. The new normal is coming, and you'll meet it when it does.
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