Correctness Doesn't Mean Comfort. It Means Alignment.

You won't always feel graceful while living your truth. 2025 Zug, Baar, Switzerland

Correctness Doesn't Mean Comfort. It Means Alignment.

Here’s a secret:


I fell twice this month.
And not while pushing myself harder.
While standing still.

Yesterday I rode 60km through the mountains and lakes of central Switzerland. Lake Luzern, Lake Zug, a peaceful stop in Küssnacht. The kind of ride that makes your body ache and your spirit hum.

But this time I tipped over — feet still clipped in, barely moving.

And I smiled, because that’s what growth actually feels like sometimes.

I was asked by my crew:
"Are you ok?"
I answered:
"No. I'm hurt at my knee and emotionally also."

Embarrassed.
But not dramatic.
Not epic.
Just… awkward.

Like falling while standing still.

For many of us — especially those navigating career change or stepping into something new — this is the trap:

We believe alignment will feel like flight.
That if something is truly right for us, it’ll be smooth, clean, and easy.


But alignment doesn’t mean you won’t stumble.

Alignment means you’ll keep going anyway.
Because something deeper in you says:
this is mine.

That’s the kind of truth I guide/coach people into — not with vague advice, but with practical tools grounded in Human Design Psychology and self-awareness.

In my workshops, leaders don’t just learn about themselves.
They start living it.
They make braver decisions.
They lead with more clarity.
They create relationships — personal and professional — that actually feel alive.

If you’ve been falling lately…
Not from rushing, but froum simply trying to stand still in a life that no longer fits.


Maybe it’s time to recalibrate.
To reconnect.
To re-align.

Not perfectly. Not performatively.

Just honestly.

And yes — I did service my pedals.