There are moments when life asks something of us before we feel fully ready to respond.
A nudge. A stirring. A quiet but persistent invitation that keeps returning, even when we try to explain it away. I have learned that these moments are often less about certainty and more about willingness.
Answering the call is rarely convenient. It may ask us to leave what is familiar. To trust our inner knowing. To move without the guarantee of how everything will unfold. And still, something in us recognizes the truth of it.
I have felt that truth in my own life—in the moments when I knew I could no longer keep living disconnected from myself, in the moments when healing asked for more honesty, more surrender, more courage than I thought I had.
Yoga has taught me that the call does not always arrive as a loud command. Sometimes it comes through the body first. Through fatigue. Through longing. Through the ache of misalignment. Through the quiet realization that the life we are sustaining is no longer the life that is sustaining us.
To answer that call requires listening. It requires stillness. It requires enough trust to believe that what is emerging deserves our attention, even if it interrupts the version of life we thought we were supposed to keep living.
Sometimes the call is simply the truth asking us to stop looking away.
I am learning that saying yes does not mean having it all figured out. It means being willing to move in alignment with what feels true. It means honoring the invitation, even with trembling. It means trusting that the path will reveal itself as we walk it.
And maybe that is the deeper practice—not waiting until we feel fearless, but choosing to respond with presence, humility, and faith.
If something in your life is calling you toward greater truth, greater healing, greater wholeness, I hope you will listen. I hope you will trust what your spirit already knows. I hope you will answer.

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