12 Lessons in 12 Months – My 40th Birthday Reflection

I began this annual birthday reflection a few years ago after being inspired by the practice introduced to me by Jay Shetty. When I’m in the midst of journaling, I’m typically expressing my deepest emotions and thoughts about what I’m going through in that moment. Doing this exercise really helps to zoom out and see how all of these experiences are so beautifully woven together.

This year was marked by big transitions, unexpected disruptions, deep joy, and moments that knocked the wind out of me. There were seasons of celebration and seasons of grief, times when life felt expansive and times when it felt unbearably tender. This year asked me to sit in stillness with contradiction – to hold what was beautiful and painful at the same time, without rushing to resolve or choose one story over the other. 

The lessons I write about weren’t learned in grand epiphanies, but in ordinary moments, that I’ve now strung together to create much larger meaning and purpose. I hope you find a nugget of wisdom that resonates with you too. 

 

Lesson #1 – November 2024

A five minute conversation with love can shift everything

 

If you’ve read my birthday reflection emails in years past, you already know how inspiring I find Elizabeth Gilbert’s writing and concepts. In November, I stumbled upon her substack, particularly an entry in which she talks about a practice called “Two-Way Prayer.” As luck would have it, this practice was just what I needed during this season. Here’s how it works, you open your notebook, and write the question: “Dear Love (or God, or whatever feels right to you), what would you have me know today?”, and from there you simply write whatever naturally comes to the tip of your pen. The trick here is not to overthink, and don’t spend more than five minutes doing it. It’s not meant to be perfect prose, but simply a practice in allowing the love that is always in you, to come to the surface and be seen and felt for a brief moment. That brief moment can be a powerful reset that gives you a genuinely, positive reset. 

 

Lesson #2 – December 2024

When you’re feeling bogged down, remember your “why”

 

I met December with a schedule that was packed and planned down to the minute. With two kids who were in full swing of the magic of Santa, I reminded myself that the years are flying by and to try to be present in these special moments. Wrapping up work for the year was equally busy, and I reminded myself that the vision of this work isn’t to get my to-do list done. There is no reward for checking off all the boxes. I spent some time thinking about my why, when my mind felt like it was being pulled in a hundred directions. I was grateful to have taken a trip with my family, where I remembered the importance of play. Traveling across the country for Christmas, and having the chance to swim in the ocean and tune out the rest of the world reminded me of just how small I am in this world, and validated my earlier notion of not sweating the small stuff.

In preparation for a Pathfinder client that I was going to be supporting on her creative journey, I re-read Big Magic for the third time. Each time I read it with a new perspective and experience under my belt, and it gives me just what I need in that season. A favorite passage from this time around was: “What are the treasures hidden inside you? What do they want you to say yes to? The hunt to uncover those jewels, that’s creative living.” 

 

Lesson #3 – January 2025

Perspective is a beautiful teacher

 

January always brings a welcome hibernation. It’s dark and cold out, the holiday buzz has worn off, and everyone is thinking about their intentions for the upcoming year. I thought a lot about what I wanted to let go of in this next season of life: situations that make me feel “ugh,” feeling the need to “do it all,” worry, grudges, unreasonable expectations. I really felt determined and ready to stand my ground with confidence and kindness. I used the metaphors of a mountain, a staple, and a pillar to help me bring to life how I wanted to feel. I have felt that way before, and I really wanted to show up as that in my daily life. My intentional word for the year was “affirmed.” 

Shortly after these reflections, the devastating wildfires swept through California, and I feared for a loved one whose neighborhood was destroyed. I had so much gratitude that she was OK, and was deeply saddened that many in her community were not. My daughter and I flew to LA as her cheer squad after she said goodbye to her beloved home. Despite the circumstances, our togetherness and immense love for each other made it one of the most fulfilling weekends on record for the three of us. Once again, I learned the power of perspective, and boy is she a beaut. 

I wrote this down in my journal, and am really hoping these were my wise words and not just me forgetting to put a quotation and author down 🤣, but regardless, it’s a lovely sentiment: “I want to see with my heart, put words to the inexplicable, and meet creativity in a two way conversation.” 

 

Lesson #4 – February 2025

Peace comes not from fixing reality, but from letting go of resistance — making room for clarity, compassion, and connection

 

February was another month of some heart-bursting highs and some painfully low lows. I felt fulfilled and empowered by a few bonding experiences with the women in my life, which reminded me of the value of nurturing relationships with the special women in your life. 

I witnessed some deep struggles from my inner-circle, and felt gutted on more than one occasion. I struggled myself with more macro events of the world, that seemed to be led by fear and anger- pretty much the antithesis of how I am built. In the synchronous, universe-knows-best timing of things, a client of mine became intrigued by Radical Acceptance, and so we dug into the concept together. Wouldn’t you know, it was just what I also needed. Some questions I explored from Radical Acceptance: 

  • How would my life feel different if I stopped resisting the pain around the reality and embraced what is?
  • What would it look like to accept this reality without fixing it or changing it?
  • What past situation have I eventually accepted, and how did that shift things for me?

 

Lesson #5 – March 2025

Presence turns endings into something I can carry with me

 

March marked the two-month countdown of moving out of our home of nearly seven years, so looming change was getting really real. I got sappy going down memory lane as I cleaned out my children’s collections, and a little spazzy trying to perfectly plan where everything would go in the new house and what our new systems would be — with my number one goal being to finally solve the mystery of how there could always be no fewer than six pairs of children’s socks scattered across the floor at any given moment. I guess life is pretty good when these are the things keeping you up at night.

Even so, a major life change has a way of luring a recovering perfectionist back toward the familiar comfort of control. I continued to remind myself that I didn’t have to have all the answers on day one. And certainly not on day one minus 60 days. Cue the radical acceptance work: 

“At this moment, do I accept myself just as I am?” This ran through my mind over and over and over. 

I decided that I wanted to let myself feel all the memories that flooded in – bringing home our second baby, his first steps, meeting our puppy, Easter egg hunts in the back yard, making baked ziti for Christmas Eve dinner and then sleeping together in the living room when the electricity (and thus heat) went out all over Nashville, sheltering in place together during the weirdest year of life, the list goes on and on. I wanted to sear these memories into my brain. Practicing presence was crucial to be able to take it all in, and by the end of it, it somehow made the emotional toll of the move easier. It gave a sort of closure to know that I could take all of those important milestones with me. 

 

Lesson #6 – April 2025

Find your village and hold it close

 

April opened with celebration – my little sister’s wedding, where we were surrounded by family and friends from many different seasons of my life. Standing beside her as Matron of Honor – and having the chance to speak about who she is – felt especially meaningful. As I prepared her speech, I felt so inspired by her that I jotted down some takeaways to apply to my own life: do more of what you want without worrying about others’ opinions; see the good in people; be unapologetically you. I was reminded to play more and let life feel a little lighter. 

On return from the magical weekend of the wedding, I experienced a stark turn of events when I came face-to-face with the reality that The Happy Hour studio had flooded from a four-day deluge of rain that left much of the city under water. I was beyond grateful for the village surrounding me during this chaos: our neighbors who not only sounded the alarm to us, but also jumped in to help (that’s you Fahrenheit ladies), Claire, who dealt with it in real-time while I was away, my women’s business group who listened to me cry, and my THH team who remained steady and supportive while I was having trouble seeing the forest through the trees. This experience nudged me to let myself accept the help from all around, and highlighted the importance of having that proverbial village around you. 

 

Lesson #7- May 2025

Figure out what is sacred to you and prioritize it

 

May 3rd, moving day. Surrounded by boxes, I reflected on how different our lives look compared to when we moved in nearly seven years ago as a three-person family where I grew into motherhood, flanked by a brood of three different dogs than we have today. Somehow it feels like a lifetime ago, but yesterday at the same time. This process put into perspective the importance of presence and not “sweating the small stuff” because you won’t remember the small stuff in the long-run. It was a great reminder to prioritize what matters and hold it close. 

I wrote: Dear House, you gave us charm, love, closeness, togetherness, sleep training, potty training, falling asleep on the floor while doing said training, and so many mental health walks. Holding space is an under-recognized, under-appreciated healing art. And house, you nailed it.”

I didn’t journal for three more weeks. I was hard at work making a new house a home. 

 

Lesson #8 – June 2025

I can hold relief and disappointment, grief and gratitude, without forcing myself to choose between them

 

The theme this month was all about holding two things at the same time: living in opposites without forcing myself to choose one or the other. We finally put the flood remediation and insurance disputes behind us — an ending that felt both relieving and disappointing at the same time. It forced me to zoom out and reconnect with my why. The flood and its impact on the business wasn’t the story; it was a moment. What mattered more was the larger vision of impact — serving my community and extending that work beyond it. In the long arc of things, this will be a blip on the radar. 

In re-visiting my journal entries, it was clear I was being overly critical of my feelings, and second guessing myself. This is easy to do when you feel spread thin. Looking back with fresh eyes is such a great reminder to remember that these punctuations don’t define you, and with determination and softness you can get through anything. At the same time, I had many tender moments with my children, got to bear witness to two of my best friends getting married, and traveled to Paris for my 15 year wedding anniversary and got lost in the freeness of the city. 

 

 Lesson #9 – July 2025

Do what you can to be actively thankful

 

The day after we returned from our big trip, the news broke of the deadly flooding in Texas. It felt so close to home, and my heart ached for the families who lost their loved ones. I cycled through feelings of sadness, guilt, desperation, and a heightened fear for how fragile and precious life is. I tuned into a church sermon the Sunday following these events, and it was about washing away your fear with love. This became my mantra this month, and brought me back to the November lesson of spending five minutes with love. 

The same sermon talked about gratitude, and the cycle of that can commonly happen. It went something like this: 1) overwhelmingly thankful – you feel it in every cell of your body; 2) extremely thankful – a little toned down, but still verbally expressing gratitude; 3) silently thankful – you’re not verbally sharing it with anyone; 4) indifferent – you don’t feel strongly one way or the other; 5) unthankful; 6) entitled. The whole point of this was to encourage listeners to be actively thankful, share their thanks with others, write it down, and make it meaningful to you. Being actively thankful helps maintain connections with people in your life who are important to you, and helps create resilience when inevitable hardships arise. This just reminded me of one of the first definitions I ever heard of “spirituality,” which was “anything that brings you closer to gratitude.” 

 

Lesson # 10 – August 2025

Don’t underestimate the power of herzensbildung

 

We welcomed the back to school season, and adapted to another new schedule, which was met with open arms and excitement for a consistent routine. I read the book How to Know a Person, by David Brooks, and I loved his concept of Illuminators and Diminishers. The titles are pretty self-explanatory, but he described Illuminators to “have a persistent curiosity about people…they know what to look for and how to ask the right questions at the right time. They shine the brightness of their care on people and make them feel bigger, deeper, respected, lit up.” Whereas, Diminishers “make other people feel small and unseen. They see other people as things to be used, not persons to be befriended. They stereotype and ignore. They are so concerned with themselves that other people are just not on their radar screen.” Yikes. 

I thought a lot about what it would look like to show up as an illuminator in all parts of my life. When I am coaching my job is to ask the right questions and make people feel seen. How can I ensure that I bring this same quality out of the office with me consistently? What’s that saying…”the painter’s house is never painted”? I want to be sure my house is always painted, so to speak. The book talked about a German word, herzensbildung, which means to train one’s heart to see the full humanity in another. In literal translation it’s “heart education.” I love that. 

 

Lesson #11 – September 2025

When in doubt, return to a Beginner’s Mind

 

This month we celebrated the joy of two birthdays in our family, and one unexpected loss of our sweet puppy, Penelope. Remember when I said this year was about living in duality? My intention through it all was to stay in my truth, and try to keep tuning into my wisdom. Helping my children learn how to grieve in a healthy and authentic manner was a painful, yet powerful teacher to me as well. My son turned to ritual, singing songs about our beloved puppy; and my daughter illustrated her grief with words, “my grief feels like an icky perfume is stuck in my chest.” I was in awe of them, and felt like I learned as much from them. I was reminded of the powerful concept of a Beginner’s Mind. 

I revisited my two-way prayer practice, and was inspired to model love, rest when rest was needed, and push when strength was needed. Despite the hardship, I felt really present with my clients and honed in on being an Illuminator. 

 

Lesson #12 – October 2025

We are all ages we’ve ever been

 

October tied all of this year’s experiences together with a nice little bow. On the way to The Happy Hour’s retreat at Miraval in Austin, I listened to a meditation in which listeners are guided to meet their Higher Selves. I let my imagination run wild, and was able to see my higher self as a steady woman with a soft smile on her face, propped up against a tree holding hands with three younger versions of myself. The concept “we are all ages we’ve ever been,” reverberated through my mind. I was reminded of how nurturing these selves isn’t about going backwards, but rather the opposite, it fosters forward movement, healing and growth. 

 

THE CONTENT OF THIS BLOG IS FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY. IT IS NOT A SUBSTITUTE FOR A THERAPEUTIC RELATIONSHIP.

12 Lessons from My 39th Year

I began doing this birthday exercise a couple of years ago after I was introduced to the idea by Jay Shetty’s On Purpose podcast. As I read through hundreds of journal entries from my last year, the theme of my 39th year seemed to jump off the pages at me: relearning the lessons I thought I had already mastered. Through these pages, I witnessed myself frequently reframing my inner narrative, taking a step back, zooming out, and trying to notice the lessons I’ve learned…and learned again, and again. 

 

For a brief moment I let shame get to me, with its unhelpful critique of “You should have known how to handle that with more wisdom,” or “you know better than to be so hard on yourself.” But the truth is, we never become infallible or impervious, despite how much practice we’ve had, even if you’re a life coach that teaches self-compassion and mindfulness for a living. We can’t check a box on how human nature has hardwired us to operate, survive and thrive. We can remain curious about why these lessons resurface, and we can go deeper on our healing around them. I’ve come to see this as an incredibly valuable opportunity. 

 

I can see the impact of better understanding myself, and the subsequent attunement to the world outside of me. The quality of my lived experience simply improved. And thus was the undertone for my 39th year – swallowing my pride and embracing a beginner’s mind. I hope that you find my lessons helpful to your own life as well. 

 

Lesson #1 – November 2023

Let go of the things that don’t belong to you. Cherish what is yours – your family, your friendships, your specialness, your worries, your grief, your friendships, your power. All the rest? Return to sender.

In November I was set back by a combination of simultaneous flu and covid, as well as the offset of an ongoing conflict with a friend that took the wind out of me. Looking back, I am saddened by how much time, energy and headspace I gave that conflict over the last year. I tend to take on a lot of emotion from others, and this experience was a pivotal lesson in protecting my emotional and energetic boundaries. I didn’t do a great job at it, but I know that is exactly what I need to practice, so that I can be present with all the beautiful (and not so beautiful, but important) things that do belong to me. 

 

Lesson #2 – December 2023

Community and connection have the power to heal and sustain us.

December was hectic with holiday fun, obligations, and trying to put a bow on 2023 at work. It was so busy that I barely journaled, so I turned to my iPhone photos to rekindle the sentiment of last December. What stood out to me was my deep gratitude for the people that filled this hectic month with meaning. I feel deeply fortunate to have such depth and breadth of relationships, knowing that I am surrounded by support and love from so many circles. Over the holidays, I had the opportunity to be there for loved ones during a time of grief, and in offering that support, I was reminded of the transformative power of authentic love and connection. Though I didn’t do it with anything in return in mind, it was a poignant lesson in how vital community truly is.

 

Lesson #3 – January 2024

There are so many “parts” within each of us that are trying to help us. If we can befriend our internal cast of characters, we can clear the way to self-love.

In January, I set my 2024 intention of “magnetic.” I wanted to attract more of the moments that made me feel buzzy. I felt connected to this intention for the most part, except when my old friend Self-Doubt appeared to knock me down a peg from time to time. As part of the Pathfinder Coaching Program’s retreat in January, we created a workshop focused on “Parts” work, a method that helps you understand the different emotions, behaviors, or inner personas that may hold conflicting beliefs or needs within you – think of the movie Inside Out. The concept is that when you understand the role that each of these parts play, you can begin to create a healthier inner dialogue between the parts, heal unresolved inner conflicts, which lead to a greater self-understanding. 

 

In order to facilitate this, I had to do the work myself. It was absolutely illuminating to explore the various parts of me, and how much they contradict each other – it’s wild in there! Some of my parts included: the good girl, the rebel, the responsible one, the wild one, the manager, the little girl, the fixer, the perfectionist, the empathizer, the helper, the sensitive, the weakling, the warrior, the romantic, and the pragmatist. When fear or insecurity surfaced, I found it grounding to identify the part of me that felt threatened, offer it care and understanding, and then move forward with renewed steadiness.

 

Lesson #4 – February 2024

Let the light both fill us, and shine forth from us.

I was poetically inspired in February. This passage from Mark Nepo’s Drinking from the River of Light struck me, “Through the window of our mind we take in endless patterns that help us understand the web of life. Through the window of our heart, we feel the thousand ways we are affected by other life, the thousand ways we are each other. It’s imperative that we love our windows and care for them.” This month, in the middle of the Pathfinder Coaching program (which requires significant self reflection and awareness for both the coach and client), I became aware of how much I am filled with light when I have these authentic exchanges with my clients who are doing this work. Though I am the facilitator, helping others to find their light, I draw inspiration and strength from these clients, and find myself again with a beginner’s mind. I dreamt a lot this month, and asked myself “what is my dream?” I want to do this more often. 

 

Lesson #5 – March 2024

At our core, all we truly long for is to be seen, understood, and valued for who we authentically are.

March brought up a swell of grief, looming on the one year anniversary of the tragic shooting at the Covenant School in Nashville. I grappled with my grief, helped clients make sense of theirs, and learned so much from them. I experienced some shame and imposter syndrome around my grief – since I was not directly related to any of the victims, I minimized and invalidated my grief. Despite all the data I know to be true, I experienced for myself that unchecked grief turns into a pressure cooker of emotions. I reframed my shame into “you are a loving person who feels deeply connected to your community.” I went to therapy, attended the Safer TN human chain that spanned nearly four miles through downtown Nashville, and wrote an email to The Happy Hour community expressing my feelings. I felt relieved, connected, and less alone after letting out my “undeserved” grief, and I didn’t feel like an imposter once it was out in the open. I received a lot of replies of community members feeling the same way, and feeling less alone after connecting in this way. 

 

As Elizabeth Gilbert says in Big Magic, “authenticity has quiet resonance that never fails to stir me. Just say what you want to say, then, and say it with all your heart.”

 

Lesson #6 – April 2024

Love is something if you give it away, you end up having more.

This is a lyric from a song that my kids were singing on repeat in April, and it really resonated with me. I found myself caught up in a lot of minutiae in my worklife this month, which felt constrictive and a little desperate. I did a lot of reflecting on my “why” and asked myself, “what would it look like to approach life from my highest power?” I wanted to take a page out of my kids’ book and tune into truth and child-like joy in order to find the wisdom of my adult self. Cue the aforementioned song lyric. Dance parties helped too. 

 

Lesson #7 – May 2024

10x is easier than 2x.

I was enveloped in this book by Dan Sullivan and Benjamin Hardy this month. 10x is Easier Than 2x is a book about concepts you can apply to grow your business, and how going for 10x growth is actually easier and more doable than 2x. It seems counterintuitive, but this book took me by surprise in a personal sense more than anything. I explored my top 20% in my personal life, and strategized how to prioritize those things, while giving myself permission to ditch the other 80%. I’m not all the way to ditching the bottom four fifths of what takes up my time, but it’s a worthwhile endeavor. I love how the authors talk about wealth creation being a compilation of time, relationships, money and purpose. 

 

Lesson #8 – June 2024

Recognize and embrace your unique strengths, even without external validation.

This month I spent time reflecting on my “unique ability,” another concept from the book I mentioned in May’s lesson. Even when we aren’t getting external high fives or accolades, we always have a unique ability – each and everyone one of us. This exercise may feel a little egotistical, but it is meant to help remind you of what you’re made of. It doesn’t imply that you shouldn’t try to improve your weaker muscles, but rather, not to let them take up more air time than your strengths. When you focus on maximizing your exceptional qualities, you will go further than trying to slightly improve across a wide range of areas, where you’ll theoretically be just OK at a bunch of stuff instead of exceptional at a few things. 

 

Lesson #9 – July 2024

Before our inner critics got so big, we were born with unbridled love.

This came to me the night before my son’s fifth birthday. Since the day he was born, he opened me up to so much love, kindness, and faith that I didn’t know was possible. It sounds cliche… and a little nauseating, I admit, but cliches are cliches for a reason I suppose! Reflecting on his uniqueness, particularly his unbridled love, made me begin to question when we start to lose that natural instinct. I prayed that nothing would ever happen to make him dim that light, and in doing so was reminded that we all have this light. What would it take to amplify that light in me regularly? How can I be more like George?

 

Lesson #10 – August 2024

It’s ok not to have all the answers.

I said goodbye to my shadow of 12 years, my dog Nacho. In addition to practicing my own healthy grieving, I was pushed to my depths of holding space, as my kids were devastated by the loss. The loss, which also propelled hundreds of questions around death and faith. I so badly wanted to fix this for them and take on their pain, but this was an exceptional lesson for all of us in the importance of sitting with discomfort. I wanted to give them some sort of certainty or timeline of what they’d feel next, but I simply didn’t know, and I had comfort in knowing that that was ok. Presence with the discomfort is the only way through. 

 

This passage from poet, yung pueblo, resonated with me this month: “Down moments will try to make you forget how much you have actually accomplished. You have overcome too much to let heavy emotions confuse you. Stop listening to the noise and ground yourself in the fact that storms do not last forever.” 

 

Lesson #11 – September 2024

When in doubt, go back to the basics.

This month was full of life with our first-ever THH Retreat, closing on a new home, surviving back to school, launching a mobile app, my 14th wedding anniversary, my hubby’s bday, my daughter turning seven, and the realization that there’s no turning back time. I felt myself teetering on overwhelm in September, and found comfort in going back to the basics. I grounded myself time and time again with the following questions: How am I feeling right now? What is my 20% What felt good today? Who am I? What is my why?

 

On the flight to our retreat, I worked through The Happy Hour’s Core Value exercise for the umpteenth time, to reground myself on what was important in that particular season of life. It was a helpful reminder of what I wanted to embody during those intense few days facilitating deep personal discovery with the retreat participants. While at the retreat, I bought a book by Alexandra Elle, called How We Heal, that started off with an inspiring “fill in the blank” exercise that I’ll share below. 

 

The magic that happened during the retreat felt like the start of a new chapter. I’m not entirely sure why, but that was the feeling I had. I’m trusting my gut enough to go with it. 

 

Ten Reasons Why I Heal (Alexandra Elle)

I am healing because I want…

I am healing because I need…

I am healing because I deserve…

I am healing because I feel…

I am healing because I see…

I am healing because I love…

I am healing because my…

I am healing because I am…

I am healing because I can…

I am healing because I choose…

 

Lesson #12 – October 2024

Embrace the gift of slowing down to listen within.

After the retreat in September, I felt renewed with positive energy and started thinking about my upcoming year. The last year in my 30s. My hope for this year is to show up fully as an adult, without holding back because of worry or “shoulds,” and to live fully in my authentic presence that has come out of her shell in the last 5 years…to let that be my home, my comfort zone, my beacon. 

 

I started pulling Animal cards (almost) daily, to help ignite self reflection, an idea one of my beloved clients introduced me to on our retreat. Against the odds, I pulled “Lamb” and “Owl” on six out of the 21 days that I pulled cards. Btw, there are 78 cards total, if you want to do the math. The themes of each of these cards are as follows:

  • “Lamb” – Peaceful, prophetic, patient
  • “Owl” – Abundance, clairvoyant, treasures

 

These were timely reminders as I walked into my 40th year of life. I feel like life is just beginning.