Amor Fati: Transforming Challenges into Growth

I didn’t see it coming. An accident that smashes into your frantic life, your hustle, your ‘get up and go’ survival mode – the thing that drives you day after day. Literally, I did not see this coming. In that split second, the moment before the vehicle smashed into us at full speed – the thought arrived: You are going to have an accident now and you may or may not live. Now hold on for your life.

Then everything went black.

Shortly after, I opened my eyes. The old vehicle was dusty – shaken to its core with the collective years of off-road memories now hanging in the air, followed by the realisation: We are alive.

Next up was the step by step process of dealing with an accident and documenting it, all in a hazy state of reality, of processing what had just happened, that there were no serious injuries and above all, no death.

More than not, a major incident such as this potentially comes with consequences, one way or the other. I accept that there is more I will go through. At this point, another wave of fear and thoughts of consequences come rolling in and the next potential reality crashes down, paralysing me with anxiety in its wake. In the meantime, business continues at full throttle. Our restaurant is fully booked for Father’s Day with record numbers. My right hand is fractured and there are plates to carry and drinks to pour. Our customers are blissfully unaware of the events of the weekend and are as supportive as usual of our journey forward. It’s hard but it’s comforting.

Come Sunday evening, frazzled and relieved that this weekend was finally over – I went to sleep and for a few sweet hours, all thoughts and fears vanished in the dark, dusting the black board clean of the weekend’s messy, frantic scribbles.  

In the early hours of the morning, before the birds had any inkling of the sun rising and the stars shone bright, I woke. This is my time; in the stillness of the night, at peace and in quiet when my day has not yet started. No distractions, no interruptions – just clear, purposeful thinking. It’s at this time, I find my way forward.

I know this: from the experiences I’ve had in the last few years, I trust that ‘Life has my back.’ I trust that my journey; the good, the bad and the challenges that come our way are designed to grow us and shape us into better, stronger human beings and are for the ‘greater good’ even if I don’t see how at this point. I know this because this has happened over and over again, and often, it’s only far down the road that the picture becomes clear.

At the event of facing something challenging, I have a choice. I can either plug into my fears and the paralysing anxiety and bad, non-aligned decisions that come with it, or into ego and become stuck in my self-righteousness, unable to accept, see clearly, take responsibility or find a way forward. I have a choice to prioritise perspective and to trust that if I am aligned with my higher self, life has my back and that what I am facing is necessary. To ask myself the question, how is this challenging me? What is it about myself that I perhaps have not seen or paid attention to, that needs to heal or for me to get better at? What is this pushing me to do or to face?

Embrace “Amor Fati” – To embrace everything – the good, the bad, the painful as necessary parts of your story. It’s not just acceptance, it’s choosing to love what shaped you. Some things didn’t happen to break you. They happened to build you.

For me, my ‘Amor Fati scenario,’ is that this accident has simplified things. It’s taken away some of the big ‘choices and options’ I had and like it or not, very definitely, has given me one way forward. The choice of how I get there is no longer a decision. And for this, despite the difficult road it might be and whether I like it or not, I am very grateful to know the path I must take. It is a relief just to know and to be able to go forward with purpose, direction and balance.

It sharpens the tool kit and gives me clarity regarding what to prioritize and what to let rest. It forces me to look at how I have been blindly ploughing forward at a frantic pace, solely focusing on succeeding and on the business and in doing so, neglecting other important areas of my life. Those ‘other areas’ are what have caught up on me, demanding I pull out of the race and reassess how I get to the finish line. Life after all, is not a sprint – it’s a marathon and a balancing act that requires perspective and alignment.

I can only focus on the next step right now. I do not know exactly what the lessons to come are. But I trust that by the end of this next chapter, I will be in a better place, the business will be in a better place and I will be better.

Does your perspective keep you stuck or does it empower you to go forward?

New beginnings happen in time, born from an ‘ending,’ that came with a ‘choice,’ or from one we did not choose. Either way, at some point, the possibility of a new beginning will come. It comes after a period of grief, when we pine and ache for our loss, when we mourn the passing of hopes and dreams, a future that will never be. The possibility of a new beginning comes with the painful transition of letting go of what no longer is, and opening our eyes to something different – a tiny spark of light, that for just a moment, helps us see something that we have not seen before – a new perspective and another way forward.

To reach the point of going forward in a new direction and seeing and feeling the possibility of another way, life will come at us in ways that are not necessarily gentle and sympathetic. Ways and waves of things going wrong, designed to defeat our old way of thinking, or attachment to a way that no longer is.

It requires us to trust ‘life’ and to realise that ‘all of this,’ the stuff that hurts us and trips us up, is not happening to us, it’s happening for us.

What is life ‘bringing up’ about me or about my situation that does not serve my growth or higher purpose?

What are the thoughts and fears I have that keep me stuck and bound in a situation that does not serve me? What is the thing that triggers me and what is the fear or pain that lies beneath for this to be a trigger? What must I change, accept or let go for me to be self-empowered and the master of my life, free of external contributors or factors I have no control of.

Our perspective of our life is our most powerful tool. It’s the thing that keeps us stuck in stagnant waters or it can be the thing that empowers us to let go and for us to go forward. To begin again, we must change our perspective.

“Your life does not get better by chance, it get’s better by change.” – Jim Rohn

From Endings to New Beginnings: My Story

It’s taken me 2 years to get here, to the part in my journey that I can confidently say I’m at a ‘new beginning.’ The truth is that with ‘new beginnings,’ there is most often a blurry start, with one year smudging into the other, swinging between ‘endings’ and old narratives, to new beginnings and the possibilities that come with a ‘different way.’

The truth about a new beginning is that to begin, there must first be an end; one that knocks us to our knees, disables us and stops us braving the night. The end is there to defeat us so that we cannot carry on as we were. It offers us no torch to light up the old trodden path we know so well. It leaves us in the dark and it’s here, when we’re feeling lost, hopeless and grief stricken, that we’re faced with a decision. We either stay here, stagnated in this position of helplessness, or we bravely take a step forward and we start walking into the unknown, in a new direction.

New beginnings are not always so clear. Sometimes, it takes years to begin again; an inch by inch process in a new direction with regular setbacks. But then something happens and it ‘lands’ with a  ‘thump,’ enough for you to turn your head and to look back and see how far you have come; to see that where there was once no space for anything else other than the pain or loss you felt, there is now simply space and enough light to mindfully choose your way. In that moment, you know you’ve turned the page and this is a new chapter, a new beginning.

Join me as I continue to walk down this path, exploring it and experiencing it, with all the bumps and burns and the twists and turns that come with starting something.

The beauty about a ‘new beginning’ is simply that there can be one.

Here begins a new chapter and a new theme for the Rosie Goes Blog: New beginnings.