
Company Culture Stories


Starting over is rarely just a logistical decision. It is an emotional event. It often feels heavier than it looks from the outside, and that weight can be confusing. You might tell yourself you “should” be excited about a fresh start, a new chapter, a clean slate. Instead, you feel resistance, fear, or a quiet ache you cannot quite name.
That is not because you are weak. Starting over feels hard because you are letting go of a version of yourself you spent years building.
You are not only changing jobs, leaving a relationship, shifting direction, or reinventing your work. You are saying goodbye to an identity that once kept you safe, that once made sense, that once helped you belong. You are not just struggling with the new beginning. You are grieving the old one.
The truth is that starting over is almost never a pure reset. It is an evolution. It is a quiet acknowledgment that something in you is no longer willing to settle. You may not know exactly what comes next, but you know with increasing clarity what can no longer continue. That recognition can feel both relieving and destabilizing at the same time.
When beginning again feels heavy, it helps to name a few truths that are usually buried under the fear.
The first truth is that you are not starting from scratch; you are starting from experience. The part of you that feels like everything is being torn down will often tell a story of total loss: “I wasted so much time,” “I should be further along,” “I am back at zero.” That story is not accurate. You are taking every lesson, every wound, every skill, every insight with you. Even the seasons you would never choose again taught your system something about what you can hold, what you can survive, and what you value. None of that disappears just because the form of your life is changing.
The second truth is that the hardest part of starting over is not the future. It is the identity release. What feels painful is not only the uncertainty ahead, it is the loosening of who you thought you had to be. You might be releasing the “reliable one,” the “high achiever,” the “one who never quits,” the one who always makes it work no matter what it costs internally. Letting go of that identity can feel like betrayal, even when you know it has become too small or too costly. Your nervous system has been organized around that version of you. Of course it hesitates. Of course it mourns.
The third truth is that you do not need the whole path to move forward. You only need the next honest step. Staring down an entire future you cannot predict will paralyze almost anyone. Your system is not built to hold all possible outcomes at once. It is built to take one step, get feedback, and adjust. Waiting until you can see every turn in the road before you are willing to move will keep you in place indefinitely. Often, clarity does not precede movement; it grows because you moved.
From this angle, starting over is not proof that you have failed. It is proof that you finally told the truth about what no longer fits. You are not beginning again because your life “didn’t work.” You are beginning again because something in you became honest enough to stop performing a version of yourself that could not keep going.
Starting over becomes lighter when you allow yourself to honor the version of you that brought you here instead of only criticizing it. You can acknowledge that you did the best you could with what you knew then, that you survived situations that were not easy, that you carried responsibilities that were real. You can feel gratitude for that version of you, even while you gently set down what it can no longer carry.
At the same time, you can begin to make room for the version of you that is waiting...one who is more aligned with what you know now, more honest about what you need, and less willing to abandon yourself to keep something that has expired alive.
You do not have to redesign your entire life in one decisive move. You can let starting over be a series of small, true steps: one honest conversation, one boundary, one choice that is more aligned than the last. Each step is a way of saying, “I am allowed to change. I am allowed to grow out of what once fit me.”
Beginning again is rarely comfortable, but it is often deeply accurate. When you stop treating it as a personal indictment and start treating it as an evolution, the weight you are carrying becomes easier to understand...and a little easier to set down.
To explore this further, you can follow Dr. Sarai Koo on LinkedIn for insights on leadership under pressure, and watch her content on Dr. Sarai Koo’s YouTube Channel, Instagram, and TikToK for real-world leadership scenarios and practical solutions. You can also subscribe to the LinkedIn Newsletter: Integration Under Pressure for deeper system-level perspectives, and visit Winning Pathway LinkedIn Page and the Leadership Hub Blog to see how regulated, psychologically safe systems translate into measurable business outcomes.
Human Development * Life Transformation


Starting over is rarely just a logistical decision. It is an emotional event. It often feels heavier than it looks from the outside, and that weight can be confusing. You might tell yourself you “should” be excited about a fresh start, a new chapter, a clean slate. Instead, you feel resistance, fear, or a quiet ache you cannot quite name.
That is not because you are weak. Starting over feels hard because you are letting go of a version of yourself you spent years building.
You are not only changing jobs, leaving a relationship, shifting direction, or reinventing your work. You are saying goodbye to an identity that once kept you safe, that once made sense, that once helped you belong. You are not just struggling with the new beginning. You are grieving the old one.
The truth is that starting over is almost never a pure reset. It is an evolution. It is a quiet acknowledgment that something in you is no longer willing to settle. You may not know exactly what comes next, but you know with increasing clarity what can no longer continue. That recognition can feel both relieving and destabilizing at the same time.
When beginning again feels heavy, it helps to name a few truths that are usually buried under the fear.
The first truth is that you are not starting from scratch; you are starting from experience. The part of you that feels like everything is being torn down will often tell a story of total loss: “I wasted so much time,” “I should be further along,” “I am back at zero.” That story is not accurate. You are taking every lesson, every wound, every skill, every insight with you. Even the seasons you would never choose again taught your system something about what you can hold, what you can survive, and what you value. None of that disappears just because the form of your life is changing.
The second truth is that the hardest part of starting over is not the future. It is the identity release. What feels painful is not only the uncertainty ahead, it is the loosening of who you thought you had to be. You might be releasing the “reliable one,” the “high achiever,” the “one who never quits,” the one who always makes it work no matter what it costs internally. Letting go of that identity can feel like betrayal, even when you know it has become too small or too costly. Your nervous system has been organized around that version of you. Of course it hesitates. Of course it mourns.
The third truth is that you do not need the whole path to move forward. You only need the next honest step. Staring down an entire future you cannot predict will paralyze almost anyone. Your system is not built to hold all possible outcomes at once. It is built to take one step, get feedback, and adjust. Waiting until you can see every turn in the road before you are willing to move will keep you in place indefinitely. Often, clarity does not precede movement; it grows because you moved.
From this angle, starting over is not proof that you have failed. It is proof that you finally told the truth about what no longer fits. You are not beginning again because your life “didn’t work.” You are beginning again because something in you became honest enough to stop performing a version of yourself that could not keep going.
Starting over becomes lighter when you allow yourself to honor the version of you that brought you here instead of only criticizing it. You can acknowledge that you did the best you could with what you knew then, that you survived situations that were not easy, that you carried responsibilities that were real. You can feel gratitude for that version of you, even while you gently set down what it can no longer carry.
At the same time, you can begin to make room for the version of you that is waiting...one who is more aligned with what you know now, more honest about what you need, and less willing to abandon yourself to keep something that has expired alive.
You do not have to redesign your entire life in one decisive move. You can let starting over be a series of small, true steps: one honest conversation, one boundary, one choice that is more aligned than the last. Each step is a way of saying, “I am allowed to change. I am allowed to grow out of what once fit me.”
Beginning again is rarely comfortable, but it is often deeply accurate. When you stop treating it as a personal indictment and start treating it as an evolution, the weight you are carrying becomes easier to understand...and a little easier to set down.
To explore this further, you can follow Dr. Sarai Koo on LinkedIn for insights on leadership under pressure, and watch her content on Dr. Sarai Koo’s YouTube Channel, Instagram, and TikToK for real-world leadership scenarios and practical solutions. You can also subscribe to the LinkedIn Newsletter: Integration Under Pressure for deeper system-level perspectives, and visit Winning Pathway LinkedIn Page and the Leadership Hub Blog to see how regulated, psychologically safe systems translate into measurable business outcomes.