The article challenges traditional definitions of success that often neglect women's unique values and complexities. It argues that many women feel disconnected despite achieving conventional markers of success, questioning their true fulfillment. The piece advocates for a redefinition of success, encouraging women to focus on personal alignment rather than external validation. By asking questions that center around joy, energy, and meaning rather than societal expectations, women can create a personalized version of success that honors their whole selves.
The traditional narrative of success-linear, externally validated, achievement-obsessed-wasn't built with women's lives, cycles, wisdom, or complexity in mind.
Success that requires you to abandon yourself, your values, or your well-being is not success worth striving for.
Instead of asking, 'What should I do next?' ask, 'What feels aligned with who I'm becoming?'
When we shift the lens from external achievement to internal alignment, something powerful happens: Success stops being about proving, and starts being about becoming.
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