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Do You Feel Stuck, Overwhelmed, and Dissatisfied?

“Everyone wants to live on top of the mountain, but all the happiness and growth occurs while you’re climbing it.” ~Andy Rooney

I was born and raised in Louisiana, where food, booze, and fun are the three most important things in most every social situation.

I had my license at fourteen, my first drink at fifteen, and I knew the owner of the local drive-through daiquiri bar by name. (Miss Billy, in case you were wondering.) It wasn’t out of the ordinary. We all drank a lot on the weekends…who doesn’t?!

In college, when my parents were going through a divorce, I discovered boxed wine and how to make grilled cheeses on my roommate’s mini George Forman grill. So, like many college kids, I would come home drunk at three in the morning and eat five grilled cheeses.

Then came the job on Wall Street, where food and alcohol were just part of the territory. Meet clients for drinks. Bond over a fancy dinner. Drink more at the bar after dinner. Eat. Drink. Repeat. Take a load off. Decompress. You get the idea. Life is intense. Period. No question about it.

Life can be overwhelming and scary, and it can feel like too much to deal with on some days. At times, it can feel easier and quicker to pour another glass of wine, or go shopping, or keep ourselves “busy,” or work nonstop, or eat a pint of ice cream than face the intensity of life. 

We keep going because we don’t know what will happen if we stop. It can be petrifying to think about how out of sync our lives are sometimes. What would happen if we stopped for a second? Would the lives we have created just crumble around us?

It was a lot easier for me not to feel how out of alignment I was when I was working on Wall Street because everything looked good on paper, and I really liked certain aspects of my job and life.

It was also a lot easier for me not to feel that the business I built last year wasn’t exactly what I wanted. It can be easier to ignore the failing relationship, the friends that don’t make you feel good, the job that’s sucking your soul, and so on.

You might not know what it is, but there’s something that doesn’t feel right. And most of us stay stuck in the dissatisfaction of where we are because we don’t know what to do with those feelings.

We get caught worrying about figuring it all out and having all the answers. When we don’t know how to change things, we convince ourselves that there’s no way, so we ignore the whispers. And in order to deal with the fact that we’ve ignored the whispers and that our lives sometimes feel okay but aren’t totally great, we pick up something to help us feel better.

We process the feelings by not actually processing them at all because we never learned how to feel our feelings. Many of us turn to a “safe” solution like wine or food. I never did drugs; that wasn’t my thing. I never had a gambling problem or a shoe addiction. But I did love wine and food. They became a comfort. They became a ritual.

So this is my story: I was raised Catholic in a Lebanese family in the South. I’m a success-driven, high-achieving woman.

We drink and we eat; that’s just what we do. And there is nothing wrong with any of that…until there is.

There’s nothing wrong with drinking wine, eating chocolate, shopping online late at night, or pouring your heart into work you love. What I’m saying is that these things can be dangerous if you use them to cover what you don’t want to feel, or to fill a void in your soul.

Many of us know there’s something more. We’re ready to feel aligned, purposeful, and driven, but we don’t know how to do that.

We don’t know what the “something more” is, but we can hear it calling to us.

I had to quit filling the void with food and wine last year in order to finally find my “something more.” I had to really look at the range of emotions I was feeling, write about them, and allow them to be present, without making them bad or wrong.

I had to notice my fears and not run from them. I had to learn the difference between thoughts that were helpful and those that were just old programming that I needed to release. I had to learn to notice my thoughts as visitors, not as invited guests. I had to learn that I had a choice in every moment.

I touched a deep, dark, raw, and beautiful place within myself. I have come out on the other side of this journey more aligned, more purposeful, more driven, and more alive than ever before. This is my one life, and I am now choosing to live it with intention.

I have a purpose in this lifetime and I need to be an open channel to do the work that I feel inspired to do.

You can create a sense of purpose too, but you have to be willing to let go of the old and embrace the new.

Are you willing to say yes to your path even if the road is dusty and dark?

You won’t always know the answers. You won’t always know “how.” But if you are willing to say yes to the whispers, the road will rise to meet you and your direction will unfold. You must first say yes.

My life without using wine or food to cover feelings is richer and more abundant and fulfilling than I ever imagined possible. I am free. I am aligned. I am driven. I am in love. I am happy. I am soulful. I am light. I am radiant.

More than anything, I am here to show you how to access the same connection to your true self so you can show up and do the work that inspires you.

Try these five steps to get you started.

1. Ask yourself, “Do my heart and soul feel completely full?”

If the answer is no, are you willing to say yes to finding your “something more” and to walking your path?

2. Once you’ve said yes, become aware of how you numb and check out (wine, food, work, etc.).

You don’t have to get rid of these things, but can you notice when you reach for them?

3. Recognize your fears without stuffing them down or making them wrong.

It’s helpful for me to write down my fears without trying to solve them. Something like “I’m scared of…” and then just write for a few minutes.

4. Remember that the feelings won’t kill you.

You might feel awesome in the morning and horrible two hours later. Thoughts and feelings come and go. Remember that they don’t define you. The real you is the stillness underneath it all.

5. Have faith.

This is a journey. Your path will unfold. Trust that once you say yes, all you have to do is keep your eyes open for the clues. You will be guided if you keep showing up and saying yes.

About Julie Santiago

Julie is a former Wall Streeter turned Women’s Empowerment Coach. She’s a certified holistic health/life coach and yoga teacher, specializing in guiding women to find their life’s purpose. As a modern-day medicine woman, Julie combines her business prowess with her love for all things mind, body and soul to connect women back to their hearts. Visit her at juliesantiago.com.

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Reclaiming Your Future

This post is so beautiful Julie!
As you say, there is nothing wrong with the status quo in your life until there is and you can’t do anything until you accept that you’re not currently happy with the way things are going. We’re the only ones that can change our circumstances and forge our next steps.

Truly love the points you bring up in this article – thank you 🙂

Megan

This is so wonderfully written! So insightful! Great job!

colleen

Nice article Julie! I love step #5-have faith-watch for the clues-enjoy the journey!

Eleni

Good job Julie!

Kevin

Lost me completely with the last step. Some of us have lost our faith because of what we’ve had to endure. To put it simply, there is no god, there is no plan, there is no “everything happens for a reason”. We’re all just pawns in the biggest, most elaborate cosmic joke ever perpetrated on a species.

xtyb

I love it that you didn’t tell us we must immediately stop drinking/shopping/indulging…that’s so scary! The thing that’s amazing is if you just start paying attention, you find yourself giving it up naturally. Thanks for the encouragement!

Lori Delgado

I love this. I grew up and still live in New Orleans and am a recovering alcoholic, so this hit home in sooooooo many ways. I want to read this over and over again. I loved this article. Thank you for making me feel very normal for a moment:) Great article!

Emily

Love this, Julie! Thanks for sharing!

Evd

This mirrors my journey and process as well….thanks for sharing yours so openly and honestly 🙂

Annie

I love this, Julie! Thanks for the encouragement and inspiration. You are a gem!

Naomi

This is very true. Thank you for sharing your thoughts, so that others are inspired to be this vulnerable and truthful.

LML

So beautiful and open, thank you!

Celest Horton

Wow! What an amazing post so filled with encouragement. Sure appreciate your vulnerability and willingness to share.

JuJu

I think that so many of us get stuck in the “this is what we should do, this is how we should live” that we numb our true feelings and just go through the motions of life not uncovering our true thoughts, feelings, and desires. It has taken me years to realize that! Thanks, Julie, for your honesty and insightfulness!

Sharon

Excellent blog post. We are all hero’s on our journey. Falling in love with all of ourselves is key especially meeting with love the bits we find less than sparkly. Thanks for sharing. I feel uplifted. X

Alexandra

inspiring & timely. thank you for sharing your story. really. <3

Melissa Maher

Well said, Julie. I absolutely agree that paying attention to what we’re REALLY craving when we reach for food or a drink is an incredibly profound practice. Thanks for sharing.

Hugh

This is really profound and timely. Very well written! Everytime I think about writing something for this site I come across someone that has written what I have experienced. Feels amazing to know that our moments of insight are happening across the collective unconscious. Thanks for letting me read my own thoughts in another light!

CGW

Great article! So relate-able and yet inspiring.. thank you for the reminder to listen to ourselves and recognize what it is we are really craving.

Emily Geizer

Yes! I so appreciate your perspective here, Julie, and the timing is impeccable. Earlier this year I was abstaining from alcohol. It lasted about 4 months. During that time I felt more spiritually aligned and stronger physically and mentally. Yet, I allowed my partying ways to take over and now it is time to climb back out of the hole. In fact, today is the day. Thanks for putting a cherry on top. It helps to know I’m not alone 🙂

Jenev

Great post, Julie!!! There is so much fear about really experiencing feelings, but like you said, when they do, they come and go. They are fluid. Thank you for such a beautiful post!!

Peace grrrl

Thanks for sharing – very relevant!

Alyson

Thank you for sharing so deeply. I have found over the past year that the more I follow my bliss, witness my fears and live more mindfully the less I have wanted to drink. I’m more aware of how it really make me feel and more often then not it’s not for the better.

Talya Price

Julie your story resonated with me. We all feel stuck sometimes and we also feel dissatisfied with our lives. I know I feel stuck because I have had 3 auditions this week and I keep asking myself when will I finally get a f..king part in a movie. I am always asking myself this question. It’s frustrating, especially when I see others getting parts while I feel as though I am struggling. Of course I turn to comfort food and this is not healthy. It is very scary dealing with my feelings. I write my thoughts in my journal and I meditate.

We all have our vices but if more people focused on their feelings and recognized their fears, more people would be more open and not afraid to connect with other and continue our journey of life.

Thank you for sharing your story.

Julie Santiago

Thank you for such a beautifully reflective post Hugh. Im a deep believer that we are all just mirrors for each other, all teaching each other the lesson we need to learn and all reflecting exactly what we´ve either just experienced, are experiencing or will soon experience. Life gets pretty fun when you start looking at it that way! With love.

Julie Santiago

Well said Jenev! We´re really not taught to feel our feelings as kids. Most of us learn to put on a happy face and suck it up…so feeling the icky ones can be hard. It´s all about remembering that the bad ones and just like the good ones…temporary. Sunshine and rain. Darkness and light. Two difference faces of the same beautiful world we live in.

Julie Santiago

Hi Kevin…thank you for sharing this. I totally understand what you´re saying here and I dont want to lesson the pain that life can bring. Sometimes things totally suck and life feels massively unfair, imbalanced and pointless. Those dark places feel incredibly real. Ive been there. I also wake up every day and chose to look at things in a different way now…life can be HARD, but the hardness doesnt have to define who we are. At some point, I wonder, can we decide to change the game we´re playing by letting go of what happened and choosing to be happy rather than ¨right¨? Id love to know what you think…

Julie Santiago

Thank you for so vulnerably sharing Talya! I think it´s so important to feel that frustration. You´re human and as a human, you want what you want when you want it, right?! The key is to remember that things dont happen on your timing. And your mind can only imagine a FRACTION of that which your life can be if you can continue to stay in the surrender and trust that if it´s not today, there is somethign better than tomorrow.

One thing I love to say to myself when I get in fear and frustration is ¨Show me what Im supposed to do! I feel scared and lost and confused. Clear the path and show me what´s next. Im here and ready…help open my eyes to the next right step on my path.¨

love!

Julie Santiago

Yes Alyon! I so witness your journey 🙂 Thank you for sharing babe.

Julie Santiago

Thank you for reading Peace grrl!!

Julie Santiago

Emily, thank you for being such a great mirror and sharing this. I´m happy to be on this journey with you AND Im here to support you in whatever way I can 🙂

Julie Santiago

You are incredibly welcome!

Julie Santiago

It takes SO much learning and self-restraint! For the longest time I knew I needed to pay attention but I never really knew how to break the cycle. I find that deep breathwork, having a plan, music and writing and some of my go-tos!

Julie Santiago

Thanks for reading and commenting Alexandra!

Julie Santiago

Beautiful response sharon…thank you deeply. And so beautifully put ´Love the bits we find less than sparkly´. With love!

Julie Santiago

You nailed it…the shoulds are what paralyze most of us. We learn at a very young age what is right and what, what we should and shouldnt do, what gets us love and acceptance and what doesnt. Most of us wake up 30, 40, 50 years down the road still living our life from the perspective of that same little kid. Breaking down the old thoughts and habits is the starting part for freedom! xoxo

Julie Santiago

You are so welcome Celest! Thank you commenting.

Julie Santiago

Thank YOU for reading LML!

Julie Santiago

xoxo Naomi!

Julie Santiago

As you are Annie. Thank you reading and commenting girl.

Julie Santiago

Happy to be on the path with you EVD!

Julie Santiago

xoxo

Julie Santiago

Ohhh sweet Lori! Thank you for such a beautiful response. I am so happy knowing that this resonated with you and that you found it so helpful. May our paths continue to cross!

Julie Santiago

Heck yeah it´s scary, xtyb. And you dont have to do anything extreme! it´s about slowly, lovingly noticing your patterns! That´s it! Just notice with loving awareness.

Julie Santiago

love!

Julie Santiago

There are clues all along the path, right Colleen?!

Julie Santiago

Thank you Megan!

Julie Santiago

Thank you Reclaiming Your Future, for such a reflective and wonderful response. Sending you big love on your journey!

Danielle

This article speaks to me as well. I’m 36 an attorney and numb the anxiousness and stress with wine and shopping. What I receive from that habit is an extra 5 lbs and credit card debt. I woke up to your post one here. Before that I fell asleep thinking about how I was filling the voids in my life.
You are right, sometimes we have to feel uncomfortable with where we are at in our careers or relationships. That uncomfortability is where progress made. I have faith that things are getting better. I just will stop filling the time in between with things that never will satisfy me in the first place.
Thank you for this lesson xo

Shayna Mahoney

Such a beautiful article Julie! Obviously I feel such a connection with you but this has given me even more to relate to and have a deeper understanding of each of us. Thanks for opening up and sharing this, which is inspiring so many! xoxo