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When Your Life Looks the Same, But You’ve Changed

WILD transitions are the unseen moments when your inner identity has shifted, even if your external life hasn’t yet caught up. Rather than forcing clarity, they invite you to pause, reconnect with yourself, and move forward with deeper self-trust and alignment.

There are moments in life that don’t look like change from the outside.

You’re still in the same job.
Still in the same relationship.
Still living the same life, on paper.

And yet, something feels different.

Quieter, perhaps.
Yet harder to ignore.
A subtle but persistent sense that something no longer fits.

These are what I call WILD transitions.

Not the obvious, visible shifts we tend to recognise – moving house, changing careers, ending relationships – but the more internal ones. The ones that begin beneath the surface, before anything external has caught up.

WILD transitions are the moments where your external life hasn’t fully changed yet –
but your internal identity already has.

The Discomfort of Outgrowing Your Life

What makes these transitions so challenging is their invisibility.

There is no clear marker of change. No external validation that something significant is happening. From the outside, everything may appear stable – even successful.

But internally, there is friction.

You may notice a drop in energy.
A growing resistance to things that once felt easy.
A sense of disconnection from roles you’ve long identified with.

You might find yourself asking:
Is this still right for me?
What am I actually doing this for?
Who am I becoming now?

These are not signs that something is wrong.

They are signals that something is changing.

And more often than not, what is changing is you.

Why We Try to Override It

Because these shifts are internal and often unclear, the instinct is to override them.

To push through.
To stay focused.
To be grateful for what you have.
To avoid disrupting what appears to be working.

But ignoring a shift in identity does not stop it from happening.

It only creates a deeper sense of misalignment over time.

The Search for External Clarity

In the absence of clear answers, many people look outward.

They seek advice.
Gather opinions.
Search for the “right” next step.

But this kind of clarity rarely resolves the tension.

Because the real question is not simply what should I do next?

It is: who am I now, and what reflects that?

How to Start Listening More Deeply

WILD transitions don’t ask for quick answers.
They ask for deeper attention.

Here are three simple ways to begin:

  1. Pause before you solve
    When something feels off, resist the urge to immediately fix it.
    Instead, create space. Even a few quiet minutes to sit, reflect, or write can help you hear what’s underneath the noise.
  2. Notice what no longer fits
    Pay attention to where your energy drops, where resistance shows up, or where you feel disconnected.
    These are often the clearest signals of change.
  3. Follow what feels quietly true
    Not what is loud, urgent, or expected – but what feels steady and real underneath it all.
    Clarity often begins as something subtle before it becomes obvious.

Becoming Someone You Can Trust

The outcome of a WILD transition is not simply a change in circumstances.

It is a change in relationship with yourself.

As you begin to recognise and trust your internal signals, something stabilises – even when your external life remains uncertain.

You become less reliant on immediate answers.
Less driven by pressure to resolve everything quickly.
More able to move forward in a way that feels oriented, rather than forced.

And when decisions do come – because they always do – they are made from a different place.

Not from urgency.
Not from fear.
But from a quieter, more grounded sense of knowing.

A Different Way to Understand Change

We often think of transitions as something that happens once we take action.

But some of the most important transitions happen before that.

Internally.
Gradually.
Almost invisibly.

WILD transitions are not the moments you lose your way.

They are the moments you begin to find it –
even if, for a while, nothing on the outside has changed yet.

About the Author – Hi, I`m Sarah Cretegny, a Transformational Transitions Coach, Collaboration Cataylst and the founder of Coach Your WILD.

I create brave spaces where creative leaders and their teams – especially those committed to meaningful impact – can reconnect with who they truly are, so they can lead with greater clarity, courage, and purpose, even in uncertain times, and create sustainable impact.

I’m particularly effective when time is limited and the stakes are high. I draw on evidence-based coaching approaches, strengths expertise, and my lived experience of balancing leadership, family life, and international living. I’m deeply passionate about partnering with people to coach their wild, because the world needs more authentic leadership now more than ever.

I am based in Lausanne, Switzerland and coach virtually globally. Find my links here: https://linktr.ee/discover.your.wild First chats are for free.

 

Coach Your Wild – Sarah Cretegny

Coach Your Wild – Sarah Cretegny

Accredited ICF Coach

I work with people in wild seasons of life - whether you’re navigating a transition, a career change, a shift in life stage, or moving to a new country. As a Certified Coach, I will partner with you to accelerate your path to authentic, fulfilling and sustainable success. Sarah is on a mission to live in a world everybody lives more fulfilling lives more of the time. By reconnec1ng people with their unique W.I.L.D. ™, we can all create the lives we love to live, and together make a meaningful impact in the world. Coach Your Wild is a creative oasis in the wildness of life – your thinking partner for what matters most. Sarah is an Associate Certified Coach and Member of the International Coaching Federation. She has a Post Graduate Certificate in Business and Personal Coaching. Sarah is British, and lives in Switzerland with her husband and 3 teenage children. When not coaching she loves going on adventures with family and friends, as well as enjoying local Swiss wine in the vineyards.

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