Let It Go or It Will Break You
When holding on stops being strength and starts costing you everything
How many of us have held onto something long after we knew it wasn’t working, simply because we couldn’t loosen our grip? A relationship. A job. An idea of how life was supposed to unfold. Even when it’s no longer aligned, no longer fulfilling, and quietly taking more than it gives.
If you’re being honest, you’ve likely felt this before. I have too. For a long time, I convinced myself that holding on was a form of strength—that if I just tried harder, stayed longer, or pushed through the discomfort, something would eventually shift. That effort alone could fix what already felt misaligned, right?
There’s a point where holding on stops being resilience and starts becoming resistance… fear, dressed up as commitment. And the shift doesn’t arrive all at once. It’s subtle. Quiet, even. It’s the moment you recognize you’re exhausted from carrying something that was never meant to be held this tightly in the first place. The moment you finally unclench your grip.
Letting go isn’t about giving up; it’s about choosing differently. It’s about releasing what no longer serves you so you can create space for what will.
And in my experience, that’s where everything begins to change. For me, it looked like letting go of an entire identity—the version of myself built around other people’s expectations. The “you should take this job,” “you should follow this path”… all the shoulds I had been carrying for far too long.
I knew I never wanted to walk into another office where “teamwork” meant a pizza party and a side of micromanagement. And I definitely didn’t want to sit in traffic, living out my own Office Space moment, rushing to get ahead, only to end up exactly where I started—just slightly more irritated.
So, I took everything that shaped me—my experiences, the lessons, and the identity I had to let go of—and turned it into a passion project. I founded Reclaim & Rise Mindset, a meditation and personal growth coaching business that I’m intentionally building.
Letting go taught me how to step fully into who I am. To embrace vulnerability and then place a cape over it and call it confidence. My purpose now is to help others who feel like their lives no longer make sense and to gently loosen the grip fear has on them.
And trust me, I still catch myself gripping tightly sometimes. Fear has a way of getting loud. It will tell you the unknown is dangerous, that uncomfortable means wrong, and that you should stay right where you are—in that small, cozy box you’ve outgrown.
But I move anyway. Because I finally believe I deserve more. I deserve happiness. I deserve the life I once talked myself out of—the one I convinced myself wasn’t meant for me. That was my old identity talking (she can be real loud sometimes).
If you’re feeling stuck or completely fed up but too afraid to let go, start here: sit with yourself and ask the question most people avoid: What do I actually want? If money, opinions, and expectations didn’t exist, what would your life look like? Then take the step, even if it feels unrealistic, even if you think the timing isn’t right. Because when you want something deeply enough, you stop waiting, and you start creating it.
This is for all the strong, powerful women out there building their empires.
I see you—rising, rebuilding, and becoming everything you were once afraid to claim.