Restless by Design

SECTION III — The Self That Keeps Becoming - The Return Chapter 10: There’s a Version of Me That No Longer Fits

5 min · Gisteren
aflevering SECTION III — The Self That Keeps Becoming - The Return Chapter 10: There’s a Version of Me That No Longer Fits artwork

Beschrijving

There’s a particular kind of shift that doesn’t announce itself. Nothing obvious happens at first. On the outside, things look the same.The same routines. The same spaces. The same conversations. But underneath it… something feels different. Subtle.Hard to name. Just a quiet sense that the version of you moving through your life… isn’t quite aligned in the same way anymore. For a while, it’s easy to ignore. Nothing is technically wrong. You can still show up.Still participate.Still be who you’ve always been… from the outside. But internally, something starts to pull. A small resistance.A kind of friction. Moments where something that once felt natural… now feels slightly off. Not dramatically. Just enough to notice. You can still move the same way. But it takes more effort than it used to. Think about a habit you kept long past the point you even enjoyed it. Not because you loved it. Because the slot was still there. Letting go wasn’t the hard part. It was leaving that space blank long enough for something truer to fill it. More awareness.More adjustment. And without a clear reason, that effort becomes harder to explain. Then something else happens. A realization. Not all at once. But enough to shift how you see. And once it lands… it doesn’t leave. You can try to move the same way.Say the same things.Stay in the same places. But something inside of you is aware now. That awareness changes everything. Not externally. Internally. A quiet sense of… oh. From that point on, there’s a kind of honesty that’s difficult to avoid. Because your instinct knows. Your body knows. Even if your mind is still catching up. And that’s where the shift deepens. It’s no longer just a feeling. It’s a knowing. And knowing doesn’t always tell you what to do. It just removes the option of going back. You’re no longer fully inside what you were… but you’re not fully in what’s next yet either. You’re in between. Holding something you now understand… without having rearranged your life around it. There’s a quiet grief in that. Even when nothing visible has been lost. A version of yourself that once fit… no longer does in the same way. And that version wasn’t wrong. It carried you. It made sense. It just… isn’t fully true anymore. So the question shifts. Not what to do next. But how to stay with what you now know. Without rushing.Without forcing clarity too soon. Just allowing something to change internally… before anything needs to change externally. Because something is already moving.Even if it isn’t fully visible yet. And once you see it…you don’t get to not know anymore . Get full access to Studio Letters by Annie Heise Alden at anniealdendesign.substack.com/subscribe [https://anniealdendesign.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

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10 afleveringen

aflevering SECTION III — The Self That Keeps Becoming - The Return Chapter 10: There’s a Version of Me That No Longer Fits artwork

SECTION III — The Self That Keeps Becoming - The Return Chapter 10: There’s a Version of Me That No Longer Fits

There’s a particular kind of shift that doesn’t announce itself. Nothing obvious happens at first. On the outside, things look the same.The same routines. The same spaces. The same conversations. But underneath it… something feels different. Subtle.Hard to name. Just a quiet sense that the version of you moving through your life… isn’t quite aligned in the same way anymore. For a while, it’s easy to ignore. Nothing is technically wrong. You can still show up.Still participate.Still be who you’ve always been… from the outside. But internally, something starts to pull. A small resistance.A kind of friction. Moments where something that once felt natural… now feels slightly off. Not dramatically. Just enough to notice. You can still move the same way. But it takes more effort than it used to. Think about a habit you kept long past the point you even enjoyed it. Not because you loved it. Because the slot was still there. Letting go wasn’t the hard part. It was leaving that space blank long enough for something truer to fill it. More awareness.More adjustment. And without a clear reason, that effort becomes harder to explain. Then something else happens. A realization. Not all at once. But enough to shift how you see. And once it lands… it doesn’t leave. You can try to move the same way.Say the same things.Stay in the same places. But something inside of you is aware now. That awareness changes everything. Not externally. Internally. A quiet sense of… oh. From that point on, there’s a kind of honesty that’s difficult to avoid. Because your instinct knows. Your body knows. Even if your mind is still catching up. And that’s where the shift deepens. It’s no longer just a feeling. It’s a knowing. And knowing doesn’t always tell you what to do. It just removes the option of going back. You’re no longer fully inside what you were… but you’re not fully in what’s next yet either. You’re in between. Holding something you now understand… without having rearranged your life around it. There’s a quiet grief in that. Even when nothing visible has been lost. A version of yourself that once fit… no longer does in the same way. And that version wasn’t wrong. It carried you. It made sense. It just… isn’t fully true anymore. So the question shifts. Not what to do next. But how to stay with what you now know. Without rushing.Without forcing clarity too soon. Just allowing something to change internally… before anything needs to change externally. Because something is already moving.Even if it isn’t fully visible yet. And once you see it…you don’t get to not know anymore . Get full access to Studio Letters by Annie Heise Alden at anniealdendesign.substack.com/subscribe [https://anniealdendesign.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

Gisteren5 min
aflevering Chapter 9: When Passion Becomes Pressure artwork

Chapter 9: When Passion Becomes Pressure

There’s something powerful about doing work you care about. It doesn’t feel forced.It doesn’t feel external. It feels like an extension of you. And for a while… that’s enough. The process is engaging.The learning is constant.The connection feels real. But over time, something can shift. Not all at once. Quietly. What once felt like curiosity… starts to feel like expectation.What once felt like interest… starts to feel like responsibility. Nothing is technically wrong. You still care.You’re still showing up.You’re still doing the work. But the feeling inside of it changes. It tightens. The work starts to carry more weight. Not because it matters less. Because it matters more. Now there’s something attached to it. Outcome.Identity.Validation. A sense that it needs to go somewhere. That it needs to become something. And that changes the experience. Because when something becomes tied to how you see yourself… it stops being neutral. It starts to mean something. If it goes well… it reflects one thing.If it doesn’t… it reflects something else. Slowly, the work becomes a mirror. Not just something you do. Something you use to understand who you are. And that’s a lot for anything to hold. Because the work itself hasn’t changed. Your relationship to it has. It’s no longer just engagement. It’s evaluation. And at the same time, something else can happen. The work stops evolving. It becomes familiar.Repetitive.Predictable. Not in a comforting way. In a way that feels slightly flat. Like you’re moving through something you already understand. That shift is easy to misread. The instinct is to turn it inward. Maybe I’ve lost interest.Maybe something isn’t there anymore.Maybe I’m not as good as I used to be. But that’s not always what’s happening. Sometimes the work hasn’t failed. It’s outgrown its current form. And when something stops expanding… its energy changes. Even slightly. That creates space. And the mind doesn’t like space. So it fills it. With judgment.With doubt.With questions that feel personal… but aren’t always about you. If that shift goes unnoticed, it’s easy to misinterpret it. To assume something is wrong internally… when something is simply ready to evolve. Which is harder to accept. Because evolution requires change. And change requires letting go of something that once worked. Even if it worked well. So the question shifts. Not “How do I fix this?” But: “What is this asking to become?” That question creates room. Room for the work to move again. To expand.To shift.To take a different shape. Not by caring less. But by loosening the need for it to stay the same. Because when everything rests on it… it becomes harder to breathe inside of it. A job interview. An audition. A first date. A pitch. A competition. A launch. A conversation you’ve been preparing for. The moment you’ve been building toward. The second it becomes everything — the proof, the verdict, the arrival — your relationship to it changes. Your legs get heavy. But it was never the destination. It was just the next part of the climb. The mountain was always still there. And at some point, pressure replaces connection. So the goal isn’t to hold onto the work exactly as it was. It’s to stay in relationship with it. To allow it to change… without turning that change into a personal failure. The work doesn’t always need to be improved. Sometimes it needs to be released into something it hasn’t been yet. And the moment you stop gripping it… it starts to breathe again. Get full access to Studio Letters by Annie Heise Alden at anniealdendesign.substack.com/subscribe [https://anniealdendesign.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

8 jun 20265 min
aflevering Chapter 8: Failure Is the Baseline artwork

Chapter 8: Failure Is the Baseline

Failure is often treated like something to overcome. A phase.A setback.A deviation from the path. Something that happens… and then eventually stops. But in most creative work, it doesn’t function that way. Failure isn’t the interruption. It’s the environment. A seed goes into the ground then — nothing. No confirmation. No signal. Just dirt. And you keep watering anyway. Not because you can see it working. Because you trust something is happening underneath. That’s not failure. That’s just how growing works. Things don’t land.People don’t respond.Opportunities don’t materialize.Ideas don’t translate the way you thought they would. Not occasionally. Consistently. And it doesn’t feel good. There’s nothing particularly inspiring about putting something into the world and not knowing what happens next. Or watching something you cared about… not connect the way you expected. Or sitting in the quiet after effort… without a clear sense of what it meant. That space is uncomfortable. Because it doesn’t offer resolution. No obvious correction.No clean takeaway. Just uncertainty. We’re taught to look for meaning in everything. To treat every outcome as feedback. Learn. Adjust. Improve. But what happens when the feedback isn’t clear? When the response doesn’t match the effort? When things just… don’t land? It’s easy to make that mean something. About your work.About your direction.About you. But that interpretation isn’t always accurate. Because if failure is constant… it can’t always be personal. Sometimes it’s structural. Part of working inside something that doesn’t guarantee outcomes. That doesn’t confirm each step. That doesn’t offer a clear path forward. And that’s where it becomes disorienting. Because without consistent signals… it’s hard to know where you are. If you’re moving in the right direction. If you should keep going… or change something. So the instinct is to interpret the silence. To extract meaning from what isn’t happening. But not all silence is feedback. Sometimes it’s just the absence of response. And those aren’t the same. That distinction matters. Because it changes how you move. From trying to avoid failure… to learning how to work within it. To keep building… even when nothing is being reflected back to you yet. To stay connected to what you’re making… without needing immediate confirmation. Not because it feels good. Because it’s part of the structure. And over time, something does begin to form. Not always quickly. Not always in the way you expected. But through accumulation. Through repetition. Through continuing to show up… without a consistent feedback loop. That’s the part that’s easy to overlook. Not the moment where everything clicks. The stretch where it doesn’t. Where you’re still in it.Still working.Still unsure. And choosing to continue anyway. Not perfectly. Not with full confidence. But with enough. Because if failure is the baseline… progress doesn’t always look like success. Sometimes it looks like staying. Continuing.Adjusting.Showing up again… without a clear signal that you should. And trusting… even slightly… that something is building. Even when you can’t see it yet. Progress doesn’t always look like success. Sometimes it looks like staying. Quietly. Without confirmation. Without applause. Just continuing. That counts. Get full access to Studio Letters by Annie Heise Alden at anniealdendesign.substack.com/subscribe [https://anniealdendesign.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

1 jun 20265 min
aflevering SECTION II — The Work That Doesn’t Hold Still - The External World Chapter 7: When Nothing Feels Fully Solid artwork

SECTION II — The Work That Doesn’t Hold Still - The External World Chapter 7: When Nothing Feels Fully Solid

There’s a question that shows up often in creative work. Not always out loud. Just beneath the surface. Am I actually good at this… or have I just gotten lucky so far? It’s easy to assume that question is personal. A reflection of ability.Consistency.Whether you belong in the work at all. But the structure of these industries doesn’t always offer a clear answer. In more traditional paths, there are markers. Progression.Titles.A sense that if you keep going, you’ll eventually arrive somewhere stable. Creative work doesn’t function that way. Things change. Constantly. Trends shift.Opportunities appear and disappear.Entire ways of working evolve in a matter of years. Something can work once… and never exist in the same way again. That makes it difficult to locate yourself. To know where you stand. To feel like anything is fully solid. So the mind tries to make sense of it. And often, it turns inward. Maybe I don’t know what I’m doing.Maybe I’m not as good as people think.Maybe this won’t last. Those thoughts feel real. But they’re not always accurate. Sometimes they’re misdirected. Because what if the instability isn’t coming from you? What if it’s built into the environment itself? You don’t step onto wet grass and wonder if something is wrong with the ground. You know it’s going to give a little. You adjust without making it mean anything. Creative work is the same terrain. The wobble isn’t a warning. It’s just where you are. An environment where outcomes aren’t fixed. Where effort doesn’t always translate directly. Where timing, context, and demand shape the result as much as skill does. In that kind of landscape, confidence doesn’t have a stable place to land. So it moves. It rises and falls with each project.Each opportunity.Each moment of visibility or quiet. That movement can feel like inconsistency. Like something internal is off. But it isn’t always internal. It’s structural. And understanding that changes the interpretation. The feeling doesn’t disappear. But it stops meaning the same thing. Instead of proof that something is wrong… it becomes information. A signal that you’re working inside something that doesn’t hold still. Something that requires adaptability. That asks you to keep adjusting… without always knowing what’s next. That’s not always comfortable. There’s vulnerability in that. In not having a clear endpoint. In not being able to say, I’ve arrived. But there’s also something honest about it. Because the work itself is alive. It changes.It responds.It evolves with the world around it. And if you’re participating in it… you’re part of that movement too. Not outside of it. Inside of it. That’s where the shift happens. From trying to feel certain… to learning how to stay engaged without certainty. The question doesn’t go away. But it lands differently. Less like a verdict. More like a condition of being in the work. I don’t know if I belong here. Maybe that’s not a problem to solve. Maybe it’s what it feels like… to be inside something that doesn’t offer permanent footing. That doesn’t make you behind. Or unqualified. Or lost. It means you’re participating in something that is still moving. And learning how to stand there anyway. That’s not instability. That’s the work. Get full access to Studio Letters by Annie Heise Alden at anniealdendesign.substack.com/subscribe [https://anniealdendesign.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

25 mei 20265 min
aflevering Chapter 6: How Things Start to Make Sense artwork

Chapter 6: How Things Start to Make Sense

I was sitting in the sun this weekend, reading, when it happened. Not dramatically. Nothing announced itself. Just a quiet recognition — almost like remembering something I’d always known — that everything I’ve ever made, built, or cared about has the same thesis. The same process. Just moving through different mediums. That was it. That was the moment. I didn’t write it down right away. I just sat with it. Which felt, somehow, exactly right…. There’s an assumption that clarity arrives all at once. A realization.A decision.A moment where everything clicks into place and suddenly feels obvious. But most of the time, it doesn’t happen that way. It’s slower. Less defined. More like something gradually coming into focus… without a clear point where it began. A thought that lingers a little longer than usual.A pattern that starts to repeat.A sense that something is connecting… even if you can’t fully explain how yet. At first, it’s easy to dismiss. Because it’s not complete. Not fully formed. Just partial. But over time, those partial pieces begin to accumulate. Not into a single answer. Into a direction. That’s usually where the shift starts. Not with certainty. With recognition. A quiet awareness that something is becoming clearer… even if it’s not fully understood. And once that awareness is there, it’s difficult to ignore. You start to notice more. More connections.More alignment.More moments where something feels like it fits… without needing to force it. It’s not a dramatic change. Nothing externally has to shift right away. But internally, something settles. Not into a final answer. Into a kind of orientation. A sense of where things are moving. That changes how you engage. You’re not searching in the same way. Not trying to solve everything immediately. There’s more patience. More willingness to let things build. Because you can feel that something is already forming. Even if it isn’t finished. That’s a different kind of clarity. Not sharp. Not absolute. But steady. And it doesn’t require you to stop questioning. It just changes the quality of the questions. They become more specific.More grounded.Less driven by urgency. That’s how things start to make sense. Not by forcing an answer. By staying with something long enough for it to reveal its shape. Which takes time. And attention. And a certain willingness to not rush the process. Because clarity doesn’t come from speed. It comes from accumulation. From seeing something enough times… in enough ways… that it begins to hold. Not perfectly. But consistently. And once it holds… you don’t have to convince yourself of it. You recognize it. There’s less doubt. Not because you have proof. Because it feels aligned. That feeling isn’t always loud. It doesn’t announce itself. It’s quieter than that. But it’s steady. And over time, that steadiness becomes something you trust. Not because it’s definitive. Because it’s repeated. Because you’ve seen it from multiple angles. Because it continues to return. That’s what makes it real. Not a single moment of clarity. A pattern that holds. And once you see it… you don’t have to force it into place. It already is. Get full access to Studio Letters by Annie Heise Alden at anniealdendesign.substack.com/subscribe [https://anniealdendesign.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

18 mei 20267 min