Tag Archives: spiritual growth

The 7-Year Cycles of Life and Why We Keep Changing Over Time

There comes a moment, sometimes subtle, sometimes unmistakable, when you realize something has changed. Not just around you. But within you. The way you think. What you value. What feels right… and what no longer does. And if you look back, not just a year or two, but further, you may notice something even more striking: You are not the same person you were seven years ago. Not metaphorically. But physically, emotionally, and in many ways… fundamentally.

Life in Cycles, Not a Straight Line

We often think of life as a continuous progression. One long, uninterrupted path from where we were… to where we’re going. But lived experience tells a different story. Life unfolds in phases. In seasons. In periods where something forms, stabilizes, and eventually gives way to something new. And one of the most fascinating ways to observe this is through the rhythm of seven-year cycles.

You Are Literally Becoming Someone New

On a biological level, your body is in a constant state of renewal. Cells are continuously being replaced:

  • Skin
  • Blood
  • Organs
  • Even bone tissue over time

While not every cell renews at the same rate, over the course of approximately seven years, much of your physical body has been replaced.

Which means: The body you are living in today is not the same body you had seven years ago. The structure has been renewed. The foundation has shifted. And yet… you still experience yourself as you.

The Deeper Parallel

This process is not only physical. It reflects something deeper about the human experience. Just as your body renews itself over time, your internal world does as well.

Beliefs change. Priorities shift. Relationships evolve. Understanding deepens. Sometimes gradually. Sometimes all at once. And often… without a clear moment of transition.

Why the Past Feels So Distant

You may look back on who you were seven years ago and feel:

  • A sense of distance
  • A lack of recognition
  • Or even a quiet disbelief

“Was that really me?” 

In a very real sense… It was. But it also wasn’t. Because the version of you that lived that life no longer exists in the same form. Not physically. Not internally. You have moved through a cycle.

The Cycle of Release and Renewal

Each seven-year period tends to carry a natural rhythm:

  • A phase of formation
  • A phase of stabilization
  • A phase of release

Something begins. Something takes shape. And eventually, something no longer fits. Not because it was wrong. But because it has completed its role.

This is where many people feel tension. Because letting go, even of something that once worked, can feel like losing progress. But it isn’t. It’s part of the cycle.

Why Change Feels Disruptive

When one cycle begins to close and another begins to form, there is often a period of uncertainty.

You may feel:

  • Less clear than before
  • Less certain about direction
  • Less connected to what once felt stable

This can be unsettling. Especially if you’re used to clarity. But this phase is not a breakdown. It is a transition. Something is being released. Something else is not yet fully formed. And in between… there is space.

This Is Where Most People Push

Because uncertainty is uncomfortable, many people try to resolve it quickly.

They:

  • Force decisions
  • Create urgency
  • Try to define what isn’t ready

But when you rush this part of the cycle, you often carry forward something that hasn’t fully completed. And the next phase becomes unstable.

The Role of Stabilization

Between cycles, there is a period where things need to settle. Not grow. Not expand. But stabilize.

This is where:

  • Insight becomes lived experience
  • Change becomes natural
  • Identity becomes coherent

It may feel like nothing is happening. But this is where everything begins to hold.

You Are Not Starting Over, You Are Cycling Forward

When something ends, it can feel like a reset. Like you’re losing ground. Like you have to begin again. But you are not returning to the beginning.

You are moving into the next phase with everything that has already been integrated. Each cycle builds on the last. Even if it doesn’t look like it on the surface.

A New Way to See Your Life

Instead of asking:

  • “Why can’t I stay consistent?”
  • “Why does everything keep changing?”

You might begin to ask:

  • “What phase of the cycle am I in?”
  • “What is forming, stabilizing, or releasing right now?”

This shifts everything. Because instead of resisting the process… you begin to work with it.

You Are Always Becoming, But Not by Force

There is a natural process unfolding in your life. One that does not require constant effort. One that does not depend on urgency. One that does not need to be forced.

You are always becoming. But not through pressure.

Through cycles of:

  • Renewal
  • Recognition
  • Integration

You might pause and consider:

  • Who was I seven years ago?
  • What has naturally changed since then?
  • What no longer fits… that once did?
  • What is beginning to emerge now?

Not to analyze. Just to notice.

You are not the same person you were. And you are not meant to be.

Life is not asking you to remain consistent. It is inviting you to move through its cycles—
with awareness, with patience, and with a willingness to let each phase complete. Because in that process… you are not losing yourself.

You are continually becoming someone you are more able to fully live.

If you’d like to better understand where you are within your current cycle,
you may find it helpful to explore:

👉 The Transfiguration Continuum
👉 Where Are You Now?

Because once you can recognize the cycle… you no longer have to resist it.

 

You Don’t Need to Change Instead Remember and Be Who You Are

There is a common idea woven through much of personal growth. It sounds something like this: “Become the next version of yourself.” At first, it feels inspiring. It suggests movement. Possibility. A future that is better than the present.

So people begin the process. They try to:

  • Think differently
  • Act differently
  • Build a new identity

And for a while, it can feel like progress. But over time, something subtle begins to surface. A kind of internal friction. Not dramatic. Not always easy to name. Just a quiet sense that something doesn’t fully fit.

When growth is framed as becoming someone new, there is often an unspoken assumption: That who you are now… is not enough.

So the effort becomes:

  • Add something
  • Replace something
  • Upgrade something

And while that can create change on the surface, it can also create division underneath. Because part of you is trying to move forward… and another part is not fully aligned with where you’re going.

What If Nothing Is Missing?

What if the tension you feel is not because you haven’t become enough… but because you are trying to become something that isn’t fully true for you?

What if growth is not about addition… but about recognition?

A New Orientation

Instead of asking: “Who do I need to become?”

There is another more precise question:

“What is already true… that I am not yet fully living?”

This question changes everything. Because it removes pressure. It removes comparison. And it brings your attention back to something immediate. Not a future version of you. But the reality of who you already are.

Recognition

There are often moments, small, easy to overlook, when something feels clear. Not exciting. Not dramatic. Just… obvious.

You might notice:

  • A decision that feels simple, even if it’s not easy
  • A preference that doesn’t need justification
  • A direction that feels steady, without urgency

These moments don’t feel like breakthroughs. They feel like: “Of course.” That’s recognition.

It Is Easy to Miss

Recognition doesn’t demand attention. It doesn’t create intensity. It doesn’t try to prove itself.

It can be overlooked in favor of something louder:

  • Big goals
  • Strong emotions
  • External validation

But what is true does not need to compete. It simply remains.

The Return to Yourself

As recognition deepens, something begins to shift. Not outwardly at first. But internally.

The effort to maintain a certain identity begins to fade.

You no longer need to:

  • Convince yourself
  • Perform a version of yourself
  • Push toward something that doesn’t fully fit

Instead, you begin to move from a place that feels… familiar. Not new. But remembered.

This Is Not Going Back

It may feel, at times, like you are returning to something. But this is not regression. You are not going backward. You are moving forward, without leaving yourself behind.

This Is More Stable

When something is truly aligned, it does not require constant effort to maintain. It becomes natural. Not because you practiced it enough. But because it was already part of you.

This is why some changes last… and others require constant reinforcement.

One was constructed. The other was recognized.

You Are Not Starting Over

If you’ve ever felt like you needed to:

  • Reinvent yourself
  • Start from scratch
  • Become something entirely different

You may have been working from the wrong premise. You are not starting over. You are continuing… from a place that is more aligned than before.

Realization

At some point, often without a clear moment of transition, you may notice: You’re no longer trying to figure out who you are. You’re simply… living it. Without explanation. Without urgency. Without the need to define it perfectly. And from that place, something else becomes possible:

A life that reflects you… instead of one you are trying to live up to.

You might take a moment and ask:

  • Where in my life does something already feel true?
  • Where am I trying to become something that doesn’t fully fit?
  • What feels obvious… that I’ve been overlooking?

There is no need to answer quickly. Only to notice.

You are not becoming someone new. You are remembering who you are. And that process does not require force. It requires attention. Because what is true does not need to be created. Only recognized.

If you’d like to explore this more deeply, you may find it helpful to visit:

👉 What is Transfiguration?
👉 The Transfiguration Continuum

Because once you begin to recognize what is already true… you may find that growth no longer feels like effort. It feels like alignment.

 

 

When Nothing Seems to Be Happening, Stabilization, New Trust

There comes a point in nearly every personal growth journey where something unexpected happens. Things slow down. Not in a dramatic way. Not in a way that clearly signals a problem. Just… a quiet loss of momentum.

A calm person sitting quietly by a window, reflecting during a period of personal growth and internal change

The urgency that once drove you forward begins to fade. The insights that once felt energizing seem to settle into the background. And the sense of progress becomes harder to measure.

For many people, this is where concern begins to set in.

“Did I lose it?”
“Why do I feel stuck?”
“Shouldn’t I be further along by now?”

So they try to fix it. They push harder. They look for the next breakthrough. They reach for something new to restart the momentum.

But what if nothing has gone wrong?

What if this phase, the one that feels like nothing, is actually one of the most important parts of the entire process?

Most models of growth focus on movement. Forward motion. Breakthroughs. Momentum. Change. But very few talk about what must happen between those moments. Because after insight… something else is required. Not more learning. Not more action. But integration.

Why Progress Sometimes Feels Like Stillness

When something becomes clear, truly clear, it doesn’t immediately transform your life. Instead, your system begins to reorganize around it.

Old patterns start to loosen. New ways of thinking begin to take shape. Your internal structure shifts, often quietly, and beneath the surface.

From the outside, it can look like nothing is happening. But internally, a great deal is changing. This is stabilization. And it doesn’t feel like progress.

It feels like:

  • Slowing down
  • Pausing
  • Not knowing what to do next

Sometimes, it even feels like regression. But it’s not. It’s your system doing something very specific:

Making sure what you’ve seen can actually be lived.

Forcing Movement Backfires

This is where many people unintentionally disrupt their own progress. Because when things feel slow, the instinct is to accelerate.

To:

  • Do more
  • Learn more
  • Push harder

But when you try to move forward before something is stabilized, you create tension. The insight hasn’t settled yet. The foundation isn’t steady. And the next step doesn’t fully integrate.

So what happens?

You move forward temporarily… and then find yourself pulled back. Not because you failed. But because something was skipped.

Stabilization Is Not a Delay, It’s a Requirement

Every meaningful shift in your life requires a period where it becomes normal. Where it stops feeling like something you’re trying to do… and starts feeling like something that is simply true.

This cannot be rushed. Because it’s not about effort. It’s about coherence.

What Stabilization Actually Looks Like

It often looks like:

  • Doing less, but with more clarity
  • Feeling less urgency, but more grounded
  • Letting things settle instead of chasing what’s next

You may find yourself:

  • Simplifying your life
  • Pulling back from things that feel forced
  • Becoming more selective with your energy

Not because you’re losing momentum. But because you’re becoming more aligned.

The Shift

At some point, often without a clear moment of transition, something changes.

What once felt like effort… no longer does.

What once required discipline… becomes natural.

What once felt uncertain… becomes clear.

And you may not even notice when it happens. Because it doesn’t feel like a breakthrough.

It feels like:

“Of course. This just makes sense now.”

That’s stabilization completing its work.

You Are Not Stuck

If you’re in a phase where things feel slower… Where progress feels less visible… Where you’re not sure what the next step is… There’s a good chance you’re not stuck.

You’re stabilizing. And that changes the question completely.

Not:

“How do I get moving again?”

But:

“What is settling into place right now?”

New Trust

This part of the process requires a new kind of trust. Not trust that things will happen quickly. But trust that what is happening, even if it’s subdued, is necessary.

That nothing is being lost. That nothing is being wasted. That what you’ve already seen
is finding its place within you.

You might take a moment and ask:

  • What have I recently come to understand that hasn’t fully settled yet?
  • Where am I trying to move forward… before I feel stable?
  • What would happen if I allowed things to be as they are, just a little longer?

There is no need to answer perfectly.

Only to notice.

Not all progress looks like movement. Some of it looks like stillness. Some of it looks like waiting. Some of it looks like nothing at all. But within that “nothing,” something essential is happening. Something that makes everything that follows… sustainable.

If you’d like to better understand where you are within this process, you may find it helpful to explore:

👉 The Transfiguration Continuum
👉 Where Are You Now?

Sometimes, clarity doesn’t come from doing more. It comes from recognizing what is already happening.