Your life can make perfect sense
and still not be yours.
For the woman who is done making her bare minimum sound reasonable —
and feels the pull towards more.
How it starts.
You don’t need it to fall apart to start choosing something else.
The first sign is so much quieter:
You start feeling indifferent towards what you once worked so hard to build.
The real costs.
You start noticing how much effort it takes to stay available for the life you’ve already outgrown.
The conversations you don’t want to have. The answers you rehearse. The authenticity you're missing. The money you don't make.
You're not staying because you don't know what you want.
You stay because you know what would have to change.
You didn’t lose your spark.
You outgrew the room.
You don’t need to understand more.
We rip apart the stories you keep telling yourself.
We look at the place where you keep choosing the small version of yourself by making her make sense.
You’re paying for it already.
It’s in the maintenance.
In the mental gymnastics you do to lower your standards with every compromise. In what you don’t say anymore. In what you're postponing. In what you explain away.
It costs you. Real time. Real money. Real connection.
Apply
You don’t need more effort.
You need to stop settling for less.
Direct. Clear. Uncomfortable where it needs to be.
I don't rescue. I don't circle. I don't soften what’s obvious.
This only works if you’re done negotiating with yourself about how little of a life you can be "okay" with.
I am here to disrupt you in your comfort cage.
Your life may look great from the outside.
But if you're here, it's because you need something to change.
It's because you are finally ready to feel yourself expand again.
For the woman who wants the cake —
and to eat it, too.
Apply
I've been there.
I had the life. The plan. The path that made sense.
But it never felt like it was enough for me.
The first time I knew I stayed for too long, I was engaged to someone who was scared of me ever changing.
Talk about pressure to stay.
I’ve not just done this in relationships. I did it in my career. Even in my everyday life.
And I knew it every time. i knew it didn't serve me anymore. But I still stayed. I played it small. And I kept finding really good reasons for it, too.
Until one day I woke up. And I didn't want to wish my time away anymore.
That's when I stopped negotiating
with how little I’m willing to accept.
It is so painfully obvious.
You’re still loyal to a version that can’t take you any further.
This space is about expansion.
I’m ready to go.Nothing forces you.
Your life still works. You just don’t want it like this anymore.
And only you have the power to change it.
Or as my grandmother likes to say:
"Änder dich, sonst bleibst du so."
"Change or else you'll stay that way."
What now?
If you don't act now, it will be later.
Later becomes "one day".
For your own sake:
Start making decisions that have some real-life consequences.
Closing doors will take you further.