You’re Not Lost. You’re Just Not Listening Yet.
How to rediscover what matters to you.
“Three things make life harder: not loving yourself, refusing to grow, and not letting go.”
🩵A Note from Me
Hi, I’m Jessica.
I write NP Fellow Become The CEO of Your Health, a weekly mental health and functional medicine newsletter focused on emotional clarity, self-understanding, and building a life that actually aligns with who you are.
As a nurse, I’ve seen how often people disconnect from themselves in order to function.
And through my own path, in trading, writing, and high-performance environments, I’ve learned that clarity doesn’t come from thinking harder.
It comes from noticing more honestly.
This piece is a reminder that what matters to you isn’t random.
It’s direction.
🚨🔊My New Annual Spring Vibes playlist - 2026 edition is now out on Spotify along with my podcast called NP Fellow Collective!
You’re Not Lost. You’re Just Not Listening Yet.
There are moments when you feel like you don’t know who you are.
You question your direction.
You second-guess your decisions.
You wonder what you actually want.
It can feel like something is missing.
Almost like clarity is somewhere out there waiting to be found, but most of the time, you’re not missing anything.
You’re just not listening to what’s already there.
Why You Feel Disconnected
People don’t usually lose themselves all at once.
It happens gradually.
You adapt to expectations.
You move toward what feels safe.
You prioritize what makes sense.
Over time, your attention shifts outward.
And the internal signals, the things you naturally care about, get quieter.
Not because they disappeared, but because they were deprioritized.
The Brain Filters What Feels Safe to Want
Your brain is constantly deciding what matters.
Not consciously, automatically.
It filters your attention based on:
Safety.
Familiarity.
Past experience.
Predictability.
If something once felt risky like wanting more, wanting differently, and wanting openly, your nervous system may have learned to ignore it.
This isn’t failure. It’s protection.
However, it’s important to be aware that over time, that filtering creates distance between you and what actually matters to you.
Desire Is Data
What you’re drawn to isn’t random.
What You:
Pay attention to.
Randomly ponder about.
Feel curious about.
Keep returning to.
Quietly wish for.
Regularly think about.
Things you dream big about.
is information.
Not everything needs to be acted on, but everything deserves to be noticed.
Self-discovery doesn’t begin with answers. It begins with awareness.
You Don’t Need to Become Someone New
There’s a common idea that discovering yourself means creating a new identity.
It doesn’t.
Discovering yourself means recognizing what has already been there.
Under the noise.
Under the expectations.
Under the adaptation.
Self-discovery isn’t construction. It’s uncovering.
What Matters To You Matters
Not because it’s efficient and not because it’s impressive.
Because it’s yours.
You don’t need to justify what you’re drawn to.
You don’t need to explain why something feels meaningful.
You just need to notice it and allow it to exist without immediately questioning it.
A Small Shift
Instead of asking:
“What should I be doing?”
Try asking:
“What has been quietly asking for my attention?”
That question changes the direction of your awareness.
From external expectations to internal recognition.
Journaling Prompts for Discovering Yourself
If you want to explore this more, start here:
What do I naturally pay attention to, even when I’m not trying to?
What do I feel drawn to that I’ve been dismissing or minimizing?
When do I feel most like myself?
What do I care about that doesn’t make “logical” sense, but still feels real?
No pressure to act. Just notice.
Final Thoughts
You aren’t lost.
You’re paying attention to the wrong signals.
Clarity isn’t something you find.
It’s something you allow.
And the more you notice what matters to you, without filtering it out, the clearer everything becomes.
Thank you for reading this article.
Until next Sunday,
—Jessica
Your 2am friend who actually gets it
“Letting go is medicine that heals the heart. Letting go is a habit that requires practice. Letting go is best done through feeling, not thinking.” —Yung Pueblo
🪩 A Gentle Invitation
If this article resonated with you, you may appreciate my new product called Weekly Skill, a paid NP Fellow series focused on one real, grounded internal skill each week regarding attention, impulse control, emotional regulation, presence, and learning how to work with your nervous system instead of against it.
No pressure. Just an invitation.🤝
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MEDICAL DISCLAIMER
This content is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not intended to provide medical advice or to take the place of such advice or treatment from a personal physician. All readers/viewers of this content are advised to consult their doctors or qualified health professionals regarding specific health questions. All viewers of this content, especially those taking prescription or over-the-counter medications, should consult their physicians before beginning any nutrition, supplement or lifestyle program.







A very real and practical perspective.
Sometimes we let too much in because we feel we owe people, pressures, or expectations access to us. But you do not owe every demand, every opinion, every message, every piece of information, every crisis, or every social expectation the right to live in your head.
Spring vibes let’s gooooooo!