Feeling Torn Isn’t Confusion
Why ambivalence is a sign you’re getting closer to clarity.
“I gathered my habits and started releasing the ones that can never lead me to lasting freedom and joy.”
🩵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, decision-making, and understanding how the nervous system shapes how we think and feel.
Ambivalence is something I see often—in patients, in high performers, and in my own life.
The instinct is always to resolve it quickly, but the truth is, some of the most important clarity comes from staying with it a little longer.
This piece is about that space.
🚨🔊My New Annual Spring Vibes playlist - 2026 edition is now out on Spotify along with my podcast called NP Fellow Collective!
Feeling Torn Isn’t Confusion
There are moments when you feel pulled in two directions at once.
Part of you wants to move forward.
Part of you wants to stay where you are.
Part of you feels certain.
Part of you hesitates.
And almost immediately, you try to resolve it.
You look for the “right” answer.
You try to think your way through it.
You tell yourself to just decide.
However, the tension doesn’t go away because ambivalence isn’t confusion.
It’s competing signals that haven’t been fully understood yet.
Why Ambivalence Feels So Uncomfortable
The brain is designed to reduce uncertainty.
When two opposing signals exist at the same time, it creates tension.
From a neuroscience perspective:
The brain increases cognitive load.
Stress systems activate.
Attention narrows toward resolution.
Not because clarity is available, but because discomfort is present.
So you feel pressure to decide, not because you’re ready, because your nervous system wants relief.
What’s Actually Happening
Ambivalence often shows up when something matters.
It’s not random.
It usually reflects:
Two values in tension.
Growth vs safety.
Familiarity vs possibility.
One part of you is oriented toward expansion.
Another part is oriented toward protection.
Both are valid.
Both are trying to help you.
Why People Rush The Process
Most people resolve ambivalence too quickly.
They:
Override one side.
Force a decision.
Collapse complexity into certainty.
This creates temporary relief, but not alignment because clarity doesn’t come from eliminating one side.
It comes from understanding both.
The Nervous System in Ambivalence
Ambivalence activates both the approach system and the avoidance system at the same time.
This is why it feels like:
Tension.
Indecision.
Internal conflict.
Feeling stuck.
Your system isn’t broken.
It’s processing, but when you try to shut down one side too quickly, the signal doesn’t disappear.
It resurfaces later. Often louder.
What Ambivalence Is Asking of You
Ambivalence isn’t asking you for a faster decision.
It’s looking for a deeper pause.
Instead of asking:
What’s the right answer?
Try asking:
What is each part of me trying to protect or move toward?
This shifts you from reaction to awareness.
The Skill Most People Don’t Build
The ability to stay with ambivalence.
Being ambivalent is:
being able hold two truths at once.
being able tolerate uncertainty.
being able to delay resolution.
being okay with dealing overwhelm.
Without immediately collapsing into a decision.
This is where clarity actually forms.
Final Thoughts
You aren’t stuck.
You’re in the middle of understanding something important.
Ambivalence isn’t a sign you don’t know what to do.
It’s a sign that something in you needs more attention before you decide.
And when you give it that space, clarity doesn’t feel forced.
It feels obvious.
Thank you for reading this article.
Until next Sunday,
—Jessica
Your 2am friend who actually gets it
“When chaos is all around you, the wisest choice is to create peace within you. Your peace shines outward and supports the creation of a new harmony.” —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.








You don’t need to decide faster.
You need to understand more deeply before you do.
Another great post Jess. Love this part: “Ambivalence isn’t asking you for a faster decision. It’s looking for a deeper pause. Instead of asking: What’s the right answer? Try asking: What is each part of me trying to protect or move toward?”