When is Enough, Enough?
I kept moving, but never ended up where I I thought I would.
Why getting everything I wanted didn’t make me happy
I have a neighbor who’s always working in his yard. Every day, I watch him move things in and out, lifting and rearranging, busy in constant motion. He digs. He plants. He hauls. He starts over.
After months of it, the yard looks exactly the same.
I recognized myself.
Always moving. Never arriving.
I was seven, maybe eight, polishing silver with my sister while my mother was out shopping. We cleaned the whole house, top to bottom, hoping she’d come home and see us. Really see us.
That moment — her eyes landing on the gleaming surfaces, a kind word — would have been enough.
It wasn’t.
I played flute. I played it well enough to make all-city band. Second chair. They gave me a medal. Not blue. Red.
I remember the feeling of holding it.
It felt flat. So did I.
Years later I stood on the porch of the craftsman house I’d always wanted, celebrating my twins first birthday. Husband beside me, friends gathered on the steps. I had the family. The children. The marriage. The whole American dream.
I remember thinking: this is it. This is enough.
What I didn’t know was that the life I thought I had was already coming apart. My husband was living a separate life. Three years later he was gone, leaving me a single mother, nearly bankrupt, fighting to keep the house.
It wasn’t enough. It had never been enough.
I mistook completion for fulfillment.
I rebuilt. I always rebuild. I got the job, kept the house, raised my children.
And then, three years later, I met Duncan.
For the first time in my life I felt something I didn’t have a word for. Not just enough. More than enough. A love that felt true all the way through.
Copenhagen came later. Duncan landed the job and we were moving — expats, just like we’d always dreamed. One of the happiest places on the planet. Travel. Freedom. A life I hadn’t even imagined for myself.
More than enough.
Until my kids left for college and the rooms felt too quiet. I was 50. My inner critic was right there:
You’re 50. You haven’t worked in four years. Who’s going to hire you? You’re not enough.
I didn’t listen. I got back to work. I always do.
When enough slips away, we polish more silver. Hoping the next shiny thing will be enough.
Then Duncan died.
I didn’t fall apart. Not the way people expect. The day after he passed, I went to work. I put on a face. That was the mask I wore. Inside I was a storm.
But something else was happening.
Just days after his death, I was seeing and hearing things I couldn’t explain. A blue orb hovering over a candle. His words coming through — first from a medium, then from somewhere inside me.
I was desperate to stay connected to him.
And I thought: if I could just learn to do this — really master it — I would have him. I would finally feel like I had arrived.
So I did what I’ve always done with fear.
I turned it into a project.
I threw myself into mediumship training, medical intuitive work, Reiki, practice circles. I questioned everything — and kept going.
Four years later, I had a practice, clients, and income
And my inner critic was still there every morning.
This is a fluke. You don’t know enough. Who’s going to buy what you’re offering? Get back to what you know.
I reached the goal.
The yard looked exactly the same.
I am good at this work now. Really good.
And I am happy — just not the way I imagined I would be.
Because there’s already something else. Something I want to do better, reach further, understand more deeply.
The goalpost didn’t disappear when I crossed it.
It moved.
I’ve been doing this since I was a little girl polishing silver, waiting for a kind word.
I chased it through careers and cities and marriages and loss.
I chased it all the way to becoming someone who talks to the dead.
Every time I thought I had enough, I’d feel it for a moment — and then I’d see the next hill.
My neighbor is still out there. Moving things around.
So am I.
The voice doesn’t leave when you achieve the thing.
It shows up at every milestone, in every quiet moment after the applause fades, asking the same question it’s always asked:
Is this enough?
Are you enough?
We are not projects with completion dates.
We are just people. Always changing. Never quite done.
All we have is this moment.
Right now, I look out my living room window and see the white blossoms of my cherry tree. A sign of spring.
I feel the smoothness of my hair — long now, where it was once short and fragile. My skin, once rough and red, now calm. My breath, once shallow, now full.
I feel the fullness of a life expanding.
The stillness of just being.
And that — just that — is more than enough.
If you’re tired of chasing the next version of “enough”
and noticing that the pattern keeps repeating—
this is exactly where we begin.
In my work, we don’t focus on achieving more.
We look at what’s driving the constant movement underneath it.
The nervous system.
The beliefs held in the body.
The parts of you still working to earn something that was never given.
That’s where real change happens.
If you want to explore it, you can book a free discovery call here.