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If I Could Give My Younger Self One Piece of Advice...

  • sandrajvecchi
  • Jan 29
  • 2 min read

Updated: Jan 30




It wouldn’t be work harder.


It wouldn’t be play it safe.


And it definitely wouldn’t be have it all figured out by now.


If I could give my younger self one piece of advice, it would be this:

Do a regular life check-up. And make sure you’re on your course—not someone else’s.


We're Great at Annual Check-ups...Just Not For Our Lives


Most of us are diligent about doctor’s appointments, car maintenance, and retirement statements. We check our blood pressure, our tires, and our bank accounts.


But our lives? We tend to put those on autopilot.


Years pass. Roles stack up. Expectations creep in quietly. And one day, often much later than we’d like, we wake up and think:

How did I get here? And is this still what I want?


The Subtle Danger of Living Someone Else's Map


Here’s the tricky part: Living someone else’s version of a “good life” doesn’t usually feel wrong at first.


It feels responsible. It feels expected. It even feels successful—on paper.


But over time, there’s a quiet discomfort. A restlessness. A sense that you’re busy, productive… and somehow disconnected from yourself.


That’s usually not burnout. That’s misalignment.


What a Life Check-Up Really Is


A life check-up isn’t about blowing everything up or making dramatic changes overnight.


It’s a pause. A moment of honest reflection.


Questions like:

  • What energizes me now—not ten years ago?

  • What am I doing out of obligation versus intention?

  • What parts of my life feel like a “yes”… and which feel like a slow drain?

  • If no one else had an opinion, what would I choose next?


These aren’t reckless questions. They’re responsible ones.


Especially in the Third Act


By the time we reach midlife and beyond, we’ve earned the right to ask better questions.


We’ve proven ourselves. We’ve shown up. We’ve done the hard things.


This chapter isn’t about starting over—it’s about starting true.


A life check-up in this season is less about achievement and more about alignment. Less about proving and more about choosing.


You're Allowed to Course-Correct


Here’s what I wish my younger self knew—and what I remind myself of now:

You’re allowed to change your mind. You’re allowed to redefine success. You’re allowed to choose a path that fits who you’ve become.


Not who you were expected to be.


Because power isn’t something we hold. It’s something we choose.


And sometimes, the most powerful choice is simply stopping long enough to ask:

Am I still on my course?


If not—there’s no shame in adjusting the direction. There’s only wisdom.

 
 
 

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