Working Towards Our Purpose

Have you ever been afraid you're making the wrong decision? Does being afraid of making the wrong decision, keep you from making a decision? In this episode, we dive into overcoming the fear of making the wrong choice. We discuss how to tell if you're choices are going to be right for you. Learn how to start trusting your inner voice, even when there's lots of outside influence. We'll talk about how to make the decision that's right for you using your internal alignment when navigating tough choices. If you’ve ever felt paralyzed by indecision or uncertainty, this episode is for you.

FREE GUIDE: Soften Your Inner Critic in 7 Days: A Guide to Stop Getting In Your Own Way

📍 Timestamps:
00:00 – Check-In
01:42 – The Fear of Making the Wrong Decision
03:29 – Struggling With Opinions and Outside Advice
05:07 – Leaving Corporate & Taking the Leap
06:30 – Lessons from Releasing My First Album
08:37 – How Do You Know If You’re Making the Right Decision?
10:34 – The Power of Trusting Your Intuition
12:37 – Internal vs External Motivation
13:16 – Living Life for the First Time
14:42 – Practicing Ownership Over Your Decisions
15:29 – Softening Your Inner Critic
16:38 – What’s Coming

 💡Key Takeaways
In this episode you'll learn:
  • Learn how to overcome the fear of making the wrong choice
  • Discover how to start trusting your inner voice
  • Understand how outside opinions can cloud your judgment 
  • Overcoming uncertainty 
  • Learn how to start trusting yourself
  • Find out how internal motivation leads to more purpose-driven decisions
 🚀 Start Here If You’re New
1. Overcoming Imposter Syndrome: How to Trust Your Success as a High-Achiever | EP 45
2. Overcoming Others' Expectations: 3 Stages to Living an Authentic Life | EP 48
3. Should You Quit Your Job? How to Know When it’s Time for a Career Pivot | EP 39

 👥How To Connect
Workingtowardsourpurpose.com
Watch on YouTube
Substack
Instagram
LinkedIn
WTOP Merch
Feedback Form WTOP.com

What is Working Towards Our Purpose?

What if the problem isn’t your job, but the version of yourself you had to become to succeed in it? Corporate jobs don’t trap us because they’re evil. They trap us because they slowly teach us to disconnect from ourselves. If you're in corporate America and your life looks successful on paper but feels empty in practice, you’re not alone.

This podcast is a space for the quiet questions you don’t say out loud at work. We explore the inner side of change: the fear of starting over, self-sabotage, the trap of external expectations, imposter syndrome, and the unsettling moment when you realize someone else’s definition of success isn't enough for you.

This isn’t about quitting your job overnight or chasing money, but asking what feels right for you and finding clarity before making your next move. We deliver actionable strategies for complex career transitions. From managing ADHD-related overwhelm at work to overcoming the disconnect of the corporate grind.

You’re not broken. You’ve just outgrown the life you built.

New episodes weekly.

Hello, and welcome to episode 97 of Working

towards our purpose. In today's episode, we're going to talk

about being afraid of making the wrong decision.

But before we get into that, we're going to take a moment and just check

in with ourselves as we always do, and just slow down and see where

we're at today.

All right. Hopefully you got a second to check in.

For me. I'm feeling pretty good today,

feeling proud of myself, which is

a feeling that I struggle to feel.

Went to open mic last night, as I do every Wednesday, and

I felt like I did pretty good by my standards, which,

yeah, makes. Makes me feel good.

And, yeah, trying to. Trying to stay with that feeling of

being proud of myself. And.

Yeah, I don't know, just feeling like the repetitions

are paying off and like I'm seeing progress and that's a cool

feeling. And, yeah.

Yeah, I guess I'll leave it at that.

But, yeah, if you're not feeling proud of yourself, that's okay, too.

And yeah, all feelings

welcome. But let's get into today's episode.

The feeling of being afraid of making the wrong decision.

And this is certainly a feeling I'm familiar with.

I think this topic came to me from talking

to a friend who is making

a big decision, a career change,

a risk, going. Going out on the ledge and trying something, not knowing

if it's going to work out. Definitely, definitely

can empathize with that and know what that feels like. And,

yeah, it's, like, exciting for me to

talk to someone else who's not me, because when it's you, it's scary and challenging

and difficult, but from,

you know, a different perspective, it's like, yes, go do that. Like,

go. Go try it. But, yeah, we're. Let's get into

that. That feeling of, like, what it feels like to. To be

scared of making the wrong decision. Because. Because, I mean, that's plagued me for, like,

my whole life, I think, like, being just so unsure

of, like, a decision and, like, trying to

put all the pieces together and, like, get everybody's opinions and

being like, am I doing this right? And, yeah,

so this friend expressed to me, like, just,

like, it's hard to feel, like, hard to know if it's, like, the right decision

and, like, you're making this decision and

even after making it and, like, committing on it, like, feeling, like,

not regret, but. But, like, oh, no, did I make the right

decision? Was the decision that I made correct? Am I making a

mistake sort of thing? I think one.

One really big thing that happens Whenever you're making a decision

and getting other people's advice and opinions and

input, I think there's a. Like, everybody has an opinion.

Everybody tells you what's right and what's wrong. And I think, like,

especially when you're making a bigger decision, that

it brings out, like, all the opinions and everybody

will tell you something different. And yeah, it's confusing.

Like, it makes you confused because one person who maybe you trust tells you

this thing, and then another person tells you the opposite. And it

can be hard to know what's right.

And so this friend that I was talking about, it was funny because

her boss was, like, kind of swaying her to do the

opposite of what she wanted to do. And

it's just interesting because that same boss was the person that

you come in in the morning, you ask him how he is, and he's like,

I just, you know, I'm here, like, sort of thing. Like,

I don't know from the outside, from what I hear, it seems like, you know,

maybe he's not on. He's not perfectly happy with his life choices,

but yet here he is being like, you should do this because I was in

your shoes one time and, like, this is what I did and it

was good for me. And like, yeah,

so it's interesting. Like, I guess you really have to be careful of, like, who

you. Whose advice you take. And.

Yeah, I mean, it reminded me of, like, so many of my own

choices and decisions and, you know, my choice to leave

corporate and make that

huge career change and life decision and,

yeah, just so many different people giving you their input and

just leading to confusion and being afraid. And I've shared this before,

but I remember when I was leaving corporate,

one person that I felt like I aligned

with a lot told me that making

this feels like a big jump, but something will catch you. And maybe

you don't know what it is now, but it'll work out. And

I always go back to that piece of advice because it worked very well for

me and it made me confident in

making a decision even if I didn't know what the outcome was going to be,

because I knew it was more in the right direction.

And so, yeah, I like to share that whenever I can. That if

you're afraid of making a decision and not sure if it's the right one, not

sure if it's going to lead to a good outcome, know that, like, something will

catch you. And if it's a decision that's made

for you, then nothing,

I believe nothing truly bad can come from It. And if it is bad, it's

a learning experience. But we'll get into that in a second.

But, yeah, reminding me of, like, the decisions that I've made. And this one comes

to mind. Back in 2023, I

recorded my first album and, like, fucking finally finished something for once.

Because I've always been recording stuff my whole life since

learning how to play guitar and never finishing things,

never ever sharing anything, never putting it out there. But I just had this

conviction that I needed to post it online and

put it on Spotify and all the streaming sites and stuff

under my own name. And I was really afraid to make that decision.

And I went back and forth and

I was like, is this even good? I don't even know. I never showed anybody.

It could be terrible. It's cringy, maybe

just thinking of all the bad things that could come

of putting yourself out there. And I eventually came

to the decision to just do it and not tell anybody, because that felt easier.

And I did, and I. A lot of things

came from that, I think. And do I like it now?

I don't know. Maybe. But it was a

piece in time. I feel like all music is that.

But what it did for me was it made me feel.

It made me take my music more seriously. Because I was like, okay, I

finished this thing, and now I can improve upon that, and now

I can go and do more things that I want to do.

And ever since doing that, a decision that was really hard for me, I've been

regularly releasing music and writing music, and it's been

such a positive change for my music

career, I guess if you want to call it that, that feels weird, but,

yeah. And so how did I know that decision

was a good decision? And I think maybe that was one of the first

decisions where I thought of it in this way. So getting to the point of

how do you know that you're making the right decision? And that's sort of a

clickbaity title, I guess. But what I found

for me is that when you're making

decisions and you're getting everybody's input and you're confused and everything,

the way to tell if you're making the right decision is

to look inward. And it's probably no

shock, it's no big secret or anything, but if you can check

in with your own self and

make sure that you're doing something, you're making a decision because

it's something that's internal, it's something that you

desire or something that you feel like you have to do. Or

that voice in your head, that quiet voice in your head.

That's how, for me, I can tell if I'm making a right decision. And I

think if I go back to thinking about releasing that album,

I thought about all the people that know me and

what is it going to look like? And every time I did that, I didn't

want to do it. But when I went on walks and I was by

myself and I was in a good place and

happy and, you know, full of energy,

I thought to myself, like, yes, that's easy. Just do it. This is what you

want to do. You want to do music. And I relied on

that. And I think, like I said, it was the first time that I

trusted myself. And I think that that was so

important and pivotal because I've always struggled with trusting my

own voice and trusting my decisions and what I think about

things. And maybe if you're somebody like that,

you can relate. But it's taken a lot of practice to

trust my own intuition and trust my own feelings about

things and listening to that and doing it. And when

I've done that, the decisions have always been good decisions. And

right or wrong is such a cliche almost.

A decision doesn't have to be right or wrong, but when you're making a decision

for yourself, then it's going to

be the right decision. Because even if it leads to a bad thing, it's going

to teach you something. It's going to let you feel like you have

authority in your life and you can trust yourself

more. And I think that's kind of the biggest thing

is for me, trusting my own self. And when I released

that album, it gave me more

confidence in my own decision making, because

at the end of the day, it doesn't matter if I put it out or

didn't put it out to anybody else. But for me, it was huge. And it

was this huge stepping stone of, okay, I write

singer, songwriter music now, and this is something I do,

and this is something I can do. And the permission,

the seeing myself through that lens, all

that happened because I made the decision that I was feeling

within myself, and I didn't ask for outside permission. And

I probably did it too much where I didn't tell anybody that I did it.

And that's kind of crazy, but

that was my way of doing it. That was my way of not getting the

outside influence, basically not asking anybody, except

I think I maybe told my therapist, and I think that was

pretty much it. And

so, yeah, the point that I'm getting to is like, how do you know that

you're making a good decision? Ask yourself, is it aligned

with you? Is it. That's like the number one thing.

Does it feel true to you? Does it feel like something that you truly desire?

Or is it something that you think you should do based off of

somebody else's opinion or based off of societal expectations?

And yeah, like, internally versus externally. I think when you can make a

decision and you know that it's coming from you, coming internally,

then you know it can't be a wrong decision. Because if

you didn't do that thing, then, you know, maybe you'll still keep thinking about it.

But, like, at least you can rely on the fact that,

like, you thought it was right and you thought that it was the best

move for you. And

somebody said something one time recently that I thought was pretty funny. And

I don't even remember the context of it, but they

were saying it was their. I forget what it was.

Dang, I forget. But he said something like,

I don't know, this is my first time living life.

And I thought that was such a comical way of putting it.

Because, yeah, none of us know what the right decision is. None of us.

None of us know what the right decision is or how to do life, because

we've never done life before. We're doing it now for the first time. But

if you can rely, if you can

call on yourself and listen to

what's within you, then that's the

best option. You know what I mean? That's the best way of trying

to figure out what's going to make you happy and where you should be

going with your life and that sort of thing, because that's all you

got, just your own inner voice and

you can do things for other people. And I found

that that does not lead to happiness for me.

You know, going to college for something I didn't want to do,

going into a career that I didn't want to do. I found it just led

to emptiness and frustration,

anger. Like, all those feelings, like, angry. I was

angry at myself for not letting myself be who I wanted to

be. And I think that that's kind of what this boils down to.

And it's like, if you can make a decision

for you, for the person that you are, then it

can't be a wrong decision. And, yeah,

it's that simple. And I hope I'm making sense here, but I feel like

I'm rambling a bit. But, yeah, that's the main point. Just

super simple. If it's simple to Say, and

it's simple to talk

about, but to actually do it, it's much harder and it takes a lot

of practice and starting with small decisions,

taking ownership over things. I don't know, we live in a world

that you can get by with having no ownership of your

decisions and just by making no decisions. And we even

talked about this in, I think, the last episode about decisions. Maybe,

maybe I shouldn't have done two episodes with decisions in the title, but

that's okay. So, yeah, I just want to talk

about that. I just wanted to sort of share that. That you can't

make a wrong decision when it's coming from within you. And

hopefully that was helpful to anybody listening. Hopefully that

made sense. I know it's super simple, but it's a super

complex feeling. But it's a super simple answer. So I

tried my best to distill it down and

yeah, just put my thoughts out there.

Yeah, I think that's all I wanted to say.

Yeah, just trust your own voice

and yeah, if you have a hard time

being hard on yourself, if you are hard on yourself, I have a free

guide, Softening your inner critic in seven days. It's

sort of walks you through, like less

than 30 minutes a day. These little exercises that can help you

after seven days be hopefully a little more kinder to yourself. So

you can download that for free. It's in the link of every episode, every YouTube

video. It also gets you on my newsletter so that

you get reminded of these episodes. And no

spam or anything. And it's completely free. And let me know if you download it.

Let me know if it's helpful for you or if it's not. And I'd like

to know. So that's all I got for you today. Hopefully this

was helpful and I will see you on another episode real

soon. We're coming really close to episode 100. I'm gonna

do something a little different for episode 100 and maybe recap

the whole. The whole podcast existence and like, what I've learned over the

past three years on purpose and working and

everything. So look forward to that. We got

a couple more episodes towards that, so can look forward

to that in the future. But thanks for listening, appreciate your time and

hopefully you can have a great rest of your day.

Sa.